View Full Version : South Korea’s Main Chinatown Lacks Only the Chinese


Bond James Bond
March 2nd, 2007, 06:22 AM
http://www.nytimes.com/2007/03/02/world/asia/02korea.html

March 2, 2007
South Korea’s Main Chinatown Lacks Only the Chinese
By NORIMITSU ONISHI

INCHON, South Korea — All was quiet in South Korea’s nonbustling Chinatown on a recent weekday. The lunchtime trickle was over, leaving the streets as deserted as they had been in the morning. The shiny arches, red lanterns and towering “Welcome to Chinatown” sign, meant to impress visitors, seemed instead to magnify the neighborhood’s inactivity.

Hoping to lure Chinese investors and some of the ever-growing number of Chinese tourists, the local government in Inchon, just west of Seoul, four years ago transformed a tiny dilapidated Chinese neighborhood into the country’s first Chinatown.

In no time, officials in half a dozen other cities across the country announced plans to build their own Chinatowns, but none have progressed very far because of a host of obstacles ranging from a lack of capital to, well, a shortage of Chinese residents.

Even here in Inchon, the site of a Chinese settlement dating from the 1880s, there are only about 400 Chinese. Most of the several thousand who had been here during the last century left when South Korea, ever wary of its neighbor’s designs, curtailed their ability to do business.

China’s rise, as well as the growing wealth of both Chinese and overseas Chinese, has given birth to new Chinatowns in places as varied as Las Vegas; Dubai; Belgrade, Serbia; and Dobroiesti, Romania. But for South Koreans, Chinatown plans are fraught with historical subtext.

Sitting on the rim of the Middle Kingdom, Koreans kept the Chinese out of their peninsula for centuries as immigrants from China set up thriving Chinatowns throughout Asia and the Western hemisphere. Even Japan, which has had strained relations with China in modern times, is home to three thriving Chinatowns.

“Korea is so close to China, not even an hour away by plane, so that makes it even odder that there has never been a full-fledged Chinatown,” said Yi Jung-hee, a South Korean expert on the overseas Chinese and the author of “A Country Without a Chinatown.”

“Korea had its own identity but always felt the need to protect itself from China,” added Mr. Yi, who is now an assistant professor at Kyoto Sosei University in Japan.

It was during Korea’s weakest period that China’s presence here reached its peak. In the 19th century, Japan and China fought to gain influence over the Korean Peninsula. They, along with Western nations, wrested concessions in Inchon, establishing settlements dedicated to commerce and not subject to Korean law.

Japan eventually colonized Korea, but Chinese merchants and laborers kept gravitating here; several thousand lived here by the end of Japanese rule in 1945.

In the decades that followed, Chinese residents ran businesses here and in the heart of Seoul. But in the 1960s and 1970s, under the military rule of Park Chung-hee, South Korea carried out policies intended to curb Chinese business activities and restrict land ownership, leading many Chinese to emigrate to Taiwan or the United States. Those remaining were effectively restricted to running Chinese restaurants, especially those that served chajangmyon, a popular noodle dish with a black-bean sauce.

“When I was growing up here, this was the darkest and most impoverished area of Korea because all the Chinese had left,” said Fan Yenchiang, 48, owner of Tae Rim Bong restaurant here.

By early this decade, only a couple hundred Chinese residents were left.

But by then, South Korea’s trade with China was booming, and Inchon officials were working on turning this historic footnote into a full-grown Chinatown. The authorities aggressively courted Chinese investors and invested about $18 million to put up signs and lampposts and to build a cultural center. Local governments in China donated a statue of Confucius, as well as three arches leading into the neighborhood.

“In Chinatowns across the world, merchants themselves band together to raise the funds to build arches,” said Chae Jin-kyu, a city planning official. “But this may be the only Chinatown in the world whose arches were donated by mainland China.”

The placement of one arch became knotted with the local history. Shandong Province asked that its arch be erected in a spot that was near the local government office, which also happened to be inside the former Japanese concession.

Some Korean residents objected that it was too close to the local government office; others saw the request as China’s backhanded retribution to Japan for earlier humiliations. The arch was put elsewhere.

“This was their idea of settling scores from a 100 years ago,” said Cho Woo-sung, 59, a newspaper columnist and a local historian. “This was just China trying to show off its new power.”

