Posted on 03/30/2013 8:43:14 PM PDT by darrellmaurina
President Park Geun-hye models herself on former British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher as the "iron lady" of South Korea, the Wall Street Journal speculated Wednesday.
"Ms. Park, like Mrs. Thatcher, is known for not being intimidated by totalitarian regimes or men in power," the paper said. "When her father, President Park Chung-hee, was assassinated in 1979, Ms. Park was quoted as saying 'Is the border secure?' -- sparking admiration by worrying primarily about the possible threat of a North Korean invasion."
"In her first televised address from [Cheong Wa Dae] she sharply chastised opposition politicians -- almost all men --for blocking her government reorganization plans," the paper added.
The paper believes these are conscious similarities. Park "made her fondness for Mrs. Thatcher clear in a 2007 speech in which she said that the 'leadership that can revive South Korea from crisis is Thatcherism'."
(Excerpt) Read more at english.chosun.com ...
What follows is a gross oversimplification but is correct in general outline.
Unlike the situation in the United States, the major denominations in South Korea are Presbyterians, Full Gospel (which is equivalent to the Assemblies of God), Baptists, Methodists and Roman Catholics, in roughly that order. The Presbyterians are divided into a number of different Presbyterian denominations, the biggest of which are two large evangelical denominations of about 2.2 million members each, one much more conservative denomination about a fifth of that size, one somewhat more conservative denomination about a quarter of that size, and one quite liberal denomination about a tenth of that size.
Other denominations exist in Korea, many of which trace their origins to the post-World War II era, but those are the largest and most influential groups.
The Roman Catholics trace their heritage to the work of Koreans who spent time in China and were the first to introduce Christianity to South Korea — I'd have to do the research but I'm fairly sure it was in the late 1600s or early 1700s, and certainly long before anyone else. They obtained the help of French missionaries, some of whom were martyred in Korea, but were not particularly successful until the large growth of Christianity under the influence of Presbyterian and Methodist missionaries who began their work in the late 1800s. The Baptists and the groups that became the Full Gospel churches came somewhat later.
Protestantism entered Korea while the country was still independent. However, the Japanese obtained a protectorate in 1905 and took over the country directly a half-decade later, ruling it until 1945, and by the 1920s were severely persecuting Christians who showed disloyalty to the Empire, especially with regard to refusal to participate in Shinto shrine worship of the Japanese emperor.
The four main splits in Presbyterianism date back to the expulsion of the Japanese following World War II, when the most conservative Presbyterians refused to have anything to do with those who had participated in emperor worship. The main Presbyterian body expelled a group of liberal denominational leaders who had collaborated with the Japanese and had adopted German higher-critical liberal views; that main body then divided over whether to cooperate with American Presbyterian missionaries in the PCUSA (Northern) and PCUS (Southern) denominations, or whether to work only with the Christian Reformed Church, Orthodox Presbyterian Church, and other strictly conservative Reformed denominations, in large measure because under Japanese rule an Orthodox Presbyterian missionary had nearly been killed by the Japanese for refusing to participate in emperor worship at the same time that most of the American missionaries were willing to do so. The initial seceder group merged with the more conservative of the two larger bodies, but the merger was not successful and part of the initial seceder group split again to form a smaller denomination which now has ties with the Orthodox Presbyterians, Canadian Reformed, and GKN-vrijgemaakt in the Netherlands.
I do not know enough of the history of the Methodists in Korea to speak with any level of authority, but my understanding is that the Korean Methodists, like the Presbyterians, suffered from problems caused by American missionaries who were too willing to compromise with liberalism. Unlike the Korean Presbyterians, the Korean Methodists were not able to find conservative Methodist bodies overseas after the Korean War who were willing to help them and that has not been good for the Methodists, who have been influenced more by American liberalism than the other major Korean denominations.
Again, this is a gross oversimplification, but I hope it is of some help.
Rikidozan "faked" being Japanese -- just to work as a wrestler.
... but everybody knows that wrassling is for real.
Ricky was famous for unleashing the “karate chop !”
I got to meet him back in ‘58 or ‘59...
I’d never heard of him until a half hour ago. There were lots of similar personal stories of Koreans under the Japanese occupation; for instance, General Choi.
Thanks for an informative post.
I am very fond of Korea.
It was one of my two overseas Army assignments; and I applied to get my time in Korea extended but it was turned down, not at the U.S. Army HQ in Seoul, but at the Pentagon. I think my life may have taken a different course if I had been allowed a longer hitch in Korea. I am not sure how exactly, only that it was a defining experience for me and I left with potential for that to increase on the table.
Glad to hear you liked your tour of duty in Korea. As you probably know, soldiers either love or hate their Korean tours — and being a “hardship tour” separated from family does not help.
I know a chaplain who managed to extend his Korean tours for 11 years, and some other people who went into the Reserves so they could stay in Korea, but they usually were married to Korean wives.
“I know a chaplain who managed to extend his Korean tours for 11 years, and some other people who went into the Reserves so they could stay in Korea”
An Intel officer I met was a Chaplain (Chaplains are accepted by lots of people, Korean and American because they are seen as ‘church’ leader type people, and therefor can be trusted). He had many years experience in Korea and when he was with us and the KATUSA’s would hear him speak they would remark how perfect his Korean was, not just the words but all the nuances of accent, tone and inflection.
I was engaged, but not married when I went to Korea.
It seemed at first I would view it as a hardship, but as my private message to you shows, I did not leave feeling like it had been a hardship.
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