Maija Rhee Devine

Author Archive

Poem “Comfort Women of WWII” Published in Pleiades

Posted on: November 28th, 2020 by Maija Rhee Devine

Maija’s poem “Comfort Women of WWII” was published in Pleiades (the literary journal of Central Missouri State University), summer 2020, and was a featured poem of the week , September, 2020: https://pleiadesmag.com/featured-poem-comfort-women-of-wwii-by-maija-rheedevine/?fbclid=IwAR1KoXiHO1RtLqvhD6eER1qALG9T9gltdJrVoSuQgdxs0H4YTSLGHVDCt5Q

SeattleN (in Korean) Reports on Maija’s Poems Published in Pandemic Anthology

Posted on: November 28th, 2020 by Maija Rhee Devine

Maija’s 3 poems were published in an anthology, When the Virus Came Calling: COVID-19 Strikes America (Golden Foothills Press, CA, 2020). 11 of the 46 writers are poets laureate, including Richard Blanco, the US presidential poet laureate at Obama’s 2nd inauguration.

https://www.seattlen.com/m/bbs/board.php?bo_table=News&wr_id=32526

COVID anthology available at:

(1) Golden Foothills Press

http://www.goldenfoothillspress.com/Our-Books-and-Authors.html

(2) Amazon

SeattleN(in Korean)Reports on Maija’s Centennial of Women’s Suffrage 1-min.video

Posted on: November 28th, 2020 by Maija Rhee Devine

(In Korean) The SeattleN news, as well as CBS, carried news about Maija’s 1-minute video story of the first woman voter in her family and other 1-minute video stories by 99 American women, including 4 former First Ladies (Michelle Obama, Hilary Clinton, Rosalyn Carter, and Laura Bush).  https://www.seattlen.com/bbs/board.php?bo_table=Headline&wr_id=5669

Maija’s 1-minute video/Centennial of Women’s Suffrage

Posted on: September 15th, 2020 by Maija Rhee Devine

8/26/2020: Celebrating the Centennial of Women’s Suffrage, 100 1-minute video stories were posted on a website established by Washington Post in cooperation with 4 former First Ladies, Michelle Obama, Laura Bush, Hillary Clinton, and Rosalynn Carter: https://www.firstwomanvoter.com.
My video/story is at: (https://www.firstwomanvoter.com/educationandarts/maijarheedevine

Other videos include:

Laura Bush: https://www.firstwomanvoter.com/first-ladies/spp13dt2jtkktiqlgax74hfkalv4q4 

Rosalynn Carter: https://www.firstwomanvoter.com/first-ladies/rosalynn-carter 

Hillary Clinton: https://www.firstwomanvoter.com/first-ladies/hillaryclinton 

Michelle Obama: https://www.firstwomanvoter.com/first-ladies/michelleobama 

Madeleine Albright: https://www.firstwomanvoter.com/publicservice/madeleinealbright 

Condoleezza Rice: https://www.firstwomanvoter.com/publicservice/condirice   

First Daughters: Lynda Bird Johnson Robb: https://www.firstwomanvoter.com/firstdaughters/homagetoladybird 

Lucie Baines Johnson: https://www.firstwomanvoter.com/firstdaughters/homagetoladybird   

Tricia Nixon Cox:  https://www.firstwomanvoter.com/firstdaughters/forpatnixon 

Rev. Bernice A. King/Coretta Scott King: https://www.firstwomanvoter.com/ 

Roslyn Brock, Chairman, the NAACP National Board: https://www.firstwomanvoter.com/  

Categories include: First Ladies (4); First Daughters (3); Business and Community Leaders (17); Allies and Advocates (12); Public Service (19); Journalists (30); Education and the Arts (23); Roslyn Brock (Chairman, the NAACP National Board); and Rev. Bernice A. King/Coretta Scott King. 

