Guryongpo pushes to register as cultural property

More and more Koreans are voluntarily registering their homes as cultural properties — in Guryongpo, Pohang, the owners of some 16 colonial-era Japanese residences have registered their homes with the city, and the town’s residents hope to have the entire area (which includes a surviving Shinto Shrine now used as a Catholic Church) designated a “Japan Town” and registered as a cultural property, the first time an entire village has been so registered. [Dong-A Ilbo, Korean]

5 Comments

  1. seouldout your flag
    Posted June 8, 2007 at 9:34 pm | Permalink

    So that’s what people do in this country when they stop getting loaded.

  2. Posted June 9, 2007 at 12:22 am | Permalink

    Living in Pohang, I find this very exciting. There are several Japanese colonial era buildings on the coast, and I hope they will be preserved. Folks here are not as anti-Japanese as they are elsewhere.

    I’ll have to seek out that church. Guryongpo has a new church, so I assume the one in the article is no longer used, although the building may stilll be owned by the Church.

  3. Posted June 9, 2007 at 1:24 am | Permalink

    Pohang is a neat place. This is an interesting initiative, and a welcome bit of good news compared to most of the stuff we hear about on the Korea-Japan front.

  4. peninsular aborigine your flag
    Posted June 9, 2007 at 8:56 am | Permalink

    #3, just don’t tell pawi.

  5. Posted June 10, 2007 at 10:26 am | Permalink

    Refreshing news on the Korea-Japan front!

    Until RohNo! confiscates all of the property and/or jails them for being collaborators.

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