Nan-hee Park left Japan in 1939 to join her fiancE, Won-sup Shim, who lived in a port city on the East Coast of Korea, which was not yet divided into North and South.
As she was preparing to leave, her parents shared a premonition: She'd face tough times in her homeland. But it was just a vague, undefined fear that they did not connect to her fiancE's ardent support of Korea's movement to break free from the control of Imperial Japan.
When Nan-hee boarded the train, she accepted a simple, wood bracelet from her sister, who said, "Remember me whenever you wear this."
...
Nan-hee Park left Japan in 1939 to join her fiancE, Won-sup Shim, who lived in a port city on the East Coast of Korea, which was not yet divided in...
Nan-hee Park left Japan in 1939 to join her fiancE, Won-sup Shim, who lived in a port city on the East Coast of Korea, which was not yet divided into North and South.
As she was preparing to leave, her parents shared a premonition: She'd face tough times in her homeland. But it was just a vague, undefined fear that they did not connect to her fiancE's ardent support of Korea's movement to break free from the control of Imperial Japan.
When Nan-hee boarded the train, she accepted a simple, wood bracelet from her sister, who said, "Remember me whenever you wear this."
...
Nan-hee Park left Japan in 1939 to join her fiancE, Won-sup Shim, who lived in a port city on the East Coast of Korea, which was not yet divided in...