True stories
Translated by Sue Cho, Edited by HJ:
- Contents -
- Oasis (Mom's story 1)
- The mother must live positively in order for her child to live without gloom (Mom's story 2)
- Children are our hope and future (Mom's story 3)
- Smiles bring good fortune (Mom's story 4)
- We are keepers of life (Mom's story 5)
This story is from "collective essays of unwed mothers" published by The Millennium Project in 2008.
Preface
Why we must help single moms...
In 1980 I once escorted a child to be adopted in the U.S., through Holt Children’s Services. In the plane, the child made a promise to herself to “study hard while living with her adoptive parents, and later take care of her mother back in Korea.” Once she caught sight of her adoptive parents at the airport, however, the child suddenly ran into my arms, frightened. “Can’t you just take care of me?” she pleaded, hanging onto me for dear life. As I tore the child away from me and walked away in tears, what I resolved to do was to “raise our children on our land, in our home.”
I don't mean that we should help because I merely feel sympathy for single moms and their children. For economic activity, a population is necessary, but that the Republic of Korea, in the time of low birthrates and an aging society, will become a “vanishing nation” is already old news. Every day the birthrate of unwed mothers, however, is rising in our country. They are ultimately the future producers who will inject young blood into Korean society, and will become the companions of the older population. Western countries have run support projects for unwed mothers for as long as 40 to 70 years. We need to support single moms and multicultural women, if only to escape the disgrace of the staggering 1,000 abortions conducted per day. The undoubtable reason, to support these families with human compassion, is here.
Representative Young Sook Park, The Millennium Project





