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Maninbo

Page 16

by Ko Un

She felt shy and sad.

  Two years later

  on February 5, 1953,

  Bak U-hwan came back home in Sin-ok’s dreams.

  Joyful laughter.

  The following day, February 6, he likewise came home.

  One month later notice came from army headquarters that he had died in action,

  with a letter of condolence from his commanding officer.

  Next a box containing his remains arrived.

  The vice-mayor put on a black tie and came

  to offer his condolences on the death of private Bak U-hwan.

  Sin-ok stopped eating.

  Her drunken eldest brother shouted:

  Stupid girl! Now what will you do?

  I don’t want my sister to live as a widow.

  Hurry up and find yourself a husband.

  Stupid girl!

  VOLUME 19

  Orari

  Three members of the punitive force in Jeju Island got bored.

  They flicked cigarette butts.

  They spat.

  They called out old Im Cha-sun

  who’d been caught in Orari village:

  ‘You, old man, come out!’

  They called out his grandson, Im Gyeong-po:

  ‘Come out!’

  ‘Slap your grandfather on the cheek.’

  His grandson refused.

  They kicked him hard.

  ‘Come on, Gyeong-po, hit me, come on hit me.’

  His grandson slapped his grandfather in the cheek.

  ‘Slap him harder, kid.’

  They kicked the grandson.

  The boy slapped his grandpa hard.

  ‘Old man, hit your grandson.’

  This time the grandfather hit his grandson.

  Then the old man got punched and kicked by the men around.

  ‘You bloody old red,

  slap him hard.’

  He slapped his grandson hard.

  Grandfather and grandson,

  weeping,

  hit each other.

  The red grandfather

  slapped the red grandson,

  the red grandson

  slapped the red grandfather.

  See? These are red games.

  Then there was the sound of gunfire.

  Grandfather Im Cha-sun

  and grandson Im Gyeong-po

  could no longer hit one another.

  After the gunfire

  there’s no knowing where the crows of Jeju Island went flying.

  One Rubber Shoe

  On a sandbar in Miho Stream

  one rubber shoe that came floating down

  got stuck

  and stopped.

  The fields along the Miho Stream seemed abandoned and empty.

  Who knew

  it was the shoe of Ha In-ae, a pretty girl from Yongin?

  Who knew

  it was the shoe of the dead Ha In-ae?

  When she walked under her sunshade,

  soon enough

  her breasts got moist under her one-piece dress,

  from this house and that

  men’s noses would come out sniffing.

  Who knew

  it was the shoe of Ha In-ae who hanged herself

  after being raped by Jeong Deok, a senior officer,

  that summer under the People’s Republic?

  Kim Seong-ju

  Oaths made by slicing palms with a knife-tip

  and mingling the blood.

  Oaths made by each cutting off a finger

  and burying the two fingers together.

  Through such blood oaths, men of old

  used to inscribe heroic aims in life.

  Blood oaths could become blood betrayals,

  and the two would be estranged forever;

  sometimes one killed the other,

  was killed by the other.

  It happened to the men of ancient times,

  to men of the Middle Ages,

  to men of modern times.

  Kim Seong-ju of the North-West Youth League

  and Mun Bong-je were great friends.

  Even though they made no oath in blood,

  they did go up Mount Namsan, take an oath in liquor

  and smash the glasses:

  ‘If you die, I die too.’

  As for their loyalty to Syngman Rhee,

  Kim Seong-ju was the more vehement,

  and Mun Bong-je lagged behind.

  When the allies recaptured Pyongyang,

  the Americans appointed Kim Seong-ju, of all people,

  governor of North Pyeongan province.

  Later Kim Seong-ju dropped out

  and Mun Bong-je swam upstream like a fish.

  What happened?

  Unexpectedly

  Kim Seong-ju, in a fit of pique, became election manager

  for Cho Bong-am of the Progressive Party.

  For that, Syngman Rhee detested Kim Seong-ju more than anyone.

  On June 25, 1953,

  the third anniversary of the outbreak of war,

  Kim Seong-ju was arrested by the military police.

  Allowed no family visits,

  he was killed by the military police

  under the command of Won Yong-deok.

  He was killed under Martial Law,

  by authority of the recently enacted National Security Law

  on the fabricated charge that he had conspired to assassinate the president

  Kim Seong-ju’s path was that of the first Republic of modern Korea.

