Skip to content

조회 수 16635 추천 수 0 댓글 0
?

단축키

Prev이전 문서

Next다음 문서

크게 작게 위로 아래로 댓글로 가기 인쇄 수정 삭제
?

단축키

Prev이전 문서

Next다음 문서

크게 작게 위로 아래로 댓글로 가기 인쇄 수정 삭제
  Boston Area Moms Speak Out Against Children’s Book ‘Bamboo’



By Jane Han
Staff Reporter



Yoko Kawashima Watkins, the author of “So Far from the Bamboo Grove,” speaks to students about her book at a school./Courtesy of Belmont Public Schools 
Watching her 11-year-old son cry after reading a children’s book made Agnes Ahn ask a few questions.
As a mother who had been volunteering in the Boston area school system for the past 10 years, Ahn knew that ``So Far from the Bamboo Grove’’ was certainly not equivalent to ``Charlie and the Chocolate Factory’’ or any other typical happy-ending kids book.

``I wondered what would make my son so sad. I wondered what the book was about,’’ Ahn said in an interview with The Korea Times.

Her initial questions began to find answers when her fifth-grade son, whom she asked to keep anonymous, asked, ``Why were the Koreans so mean to the Japanese people?’’

When the concerned mother picked up the book, which had been around her house because her older daughter had read it years before, she noticed the front cover.

``The picture of soldiers and a family on the jacket illustration _ I thought the family was Korean and the soldiers were Japanese, but it was actually the other way around,’’ Ahn said.

The book’s author, Massachusetts resident Yoko Kawashima Watkins, calls the award-winning book a ``fictionalized autobiography.’’ It portrays the story of 11-year-old Yoko and her wealthy family as they escape in the ruins of war.

The controversy rises over the storytelling. Many argue that the Japanese people’s wrongdoings against the Korean people are not mentioned.

``Korea is portrayed as part of a Japanese empire, and the book doesn’t mention the invasion or the Japanese occupation,’’ she said.

She said she had to remind her third-generation Korean-American son that his grandparents went through the war.

``Don’t you remember grandma and grandpa talking about the war?’’ Ahn said she asked her son. ``I explained that they were taught to count in Japanese and have Japanese names as well because they were under the rule of Japan.’’

Although Ahn clarified for her son, she knew that correcting the inaccurate historical content of the book at home wouldn’t be enough.

She got in touch with Sheila Jaung, a Korean mother who has a child who attends the same school, and decided to approach the school committee.

Ahn and Jaung presented the book to a subcommittee of six people _ the principal, two English teachers, a social studies teacher, a librarian and a parent.

``After some discussion, the book was unanimously voted in November to be removed from the school’s reading list,’’ Ahn said. ``But that wasn’t the end of the issue.’’

The book voting was extended to the regional school committee. Convincing that panel was more difficult for the mothers.

``One of the English teachers was a friend of Yoko,’’ Ahn said.

The teacher called for support from other parents and teachers, claiming that Korean parents were trying to censor the book, Ahn said.

However, the 13 parents protesting the book were not all Korean.

``The school district only has about three to four Korean students,’’ said Ahn, who lives in a suburban town about 15 miles west of Boston. ``The other parents in our group are not Koreans, but they want a change because of the book’s graphic descriptions.’’

She said they did not even ask for the book to be completely removed from the curriculum.

``We just asked for a few things _ move the book up to an older grade, teach history regarding the same time period of the book’s setting and don’t bring the author to the school anymore,’’ Ahn said.

But the requests were not met.

Watkins had been visiting schools to talk about the book, and the school’s superintendent decided in a Jan. 2 committee meeting that the book wouldn’t be of interest to older children.

``Since so many people want to keep the book, they are going to try to balance with Korean history and another Korean book,’’ Ahn said. Some books under consideration are Sook Nyul Choi’s ``Year of Impossible Goodbyes’’ and Linda Sue Park’s ``When My Name Was Keoko.’’

Although the book will remain part of the curriculum in the school district where Ahn lives, she said that the book has done a lot of good things.

``We’re bringing public awareness now. We’re taking something negative into positive,’’ said the 45-year-old mother of two, who works as an obstetrician in a Boston area hospital. ``This book is serving as a launching point to tell the true stories during World War II.’’

