It's amazing what this country has done for itself in such a short period of time, a worn torn shattered country divided by power and invasion.. within 50 years pulled itself up by the bootstraps to a world presence, one of the 10 leading economies no less. Three years of brother battles on common soil with so much at stake, everyone took a stand for their people, their land- children, men, women.
Outside of the museum stood the ghosts of war- immobile and yet formidable. Upwards of forty aircrafts, jeeps, tanks, howitzers, submarines, and more- from a multitude of nations, it became clear that the war may have been hosted by Korea, but many a flag had their presence at the table here in 1950-1953.
Korea has had it's enemies and the enemy lines drawn and redrawn countless times. From Japan to Mongolia, China to Russia... not one century has gone by that they haven't been occupied or under some form of military duress. The War Memorial presented artifacts from hundreds and hundreds of years ago, military costumes (from everywhere, even the U.S Civil War attire- the blues and grays), weaponry, maps, documentaries, ships, murals, paintings, demonstrations- it was several levels of countless layers, so much to unveil, too much to take in. I'll be having to return again after I get my second wind.
The most indelible impression left with me on this day was actually via a conversation with Ok-Young (he likes to be called Ok, okay?!!), an 80 year-old Korean Vet. His grandson had a pension for weapons and was ogling around the corner just before we came into the parachute room of the museum.
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NICE Blog :)
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