Showing posts with label Korean countryside. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Korean countryside. Show all posts

Wednesday, August 27, 2014

Old Korean Path

Past the Dunkin' Donuts, between the Mercedes and BMW,  
And way beyond the endless, tall apartment complexes that fill the horizon, 
You can still find an old mud path that runs alongside a shimmering green rice paddy. 
Take it to the end, turn right,
And there you may catch a glimpse of the old Korea you once knew.


Village homes in countryside near Daegu, 1974
Stream and fields near Daegu, 1974


Mud path heading back in time

Tuesday, December 17, 2013

Countryside (시골)


Ah, the sweet countryside beckons.  Its villages and meandering lanes humbly escort us to the past.  If we listen to its whispers, we may also hear stories about our future.  Not surprisingly, Daegu’s countryside has melted in all directions. Once, the walls of Dalsung Park marked the city’s edge. Yeungnam University, built in the countryside in 1947, once a long, tedious bus ride east from the city center, is now just another Daegu subway stop.

Yesterday's countryside: thatched roofs, mud walls, and clear streams

In the 1960’s and 70’s, developing the countryside was a key strategy of then president, Park Chung-hee. His New Village Movement (새마을운동) spread the values of diligence, self-help and cooperation. It was intended to establish an entrepreneurial spirit in Korea’s rural communities.

The countryside still calls those few who listen

Thatched roofs, mud walls, clear streams, and the hard calloused hands of the Korean farmers, have given way to paved roads and the faster pace of a wireless world. Between cities and the ribbons of highways that wrap this peninsula ever so tightly, one may still find the Korean countryside of days gone by.  The old white crane, standing with dignity in the distant rice field, knows the secrets of Korea’s past.  The romantic lure of the countryside still calls those few who will listen.

*Note: this post was originally written for Platform Daegu, the city's new on-line magazine