Starting from the period after the Korean War and continuing today, more than 100,000 Korean children were adopted around the world. As they get older, many of them decide to conduct a search for their birth families in Korea, beginning what often turns out to be a long, difficult and emotional process for all involved.
Today's guest, Katelyn Hemmeke, is currently in Seoul as a Fulbright researcher, speaking to adoptees about their experiences conducting a birth family search. She has found that it's often incredibly difficult to find information that can help track down birth families, and that even when a search is successful, the emotional journey is not over. Learn more about the challenges adoptees face when they decide to conduct a birth family search in this week's episode of Korean Kontext.
Photo taken by Andrew Le.
Learning from Past Engagements with Pyongyang: Ambassador Chun Yung-woo
Growing Up as a Defector Migrant in South Korea
[Rebroadcast] Talk to Us in Korean: The Mavericks of Teaching Korean Online
[Rebroadcast] Korean American Day 2018: Photojournalist Chang Lee
[Rebroadcast] Covering PyeongChang: The Wall Street Journal's Jonathan Cheng
K-pop's HIgh Tide in the United States
How Would New U.S. Auto Tariffs Impact Hyundai and Kia?
Behind the Scenes of Repatriating American Soldiers' Remains from North Korea
Examining Korea’s Economic Growth: A View from the OECD
Ambassador Chris Hill on North Korea Negotiations
[Rebroadcast] Shamans, Goblins, and Ghosts: A Look at Korean Folk Culture
Farewell Podcast with KEI President Donald Manzullo
North Korea's Nuclear Identity
Can Science Diplomacy Help South Korea's Foreign Policy?
Summit Sum-Up: A Conversation with Ambassador Jim Zumwalt
Singapore Summit: Ambassador Joe Yun on the Big Trump-Kim Meeting
Covering the Korea Beat with Elise Hu
The Art of the Deal? A Proposed Framework for the Trump-Kim Summit
Kim Jong-un's Public Relations Strategy
Navigating the Moon-Kim Summit
Create your
podcast in
minutes
It is Free