“This is not a real Chinatown,” Mr. Cho added. “It’s a creation of the local government — very shallow and artificial. What is this? Do Chinese come here? No. There’s nothing beautiful here. Plus the parking’s terrible.”

The Chinatown’s fitful progress reflects South Korea’s larger ambivalence toward a re-emerging China.

South Korea has been strengthening ties with its big neighbor in recent years. China is now South Korea’s No. 1 trading partner; South Koreans are studying Chinese in droves; many see eye to eye with China on how to handle problems like North Korea.

Still, South Korea’s embrace of China has been tempered by the historical fear that it could be suffocated. China’s claim in recent years to Koguryo — an ancient kingdom that straddled the Korean Peninsula and northeastern China, and which Koreans regard as an integral part of their history — sharpened those fears.

So how much of Korean territory are Koreans willing to cede for the sake of Chinatowns? Can you build a Chinatown without Chinese?

“Chinatowns should be where the Chinese live,” Sun Meiling, 40, a third-generation Chinese-Korean, said emphatically.

Ms. Sun, 40, who owns three shops here with her husband, had left South Korea to do business in China for a decade. “But in 2002 we heard that they were building a Chinatown in Inchon, so we decided to come back,” she said.

Mr. Fan, the restaurant owner, leads a local merchants’ association that has 73 members. It includes 50 new arrivals from China, though the number is only a small fraction of what the authorities had hoped to attract.

He said that obtaining visas was a big obstacle and that a mainland Chinese businessman’s plan to open a foot massage center had fallen through because he could not get visas for Chinese therapists.

“If this Chinatown is to become a real Chinatown,” he said, “we must bring back the people who left or bring in new people. How can we call this a Chinatown if there are no Chinese here?”

Sen
March 2nd, 2007, 06:28 AM
Korea had a thriving Chinese community before 1945, but all of them left under Park Chung Hee's racist regime.
Incheon "Chinatown" is nothing but a fake tourist trap.

Huhu
March 2nd, 2007, 08:53 AM
I still don't understand why tour guides like to bring Chinese tourists to Chinatown. Lol :lol:

OshHisham
March 2nd, 2007, 01:59 PM
same case goes to Japan's chinatown.....seriously fake!!

homeandaway
March 2nd, 2007, 02:15 PM
What about Seoul?
~Alex~

Roch5220
March 2nd, 2007, 10:46 PM
I still don't understand why tour guides like to bring Chinese tourists to Chinatown. Lol :lol:

In regards to HK, its because these tours usually include dinner, and other meals, in which especially the older generation like to eat chinese food where ever they go.

Roch5220
March 2nd, 2007, 10:53 PM
Korea had a thriving Chinese community before 1945, but all of them left under Park Chung Hee's racist regime.
Incheon "Chinatown" is nothing but a fake tourist trap.

During that period, there were such regimes everywhere. Including china after the communist victory over the nationalists.

Sen
March 3rd, 2007, 01:59 AM
No, There were a lot of Koreans in China there are still are(more than eight hundred thousands). I am surprised you dont know about your own people's history.

dhuwman
March 3rd, 2007, 04:15 AM
any photos?

gladisimo
March 3rd, 2007, 04:01 PM
In regards to HK, its because these tours usually include dinner, and other meals, in which especially the older generation like to eat chinese food where ever they go.

HK itself is Chinese anyway, you can't really get too far away from the Chinese in HK.

Sen
March 3rd, 2007, 05:01 PM
any photos?

http://image.baidu.com/i?tn=baiduimage&ct=201326592&lm=-1&cl=2&word=%C8%CA%B4%A8%D6%D0%B9%FA%B3%C7

Roch5220
March 5th, 2007, 02:43 PM
No, There were a lot of Koreans in China there are still are(more than eight hundred thousands). I am surprised you dont know about your own people's history.

After the reds took power, they sought to eliminate all outside influences as well. Even western music was banned.

oliver999
March 5th, 2007, 03:35 PM
there is humanbeings, there is chinese.

PedroGabriel
March 5th, 2007, 04:43 PM
I still don't understand why tour guides like to bring Chinese tourists to Chinatown. Lol :lol:
Portuguese colonial towns in Brazil attract many Portuguese visitors.

Roch5220
March 5th, 2007, 07:55 PM
HK itself is Chinese anyway, you can't really get too far away from the Chinese in HK.

