Jason Strother

Jason Strother

Jason Strother is a freelance journalist based in Seoul, South Korea. He has reported from both sides of the DMZ for The World.

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South Korea Opens Multicultural High School

Students at the Dasom High School for 'multicultural children' participate in a Korean as a second language class. (Photo: Jason Strother)

Students at the Dasom High School for 'multicultural children' participate in a Korean as a second language class. (Photo: Jason Strother)

Cultural homogeneity is a source of pride for many South Koreans. But their nation is going through a demographic change. Over the past decade, hundreds of thousands of Korean men have married women from Vietnam, Cambodia, China and other Asian countries, and the number of children born to these couples is on the rise.

Enkhjagal Khishigbaatar comes from Mongolia, but her two young sons were born here, like their father. The boys have Korean names and don’t really speak Mongolian, but she says she hopes they won’t forget their roots.

“I always remind my sons that they are also Mongolian, that they should be proud to be Mongolian.”

Mixed families like this are increasingly common in South Korea, according to Hong Inpyo, who heads the Seoul Multicultural Family Clinic.

“Multicultural families are really helping out Korea’s low birth rate,” Hong says. “By 2050 their children will make up 10 percent of the population. These children will be the next generation of the nation.”

Just this month, Seoul opened the Dasom School, the country’s first publicly funded school for multicultural children. Liang Man Ni, 18, who moved here from China in 2009 with her Korean mother and Chinese father, says she likes the school very much.

“I’ve made friends from Japan, Hong Kong and Vietnam.”

So far, Dasom has 48 students who were raised abroad. But soon, school administrators say, they expect to enroll children who’ve grown up entirely in Korea.

Korean authorities say many children from multicultural families aren’t attending school at all, especially in rural parts of the country. A recent survey found that about 30 percent of these children stay home with their foreign mothers, and many don’t learn to speak Korean proficiently.

That has the South Korean government worried, according to Chung Chin-sung, a sociologist at Seoul National University. Chung says she doesn’t want to see these kids fall through the cracks, even if it means educating them in separate schools.

“In principle, children from different backgrounds should be integrated with other students,” she says, “but there are children who cannot adjust to normal school. Without any help they cannot be prepared to get into normal society. I think this school can be a last chance for those children.”

Enkhjagal Khishigbaatar and her two Korea-born sons are one of South Korea's increasing number of 'multicultural families.' (Photo: Jason Strother)

Enkhjagal Khishigbaatar and her two Korea-born sons are one of South Korea's increasing number of 'multicultural families.' (Photo: Jason Strother)


Discrimination is also a factor. Many Korean kids bully their multicultural classmates, according to Kim Heekyung, of the group, Save the Children. They’re teased about the way they look or talk, she says, and Korean kids pick up stereotypes from their parents about children with Southeast Asian mothers – for instance, they’re not as smart or they’re poor.

“Southeast Asian countries are less economically developed than Korea. So that’s why they assume they are inferior to them,” she says.

Kim adds that isolating these kids in their own school isn’t going to reduce prejudice. Last year Save the Children launched an anti-discrimination pilot program in a few Seoul elementary schools. Students acted in role-playing games that had them pretend to be kids from non- traditional families.

Cha Eun-seo, who is 9, tells me she’s learned that she shouldn’t tease kids with parents from other countries.

She says she and some of her classmates have made friends with a boy from a multicultural family, and they’re trying to teach him Korean.

Discussion

5 comments for “South Korea Opens Multicultural High School”

  • http://pulse.yahoo.com/_5SSCEDQTMZ3AOWY4JJCK77U5AM A R

    About time that Asia also becomes multicultural too. If America can do it, then why not South Korea and by extension China, Thailand etc.?

    • a n

      But it’s not multicultural like the West! In the West you have DIFFERENT RACES. Western countries like America has always been multicultural in a “one race style.” What I mean by that is that there were always Germans, Irish, French, Spanish White groups in America. There wasn’t always people from DIFFERENT RACES in large amounts like these days.

      Until South Korea or any other country in the far east is multicultural in the sense of having different races, it is not truly not multicultural the way we mean it in the west!

  • Jacqueline

    This breaks my heart to read about such out and out racism. I am a multiracial American woman that hasn’t experienced racism within my own country yet I have seen others who have. It hurts me as if it has happened to me. To read that these children are being treated unfairly by their peers. I have heard that people in South Korea are racist that I should never step foot in this country let alone think about marrying someone South Korean.

    For such advanced country, it is extremely behind on its social issues. If those in this country continue to insulate themselves, they will isolate themselves to the point of extinction. I can understand why women there don’t want to marry the men there if this is how it is.

    What’s awful is it’s not just the racial issue that is the problem in this country, it’s also the things with perfection. Some ideal of what beauty is. Asian people as a whole are beautiful people and yet they spend money to become more western looking. These children deserve to be treated with as much respect as the others. For a group of people that are considered so beautiful, they are so ugly. Doesn’t South Korea care about the image they are presenting to the world? This is disheartening. Get your act together South Korea, you can do better than this. You are better than this.

    • a n

      It’s quite absurd how they treat other Asian nationalities with contempt when they are THE SAME RACE! Imagine if some of these people met you!?

      • Jacqueline

        That’s my worry :( I am often asked if I am Korean (that picture isn’t a really good one). I get confused because I don’t think I look Korean, whatever that means. I guess it’s like when someone tells another person that they aren’t black enough, whatever that means.

        I am honestly quite afraid to go to South Korea when I keep reading about stories of racism. As I said before, I haven’t experienced it here in America and I’m from the South (racism capital). 

        All I know is that South Koreans have this thing with status, money, and looks. Really sad because they could miss someone really spectacular.