The SeattleN news (that is published in Korean), as well as CBS, carried news about this.

https://www.seattlen.com/bbs/board.php?bo_table=Headline&wr_id=5669

Abraham Lincoln Presidential Library & Museum (ALPLM) Interviews of Maija Rhee Devine: an excerpt posted 8/2020

Posted on: September 13th, 2020 by Maija Rhee Devine

Mark DePue, military historian and director of Oral History Program at the ALPLM, posted a condensed version of Maija’s 10-plus hours of interviews conducted several years ago, which have been transcribed and archived on the Museum’s website (www.oralhistory.illinois.gov), into an “Oral History Spotlight” in August, 2020, and posted it on the Museum’s Facebook. The link is: https://www2.illinois.gov/alplm/museum/blog/Pages/blog110.aspx (It includes 10 audio clips.) Here’s the beginning story. The interviews include Maija’s stories as a child survivor of the Korean War, her post-war experiences through the secondary school and college years in Korea, her later immigrant life in America and her career as a writer. Illinois men and women dedicated their lives to the defense of democracy for South Korea by fighting during the Korean War and their stories are important part of the Oral History Project of the ALPLM. Maija feels honored to have been one of the interviewees and that her stories are preserved in the distinguished ALPLM. Deep gratitude goes to Mark DePue and outstanding staff.

E-news from the ALPLM (Abraham Lincoln Presidential Library & Museum), Springfield, IL       ALPLM ORAL HISTORY PROJECT
A Childhood Surrounded by War   To say Maija Devine’s childhood was defined by war would be an understatement. She was born in Manchuria during World War II to Korean refugees fleeing a brutal occupation of their homeland by the Japanese.  Maija was soon given up for adoption and eventually returned to Korean, only to see her life upended yet again when North Korea invaded the south in 1950 and occupied Seoul where Maija’s family lived.  >>>>>Learn More about Maija’s life story, in her own words – a story also told in her award-winning novel The Voices of Heaven.     Maija Devine was born in 1943 as her parents fled Japanese-occupied Korea.   Maija met a young American Peace Corps volunteer named Michael Devine in 1970 and the two were soon married.   Maija wrote an award-winning novel based on her life: The Voices of Heaven. 

Op-Ed: How surviving Korean ‘comfort women’ cope with COVID-19 crisis, by Maija Rhee Devine

Posted on: July 11th, 2020 by Maija Rhee Devine

This was published 6/23/2020 in The Korea Times, Seoul, Korea.

Link:

https://www.koreatimes.co.kr/www/opinion/2020/06/162_291430.html

former Korean ‘Comfort Woman’ Kim Wha-Sun passed away but left great paintings about her life as a comfort woman.
Comfort Woman Kim’s painting on display at the House of Sharing, a residential complex managed by the Museum of Sexual Slavery by Japanese Military
Also by former comfort woman Kim Wha-Sun on display at the Museum.

Op-ed, The Korea Times, 8/7/2019

Posted on: August 7th, 2019 by Maija Rhee Devine

My op-ed, “Surviving Korean ‘Comfort Women’: How Are They Doing?

https://www.koreatimes.co.kr/www/opinion/2019/08/162_273453.html

Aug. 14 marks the 28th anniversary of the 1991 announcement by the late Kim Hak-soon about her ordeal as a sex slave for the Japanese military during World War II. It’s time to assess the wellbeing of her sister survivors ― 20 of the 238 women who are “registered” in South Korea, now aged 89 to 103.

Of the 219 registered in North Korea, an unknown number are alive, while hundreds or more, who never registered anywhere, live anonymously throughout the world.

How are the “grandmothers” ― the title the comfort women prefer ― doing? Do they have reasonably satisfying lives? Are they still pockmarked by shame, as they professed in their testimonies?

Since 2011, I have visited the “grandmothers” living in the House of Sharing, a residence at the Museum of Sexual Slavery by Japanese Military located south of Seoul, where I read their testimonies, analyzed works by scholars in English and Korean, and worked on previous articles.

At 103, Jeong Bok-soo, one of the six House of Sharing residents, is the oldest. The shortest with the loudest voice, she has a gruff manner ― a part of her charm. Lee Ok-sun, 92, her hair as white as green onion roots, delivers testimonies ― with or without her dentures. As her interpreter during her recent trip to the United States, I reminded her to wear them before her speech. Back home, she attends weekly protests outside the Japanese embassy. Warm-hearted, Park Ok-sun, 95, kept my hands in hers a long while.