I meant Hong Kongers, older generation who go on tours outside of HK, like to eat chinese food when they are not in HK.

feverwin
March 6th, 2007, 05:18 AM
No, There were a lot of Koreans in China there are still are(more than eight hundred thousands). I am surprised you dont know about your own people's history.

In fact there are 2 million most of whom were driven by Japanese during the Sino-Japanese war in 1940s to weaken the Chinese domination in Manchuria... :ohno:

kyenan
March 6th, 2007, 05:33 AM
In fact there are 2 million most of whom were driven by Japanese during the Sino-Japanese war in 1940s to weaken the Chinese domination in Manchuria... :ohno:

Who were the people driven by Japanese during the Sino-Japanese war in the 40s?

Sen
March 6th, 2007, 06:00 AM
Who were the people driven by Japanese during the Sino-Japanese war in the 40s?

Korean Chinese."Cho Sun Jeok".
Correction: not Sino-Japanese war but famine at the end of 18th century and subsequent Japanese colonization of Korea.

ejd03
March 8th, 2007, 03:00 AM
are there many cho sun jok in china?? one of my friends is korean chinese.. she can't speak korean though..

Sen
March 8th, 2007, 03:29 AM
that's odd, most korean chinese can speak korean, they haven't been assimilated yet, I think after 2 or 3 generations they will forget to speak Korean.
According to Wiki there are 2 million.

Sen
March 8th, 2007, 03:35 AM
No 'real' Chinatown in S. Korea, the result of xenophobic attitudes

By Kim Hyung-jin
INCHEON, South Korea, Aug. 29 (Yonhap) -- With the name "Chinatown" written in both Korean and English on it, a colorful arch spans a narrow street in western Incheon, indicating that the area is a Chinese community -- but it's not a Chinatown in the true sense.


Chinatown in Incheon

The Chinatown in this bustling port city west of Seoul, with a population of 2.6 million people, is South Korea's largest, but probably also one of the world's smallest. It is a tiny neighborhood with only 40 or so Chinese-style restaurants and other stores run mostly by Koreans. Only a third of the restaurant and shop owners here are Chinese.

"As a matter of fact, it's not a Chinatown. How can a town without Chinese people be called a Chinatown?" said Yuan So-chin, 48, an ethnic Chinese merchant who runs a Chinese general store in the area.

If the area can be called a Chinatown, it should be much bigger, with a distinctive Chinese culture like those in New York, San Francisco, Yokohama, Paris and London, said Yuan, who works as vice chief of an association of merchants in the district, once inhabited predominantly by Chinese nationals.

Chinatown is a universal component of Chinese culture and business found in most major cities around the globe and has worked as a channel to draw Chinese investment, but there is nothing like this in South Korea.

Critics blame the absence of real Chinatowns in Seoul and other South Korean cities on the discriminative policies of past South Korean governments, coupled with the xenophobic attitude of Koreans toward Chinese people living on their soil.

Historical records show that the ethnic Chinese settlement of Korea dates back to the early 1880s, when China dispatched 3,000 troops to help put down a military revolt here. About 40 Chinese merchants came with them, followed by more later.

The Chinatown in Incheon was once a major Chinese community in South Korea because of the port city's geographical proximity to China across the Yellow Sea. Many came over to work in the restaurant business.

The number of Chinese residents in Korea reached 65,000 in 1937. The Japanese colonial rulers of the time were reportedly uneasy about the expanding Chinese community and began to crack down on them. They imposed heavier taxes on Chinese merchants and orchestrated anti-Chinese riots among Koreans.

The ordeal of ethnic Chinese in Korea continued even after the country was liberated from Japan's colonialism in 1945. Most past South Korean leaders, especially Park Chung-hee, harbored a negative view of them, reportedly out of concern that they could take away national wealth.

Park, who came to power in a military coup in 1961 and ruled South Korea until his assassination in 1979, restricted foreign ownership of land and other property and implemented a currency reform that excluded Chinese savings. He barred Chinese restaurants from selling food made with rice, a major staple in South Korea, and often froze the prices of their dishes made of flour for a long time.

The Park government also virtually denied Chinese nationals the right to live in South Korea permanently, requiring them to renew their residential permits every three years.

"Some say Park is the father of South Korea's modernization, but for us, he was evil," said Wang Wen-jung, vice president of the Chinese Residents' Association in Seoul, adding that he had to drop out of a high school in Seoul after his father's Chinese restaurant went bankrupt in 1967.

