Korean Women Raped by Ghosts

Once again it is time for my annual Halloween post.  This year I decided to write about Korean ghosts and how they were sometimes used to influence society or to disguise transgressions against social norms. 

We often read that we foreigners are maligned by the press and viewed in negative ways by the general Korean population.  Whether that is true or mere exaggeration is a matter of opinion, but a little over a hundred years ago one of the scarier ghost in Seoul appears to have been a white Westerner.

“A strange creature appearing at the old sites of the Namso and Sukchong gates, which had not been used for hundreds of years. The ghost, it was said, had a white face, yellow hair, blue eyes, and blood-red lips, and cried in a child’s voice. Its appearance was obviously that of a Westerner, and many people immediately connected it with the idea that Westerners, kidnapped children, killed them, and made a power from their bodies that was used for photographic film.”

The rest of the article - including haunted Korean palaces, haunted houses destroying the house market, and Korean women raped by ghost and then giving birth to “ghost children” can be read here.

Happy Halloween 

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9 Comments

  1. Gravatar Uri Onara your flag
    Posted November 1, 2007 at 12:39 am | Permalink

    But what is their connection to fan death? Surely these spirits are involved…

  2. Gravatar Ledtim your flag
    Posted November 1, 2007 at 5:40 am | Permalink

    Christianity would be so much cooler if Jesus’s title was “Jesus the Holy Ghost Child.”

  3. Posted November 1, 2007 at 6:13 am | Permalink

    I blame global warming.

  4. Gravatar Wedge your flag
    Posted November 1, 2007 at 9:53 am | Permalink

    #3: Heh. Everything wrong in the world can be blamed on three things: Israel, George Bush and/or Global Worming.

    The schoolyard epithet “ghost,” referring to half-Caucasian half-Korean kids, now makes sense. Thanks, Mr. Neff.

  5. Gravatar robert neff your flag
    Posted November 1, 2007 at 11:56 am | Permalink

    Something I found on the net:

    “According to the Gallup poll, one in ten Americans believed in ghosts in 1978. In 1990, one in four did. Today, one in ten people say they have seen or been in the presence of a ghost!”

    Wonder what the ratio is now?

  6. Posted November 1, 2007 at 12:53 pm | Permalink

    I never thought I would get laid trick or treating. And to think all I wanted was some candy~!

  7. Gravatar Ledtim your flag
    Posted November 1, 2007 at 3:39 pm | Permalink

    George Ladd: “It was erected by the tyrant Lord Kwanghai who was here dethroned, and from here sent into exile, where he died a prisoner. From it also his successor was driven out by the usurping ‘Three Days King.’ It was in this palace, also, that the King Suk-jong having surprised his favorite concubine in practicing magic rites to accomplish the death of the Queen whom she had already caused to be divorced and banished, turned upon the concubine in revenge, mutilated the Crown Prince, had her torn in pieces.”

    How much of that is true? I’m not familiar with Korean history all too much, but from what I can tell from http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/L.....n_monarchs , Gwanghaigun’s successor didn’t get usurped by a “Three Days King.” And the thing about the voodoo concubine, is that real?

  8. Gravatar R. Elgin your flag
    Posted November 1, 2007 at 9:36 pm | Permalink

    If I had to pick a place that is haunted, in Seoul, I would pick 창덕궁 since it has a melancholy vibe to it. I prefer not to go there because of that.

  9. Gravatar arthjourneyman your flag
    Posted November 2, 2007 at 1:54 am | Permalink

    Oh but Shaku, you did get your candy…it came with her in the form of sloppy seconds. No need to thank me though, everyone gets my love~!

    BTW mate, who’s the bug-eyed fellow in your pic?

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