“Grandmothers” Bae Chun-hui, an artist; Kim Goon-ja, a devout Catholic; Kim Hwa-sun; and Yu Hui-nam, a resident of New Jersey with daughters before returning to Korea, have passed away since I met them.

An “Outside Grandmother” section of the museum’s website describes the lives of the 17 survivors living throughout South Korea. As of December 2018, half of them were ill. One was in a hospital with dementia. Others have ailments ― diabetes, high blood pressure and difficulty walking.

The rest are doing well. The Korean comfort women were mostly 11 to 20 years old during World War II. Throughout an average of two to four years, they endured an estimated 7,200 sex acts with enemy soldiers ― while suffering beatings, abortions, drug/alcohol addiction, re-capture following escapes, attempted suicides and sexually transmitted diseases.

How did they become near-centenarians? And reasonably healthy at that? How did some nonagenarians assemble the courage to deliver speeches? How did most of them maintain nurturing relationships with family and friends? Play “hwatu” card games and enjoy other social activities?

Kim Oe-han passed away at 81 in 2015, leaving behind a husband of 65 years. Born in 1934, she became a comfort woman at 11 and, after the war, married at 16. “She was beaten so severely,” her husband reported, “she had pains all our married life.”

Despite their apparent resilience, a journal of visits made by the staff of the House of Sharing in 2017 to “grandmothers” in Busan reveals the soul-gnawing shame survivors still feel, whether ill or healthy. Drilled into them are sexual morality lessons exemplified by stories verbally passed on and in textbooks, like the legend of 3,000 seventh-century Baekje Kingdom palace maidens who leaped to their deaths from the Falling Flowers Cliff to avoid molestation by enemy warriors. The survivors feel they should have defended their honor with similar determination.
Maija Rhee Devine has published 15 articles on comfort women of World War II in The Korea Times and U.S. newspapers, including The Kansas City Star.


“Dog-Year Fortune,” The Korea Times, 1/4/2018

Posted on: March 11th, 2018 by Maija Rhee Devine

PreventFemaleBabies

 

My article, “Dog-Year Fortune,” 1/4/2018, http://www.koreatimes.co.kr/www/opinion/2018/01/162_241921.html.  The image: A good luck charm to be carried by a woman not wishing to bear a female child. She should keep the charm until she gives birth to a son.  The charm prevents “a nine-daughter curse.”  It’s best, the Good Luck Charm book says, that a woman carry the charm after the birth of her  first daughter and not wait until she has three daughters.  There is no “nine-son curse,” as having many sons is one of the five greatest blessings in life.

#RAS talk, “Asian Beliefs: How Chinese Zodiac Signs Affect Women,” on Youtube

Posted on: March 11th, 2018 by Maija Rhee Devine

DogByFangHong

 

The 2/6/18 talk is now on Youtube: 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gZnqmBUoR7o&feature=player_embedded 

 

(Chinese papercut by Fang Hong)

 

 

How Chinese Zodiac Signs Affect Women

Posted on: December 21st, 2017 by Maija Rhee Devine

ImagesZodiacSignsThis lecture will be given by Maija Rhee Devine on Feb. 6, 2018, 7:30 p.m., 2nd floor, Residents’ Lounge, Somerset Palace, Kwanghwamun, Seoul.  Here is the description of the power point presentation.

“Folk beliefs in the power of the Chinese zodiac signs to affect fortunes of human beings have flourished for millennia in Asian regions.  Even today, in Korea and elsewhere, in tandem with world-record-breaking scientific and technological advances, the zodiac myths exert power over men and women, and contribute to the creation of various societal phenomena, including the dramatically fluctuating birth rates, increased abortions of female fetuses in certain years, population imbalances, and popularity (or unpopularity) of persons of certain signs as marriage or business partners.  In China, Korea, and other Asian countries, such beliefs enable expanding commercial activities, such as fortune telling, match making, and shamanistic rituals. . . . the lecturer will discuss how Asian beliefs in Chinese zodiac signs continue to impact lives, particularly those of women.”

The lecturer’s talk on this topic can be listened to at:  KKFI FM 90.1, “Every Woman,” 8/05/2017, http://www.kkfi.org/program-episodes/chinese-zodiac-effects-womens-lives-today/

 

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