Amid the hostile Korean government policies, fledgling Chinatowns in South Korea, including the one in Incheon, slowly withered or were drastically downsized.

"I remember there used to be many Chinese living in this area who were running restaurants and other stores. The area was much bigger than now," said Yuan at Incheon's Chinatown, disclosing that his father ran a Chinese restaurant there.


Wang Wen-jung, vice president of the Chinese Residents' Association in Seoul

The Chinese community in South Korea has shrunk drastically. About 10,000 Chinese emigrated to the United States, Taiwan and other Southeast Asian countries between 1972 and 1992, Yuan said. Now, about 26,700 ethnic Chinese live in South Korea.

"I myself came back to South Korea only four years ago after living for nearly 20 years in Taiwan, Japan and mainland China," Yuan said. "At 20, I left the South Koreans who turned their backs on me. But as I got older, I felt like coming back here, where I was born and my old friends live."
It was only recently that South Koreans began to show genuine friendship and generosity toward their Chinese neighbors, largely thanks to their country's diplomatic normalization with Beijing in 1992.

Most ethnic Chinese here retain Taiwanese citizenship, but the number of those who have shifted loyalty to China is increasing. It's still difficult to become a South Korean citizen, as they have to prove their financial ability, be endorsed by high-level South Korean officials and complete complicated paperwork.

There has been a rising call recently to help support the Chinese community in the country.

"We should be very ashamed of ourselves, particularly because we've been clamoring for globalization," said Yang Pil-seung, a Chinese studies professor at Seoul's Kunkuk University.

Discrimination against ethnic Chinese in South Korea, albeit eased in recent years, is still rife in their everyday lives. For example, they cannot sign onto South Korean Internet sites and are even denied e-mail accounts, as their alien registration card numbers don't work at most of these Web sites.

In May's mayoral and gubernatorial elections, foreign residents of more than three years in South Korea were given suffrage for the first time. But foreign residents, including ethnic Chinese, no matter how long they have lived here, are barred from voting in parliamentary and presidential elections.

"I know things have improved, compared with the past, but South Koreans still don't regard us as real members of their society," said Yin Chia-ching, 36, who works as a waiter at a Chinese restaurant in Incheon.

Disclosing that he recently broke up with his Korean girlfriend, partly due to his ethnic background, Yin complained that most of the Chinese residents in South Korea can't get "decent" office jobs and end up running or working at restaurants at best.

"South Koreans should know we have been living with them for more than 100 years and do all major national duties as they do, such as tax payment," he said.


Yuan So-chin, vice chief of an association of merchants in Chinatown in Incheon

Yang of Kunkuk University said that allowing ethnic Chinese to freely engage in business will benefit South Korea.

"We should allow them to make use of their status as 'hwakyo,' as 'kwansi' is important to do businesses," he said. Hwakyo refers to overseas Chinese residents and kwansi roughly translates as "connections" or "links" in business.

The professor quoted a recent report by the Federation of Korean Industries, a major business lobby group, as claiming that a Chinatown in big cites such as Seoul can attract foreign investments and generate consumption worth 23.9 trillion won (US$24.9 billion), produce 12.1 trillion won in value added and create 920,000 new jobs.

The creation of Chinatowns in South Korea is also urgent given the increasing number of "new hwakyo" from mainland China, who numbered 356,790 earlier this year, including 219,000 ethnic Koreans, he said.

Wang of the Chinese Residents' Association called for a "more open-minded, warm-hearted" attitude by the Korean people toward their Chinese neighbors.

"If you ask us why we don't leave here or become naturalized South Korean citizens and stop complaining, we have nothing to say. But I would say this is the country where we were born, have lived and will live until we die," he said. "You can easily understand our difficulties if you think about ethnic Koreans in Japan."
About 700,000 Koreans live in Japan, a legacy of Japan's 1910-45 colonial rule of the Korean Peninsula. They complain that they are being discriminated against by the Japanese government and its people.

hyungjin@yna.co.kr
(END)

http://english.yonhapnews.co.kr/Engnews/20060829/480100000020060829091233E3.html

Roch5220
March 8th, 2007, 02:21 PM
Reminds me of Houston's "chinatown". Stripmalls and small malls on a street outside of the downtown area, mostly run by people from vietnam.