What a strange thing to say. Stay off of that stuff, what ever it is.
The Japanese did it? Under the Japanese colonial rule, the country was one. In fact, Japan and Russia (USSR then) had agreement that after the war was over they would split Korea into North and South, Japan keeping the south. Of course Japan had to win the war hopefully with USSR help. Now about the same time, Truman, Churchill and Stalin met in Cairo and agreed to split the country into two parts, the North being a satellite of the USSR and the South .. well you get the idea. When the war was near an end, after the use the A-bomb in Hiroshima, USSR declared war on Japan, their troops occupied all of Korea but pursuant to the Cairo accords agreed to pull back to roughly 38 N degrees lattitude, as soon as American troops could be sent to South Korea.
The South Korean population wants reunification? Reunification? Or do you mean they want Korea to be one country under a regime similar to the current South Korean Government? You think you could find many that would agree to that funny looking fellow from the north as head of the country? Ain't no way. I think what they want is for the commies and their repression gone, they want to keep what they have. Doubt you could find one South Korean that would give up their Internet access, their cell-phones or what ever, for reunification. They want what they want and they want it now.
South Koreans hate Japanese? Wonder why so many SK’s stand in line to immigrate to Japan?
South Koreans want US forces out? Hate Americans? Maybe, but they would want the money USA spends in Korea left behind as well as the protection of the US forces to remain. Most all want the USA immigration process to be open up further so more could come to the USA.
I could be wrong but that is what my highly educated SK students in my English class say about the situation
I'm not sure where you're getting any of that.
I never said they wanted to reunite under North Korea. I said they view it as a natural endstate. As in, it SHOULD happen. The South Koreans even have a government reunification agency dedicated to planning for the day.
On their own terms of course, but that it should happen eventually. Not that they're willing to do much about it or make sacrifices to their way of life now, but if you were to poll them in a simple yes/no format on whether the Koreas should one day be united, I'd bet ~100% South Koreans say yes.
The sentiment has changed from hate for the North and all communists to a more sympathetic view for the average North Korean as a brainwashed victim.
There were two very popular Korean movies made during the late 90's, both portraying individual North Koreans as good people rather than communist fanatics. Considering movies in South Korea are screened by the government, the fact that they were released AND were very popular says something.
As far as my line of credit on the issue, I'm not just pulling shit out off of Google or Wikipedia:
My parents are Koreans, who still live there, and I have plenty of family over there. I spent a fair bit of time growing up there in the early and mid 90's.
I was in the country when Kim Il Sung died.
My grandfather was killed shortly after the end of the war because he had been educated in Japan during the colonization (and yes, I never actually met him).
I've pretty much lost ties with my roots since going to college and joining the Navy, and I'm sure things have changed, but I doubt things have changed THAT drastically.
And please clarify for me, by English class, do you mean SK students living in Japan? They would of course have a very different take on the whole situation.
I'd be curious what their take would be on the ongoing disputes like the Sea of Japan/East Sea or Tokdo/Takeshima.