Chusok, the Korean Thanksgiving

Talk about anything in here.

Chusok, the Korean Thanksgiving

Postby ClosetOtaku » Fri Sep 24, 2004 2:31 am

I'm sitting in my apartment, watching the southbound traffic crawl across the bridges of the Han River, as the people of Seoul leave for their ancestral homes to celebrate Chusok.

Chusok is Korean Thanksgiving, and has much of the same hallmarks as our own holiday. This year, it falls on the 28th of September, but Monday and Wednesday are also red-letter days, making this essentially a 5-day weekend.

While Korea is a country of about 45 million people, almost one-third have gone north and live in the greater Seoul area. Around Chusok, this trend reverses, and families will drive hours to distant cities like Busan, Daegu, or Kwangju to the places where their families have lived, some for generations.

The holiday celebrates family togetherness and honors the ancestors (both living and dead). There are many traditions associated with the holiday, a few of which I'll try to describe as best I can, as they were explained to me by those who participate in them. Some of the activities owe their roots to ancestor worship that is a large part of religion is Asia. Today, about one-third of the South Korean population is Christian, and while this has had an effect on how the holiday is celebrated, many of the traditional practices remain.

On the morning of Chusok the children are awakened early and brought into the company of the adults, where all honor the (usually patriarchal) line of ancestors. A very large meal is set out consisting of a wide variety of traditional Korean foods. It is not unusual to have four (or even five) generations under one roof in this setting.

Later that day, the families will go out to the family grave sites for both ritual and practical purposes. Unlike in the West, where we have large and sometimes ornate cemeteries, these grave sites are singular, usually on sides of hills, decorated with a few modest stone markers, and the graves themselves are small burial mounds. You can see them dot the countryside as you drive along any number of routes.

The families will leave behind food or pour out drink (soju, an alcoholic beverage, is one example) at the sites, in honor of the ancestors, much like we would leave flowers or other memorabilia. They also use the time to tidy up the gravesites, cutting down weeds and removing fallen rubble.

The holiday often ends like it began -- very long highway drives as all of Korea tries to get back to their current hometowns, most in the Seoul area, and experiencing perhaps one of the largest anticipated traffic jams in all the world.

There are many other elements to the holiday that I'm not as familiar with, and you can find out about them from the Internet if you're interested.

I was hesitant to post this to CAA, since some of these practices, while well-intentioned, seem to border on the pagan. Yet that's not the impression I get when I talk to people here about the holiday -- they focus on family reunion and visiting their parents and grandparents. I've found it to be a widely-celebrated and eagerly anticipated holiday for many people, including many Christians, and it has made me wonder why I can gloss over pagan elements of my own Christmas celebrations (the Christmas Tree, for example) while feeling obligated to scrutinize others. I admire the Koreans in the dedication they show to their elders. And it might be nice if I saw more of such dedication in my own culture as well.
"If I find in myself a desire which no experience in this world can satisfy, the most probable explanation is that I was made for another world." -- C.S. Lewis
User avatar
ClosetOtaku
 
Posts: 927
Joined: Tue Jul 06, 2004 3:12 am
Location: Alexandria, VA

Postby termyt » Fri Sep 24, 2004 11:17 am

Well said, ClosetOtaku. Thanks for sharing and the insite, too.
[color="Red"]Please visit Love146.org[/color]
A member of the Society of Hatted Members
Image
If your pedantic about grammar, its unlikely that you'll copy and paste this into your sig, to.
User avatar
termyt
 
Posts: 4289
Joined: Sat Jun 26, 2004 12:00 pm
Location: oHIo

Postby Mr. SmartyPants » Sun Oct 10, 2004 9:05 pm

i forgot about it.... oh boy... that's not good. I think my friend yesterday, did that, forgot which holiday. In honor of his grandmother who passed away? Im not sure if he said she did or not.

(im korean, if ya didn't know ^_^)
User avatar
Mr. SmartyPants
 
Posts: 12541
Joined: Sat Aug 21, 2004 9:00 am

Postby c-girl » Sun Oct 10, 2004 9:14 pm

>^^< That's cool. Thank you so much for sharing!
I live to love and love to live! >^.^<
ImageImage
I am part of The No Group.. Group.. >"<.. >0.o<
Image
~Real guys go for real down to Mars girls ~ "Roses" by Outkast
User avatar
c-girl
 
Posts: 683
Joined: Sat Nov 22, 2003 10:00 am
Location: Omg! It's a flying bird!!! *runs away while you're distracted*

Postby Jaltus-bot » Sun Oct 10, 2004 9:15 pm

I think that is a good point about our own culture. I know that my parents have mentioned things about how it's harder now as middle aged baby-boomers. When my dad got laid off, it was only the old experienced people that his company was getting rid of, probably to save money. It's important to consider what our elders can teach us from their experience, than again, the way our society works could also be more condusive towards forging bonds between parents and children, at least in my opinion for what I have seen.
When I feel blue, I start breathing again.

Asdvadz hedut ullah! (W. Armenian, "May God bless you!")

It's cosplay, get used to it.

"A hero need not speak. For when he is gone, the world will speak for him."

"One of the nice things about diseases of the brain is they tend to slip your mind." Colbert
User avatar
Jaltus-bot
 
Posts: 1822
Joined: Mon Jun 14, 2004 4:00 am
Location: Almost there.


Return to General

Who is online

Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 203 guests