  The Younger Brother Stayed Behind

  In July that year

  the People’s Army came down like a torrent,

  from Hongcheon to Wonju, from Wonju to Yeongcheon.

  Refugees came streaming down, too,

  with a pot, some bowls,

  a bag of rice, a bottle of salt.

  In every village they passed

  the villagers killed cows or pigs and sold the meat.

  The village people also sold

  their belongings one by one.

  In any case, the livestock would soon be requisitioned

  or carried off by the army.

  So they killed them and

  received 5 won for a pound of beef,

  2 won for a pound of pork.

  They boiled them in soy sauce and sold that, too.

  Gu Bon-yeong from Yeongcheon

  killed two pigs

  and sold them to the refugees.

  He sold his goats and killed chickens to sell them, too.

  Having sold everything

  Gu Bon-yeong himself had to flee southward

  seven hundred li downstream

  along the Nakdong River,

  ending up in Busan.

  Gu Bon-yeong’s younger brother, Bon-ho, stayed behind.

  ‘You leave, Brother,

  and take Mother,’

  he said; ‘I must stay.

  If the People’s Army arrives,

  I’ll live in their world,’ he said.

  ‘If the Southern army arrives,

  I’ll live in their world.’

  His married elder brother had taken the land

  their father inherited, fields and paddies.

  Bon-ho was an old bachelor with nothing.

  He could live with nothing, he said,

  in whatever world he found himself.

  That old bachelor Bon-ho

  followed the People’s Army when they retreated.

  Nobody in his family thought he would turn up one night

  in their home as a spy.

  Little Cheon-dong

  In the backcountry of Sangju at the foot of Mount Sobaek

  lay a village

  of only eleven households.

  It was a remote village,

  with neither right wing nor left.

  Because the world refused to stay still,

  these villagers too

  followed the head of the neighbouring village, just over the hill,r />
  and joined the refugees on the road.

  From the start they had hard times.

  Looking back after setting off,

  already their houses and their village

  looked far away.

  Carrying half a sack of rice on his back,

  a man dragged along two goats.

  The older child carried the bedding,

  the younger something lighter.

  His pregnant wife went into labour.

  Screaming on the grass by the hill path,

  she frightened the goats she’d been dragging along

  and gave birth to a blood-covered baby.

  The man set up a cauldron so she could eat seaweed soup.

  He named the new-born Cheon-dong,

  meaning ‘live a thousand years’.

  The baby’s left hand had six fingers,

  so he tied the fifth and sixth together with thread.

  There was no going back.

  Mother and child spent a while

  in someone’s draughty back room.

  Then when the People’s Army was near

  they took to the road once again.

  Cheon-dong was lucky:

  his mother was healthy and brimming with milk.

  Kim Jin-yeol

  War made a person swell up

  into someone totally different.

  In the train of refugees

  he stole

  five wristwatches

  two gold turtles

  twenty-four gold buttons

  three gold hair-pins

  eight gold rings

  and seven thousand won in cash.

  He was so delighted he whistled, which tickled his ribs.

  He approached a sleeping woman who had a fox-fur muffler

  and stealthily removed the muffler from around her neck.

  He approached an old man driven into a corner by people’s pushing

  and took the bundle he was clutching as he slept.

  Inside he found some cash

  and several house deeds.

  Amazing!

  There are guys who get rich even while they’re fleeing for their lives.

  How amazing!

  Once safely settled in some unfamiliar city,

  he fooled a woman into becoming his wife.

  Kim Jin-yeol,

  son of a stationer at Uljiro 3-ga, Seoul.

  Before he fled South,

  he had never stolen,

  had never looked at a woman.

  Bak Gwan-hyeok

  Only once did he do good.

  Jin-Su’s father was

  a miser all his life,

  a bully all his life,

  a liar all his life,

  always abusing and exploiting.

  Old Bak Gwan-hyeok.

  But as he lay dying, at the age of seventy-seven.

  he called for his farmhand Myeong-gu.

  From his lips issued these words:

  ‘You are my son by our kitchen maid.

  The half-acre of paddy over in Jindong is yours.’

  Then he spoke to his eldest son,

  Jin-su:

  ‘Myeong-gu has our blood in his veins.’

  That ruthless old man

  had survived in safety

  even under the Communists.

  Arrowroot-vine sinews his whole life long.

  Yi Yeong-geun

  In the days of the Liberal Party

  he was arrested by Counter-Intelligence.

  You bloody red!

  Agent for Kim Il-sung!