``Why the sudden fuss about the book?’’ many local people ask. Ahn, emphasizing that the book has been in numerous school systems for more than a decade, said in reply: ``My husband and I are one of the oldest second-generation Koreans. Prior to that, first-generation Koreans simply want their children to blend in with the crowd, and many parents did not even know how to make a protest.’’

With some parents speaking out, the recent movement against ``So Far From the Bamboo Grove’’ had been spreading in the eastern U.S.

``I’ve been contacted by Susanna Park from New York last November,’’ Ahn said. Park and her daughter Bo-eun made news when the seventh-grader refused to attend school as long as the book was part of the curriculum. ``I met with Susanna, and I think her daughter is a very brave little girl.’’

Ahn said history must be accurately represented, especially for the younger kids, who assume everything they read is true.

``We’re not afraid to make a challenge,’’ she said.


end

http://search.hankooki.com/times/times_view.php?term=yoko++&path=hankooki3/times/lpage/nation/200701/kt2007012319465352910.htm&media=kt
?

Title
List of Articles
번호 제목 글쓴이 날짜 조회 수
공지 글쓰기 및 편집 방법 2 file 다중이 2016.06.12 48655
501 Re: 안녕하세요...^^ 운영자 2008.11.25 7960
500 Re: 어느 60대 노부부 이야기. 곽삐남 2010.04.09 8702
499 Re: 유 튜브에 나온 것 마틴 2009.02.09 24563
498 Re: 재미있는(?) CCP 2010.10.21 9083
497 Re: 저는 좌파군요. 1 마틴 2010.01.26 8788
496 Re: 저도 머리가 띵한 이야기 Martin 2009.02.14 8710
495 Re: 참 멋집니다 박집싸 2008.11.25 7540
494 Re: 캘거리안내설명부탁드립니다. 1 캘거리 2009.07.31 8526
493 Re: 현장 숙소에 도착하여 3 곽삐남 2010.04.20 8525
492 Remember the Land 플로렌스 2012.12.05 12033
491 Sarah Chang Interview & Zigeunerweisen 2 ch 2010.12.01 12847
490 SBS 장준하 의문의 추락사 마틴 2009.06.03 8572
489 Scarborough Fair ch 2010.09.27 16703
488 Schools at mercy of funding policy - Calgary Herald 운영자 2003.09.08 10958
487 Scientific Jargon, translation 2 운영자 2003.04.16 12859
486 simpleliving 웹사이트 소개 이동진 2005.05.03 10317
485 St Matthew Passion, Final Chorus, J.S. Bach 2 플로렌스 2011.10.07 15288
484 Susan Boyle의 I dreamed a dream. 3 뚜버기 2010.10.24 8552
483 Sweet Hour of Prayer - Barbershop Chorus Song 2 ch 2010.11.13 13448
482 Taizé - prayer and songs 플로렌스 2012.09.15 10357
481 Thank you for your time & effort!! 1 가현 2011.12.03 8930
480 The annual CBC/Calgary Reads Book Sale: May 26 & May 27 로즈마리 2007.05.02 30351
479 The Cranes 1 ch 2010.12.21 13125
478 The Legend of 1900 1 뚜버기 2011.06.24 14694
477 The Lord`s Prayer 운영자 2006.09.24 11794
476 The Pilgrim's Progress 2 마틴 2010.05.27 8633
475 Tibet: Cry of the Snow Lion_티벳 이해하기 플로렌스 2011.06.13 18727
474 Torn Between Fiction and Reality 운영자 2007.01.24 16226
473 Two Of Us - Joe Hisaishi - Eminence 로즈마리 2008.04.09 8427
472 ufo 관련사이트 소개 7 UFM 2010.12.24 11847
목록
Board Pagination Prev 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 ... 20 Next
/ 20

Powered by Xpress Engine / Designed by Sketchbook

sketchbook5, 스케치북5

sketchbook5, 스케치북5

나눔글꼴 설치 안내


이 PC에는 나눔글꼴이 설치되어 있지 않습니다.

이 사이트를 나눔글꼴로 보기 위해서는
나눔글꼴을 설치해야 합니다.

설치 취소