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Foreign Teachers in Korea Vilified by Anti-English Group

Group’s views don’t represent mainstream, says Korean diplomat

By Joan Delaney
Epoch Times Staff
Created: December 17, 2009 Last Updated: June 16, 2010
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“Their reactionary views and opinions do not represent the sentiment of Koreans toward Canadians or other foreign teachers,” Park told the CBC’s The Current.

Police are investigating the death threats. The campaign against foreign teachers began with a party put on by some English teachers in 2005 after which distasteful photos of Korean women and Western men were posted online.

According to The Korea Herald, one of the women pictured explained that the group's website, the Naver Cafe, called the women "Westerners' whores" and "prostitutes." The women's personal information was released and they were harassed by members of the group, suffering “incredible mental anguish" that required psychiatric treatment.

“There has been a recurring theme with the Anti-English Spectrum Group—they have been very insulting and abusive towards Korean women who have anything to do with foreign men,” Gaymer says.

The fact that Canadian pedophile Christopher Paul Neil taught English in Korea before being arrested in Thailand in 2007 has added fuel to the fire. Although Neil is not known to have committed any offences in Korea, the Anti-English Spectrum Group has used the situation to stoke anti-foreigner sentiment.

Of the estimated 20,000 foreigners teaching English in South Korea, about 5,000 are Canadian.

Andrea Vandom, a doctoral student at the University of California who has taught in Korea, sent a letter to the Internet provider used by the Anti-English Spectrum Group asking them to remove the group’s site.

Endorsed by ATEK, the letter said the group tries to pass itself off as a citizens’ organization dedicated to ensuring “upright” English education. But the fact that it focuses only on non-Korean teachers while ignoring “instances of problematic Korean teachers … make the group’s agenda of racial hatred very clear.”

“There's always been a little ethnocentrism in Korea,” says Don Baker, Associate Professor, Department of Asian Studies at the University of British Columbia.

The people involved in the anti-English teacher movement, Baker says, are products of an education system that for years taught that Koreans were a pure race.

“Until about five years ago Koreans were taught in school that Koreans were a pure race and unlike other people they've never had a mixture of genes; they're a pure people. The government has now changed that because they've got over a million foreign workers there.”

Baker, who travels to South Korea frequently, says the situation is exacerbated by the fact that the country has a shortage of women as a result of selective abortion.

“Koreans want to learn English, but they get turned off by the behaviour of the foreigners, especially when foreign men are dating some of the more attractive women in Korean society when there's a shortage of women in Korea.”

He also notes that Koreans are “extremely nationalistic” and take offence when some English teachers show their ignorance of and lack of interest in Korea’s 4,000-year culture.

“I've seen westerners in Korea who show, just the way they talk, that they really have no clue of the sophistication of Korean culture, and that really irritates Koreans.”






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