  Agent for Jo Bong-am!

  Bastard!

  You wretched liberals,

  how dare you say anything against His Excellency Syngman Rhee,

  you bloody reds!

  For one full week,

  for all but three or four hours a day,

  he suffered

  every kind of torture.

  Enough to bring Ulsan Rock on Mount Seorak crumbling down.

  Through torture

  torturers get to know through and through

  the one they are torturing.

  They got to know that most manly of men,

  that most human of humans,

  that most admirable man, Yi Yeong-geun.

  Baaastard! Fine fellow! Human of humans!

  He framed the founding declaration of the Progressive Party.

  He followed Jo Bong-am, its leader,

  and was close to Bak Jin-mok.

  Before Jo Bong-am was arrested

  Yi Yeong-geun urged him

  to go into exile in India:

  he’d arrange for a ship to smuggle him out.

  Two days later Jo Bong-am was arrested.

  Jo Bong-am was executed.

  Yi Yeong-geun, most human of humans,

  left for Japan in a smuggler’s boat.

  His horselaugh was loud.

  His inward heart was deep.

  He never spoke of past pains

  or present poverty.

  By himself, alone, he preserved the world of comrades and old friends.

  Gamak Valley

  During wartime the men die,

  the women survive.

  Cockerels have their necks twisted and die,

  hens sit on eggs.

  At Gamak Valley in Yeonsan,

  north of Nonsan in South Chungcheong

  sharp hills

  approach the ridges of Mount Gyeryong.

  Fifty men died there, once,

  while two men

  twisted their hair into topknots and revered Kim Il-bu’s esoteric Jeongyeok.

  The small room, the door of which is never opened

  was pitch dark even at midday.

  Yeonsan’s Gamak Valley.

  Some forty women survived:

  old widows,

  young concubine widows,

  young widows,

  old maids.

  If an unfamiliar man appears, their eyes light up.

  They each offer a gourd of water with a willow leaf on it.

  ‘You must be thirsty.’

  ‘You look thirsty.’

  ‘You’re thirsty.’

  The woman from Buyeo with long cheek-bones,

  hastily comes forward.

  ‘Drink this water.

  I have no idea who you are or where you are from,

  yet your face looks familiar.

  If you are hungry

  I will warm some cold rice, so you can eat before you go on.’

  The woman from Ganggyeong poured the water out of her gourd, grumbling:

  ‘Yesterday she was making up to a male dog,

  today she’s clinging to a man instead of a beast, that slut.’

  One Schoolgirl’s Life

  Jo Eun-seon,

  Jo Sang-yeon’s sister in Sinchon,

  was so pretty, always quiet and bright

  like a rising moon, like moonlight.

  Each of the five stalls in the toilets in Sinchon primary school

  had the following graffiti:

  Jo Eun-seon’s mine.

  Jo Eun-seon’s xx is gold-rimmed.

  I want to suck Jo Eun-seon’s milk.

  Jo Eun-seon is xx

  Jo Eun-seon’s my wife.

  Jo Eun-seon’s the sun of our nation.

  That Jo Eun-seon was in fourth year of teachers’ training college.

  Her brother

  served as vice-chairman of the local People’s Commission.

  After the reds withdrew,

  she was arrested

  and raped by the head of public security.

  When the police came in,

  the police lieutenant raped her.

  The constables

  raped her.

  Several more people

  raped her.

  Then

  she was buried alive.

  Thus ended a schoolgirl’s life.

  Today’s Meal Table

  Shin Jang-heon, in his s
hirt-sleeves,

  unfolds the morning paper wide.

  He deplores the news, his laments ready-made:

  ‘Fighting breaking out again… the world’s going to the dogs, to the dogs…’

  Where did he learn

  that the world cannot be made of peace,

  that the world cannot be made of love,

  that human goodness is all lies,

  that human evil alone is not a lie?

  ‘The world’s going to the dogs, to the dogs….’

  ‘The world is all made up of thieves.’

  At the table, lamenting, he had three glasses of wine.

  On the front page: twenty-one enemy soldiers killed in combat in Inje.

  Page three: smuggling organisations rounded up in Busan, Masan, Yeosu,

  and, oh, one mutilation murder.

  Han Jae-deok

  During the Japanese colonial period

  he studied French

  at Waseda University, Japan.

  He was mad about André Gide:

  La Porte Étroite

  Symphonie Pastorale.

  Then

  he fell for socialism,

 

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