Wanda King's life in the United States has been a good one.
But as a child in North Korea, she lived under communism and saw the effects of war. She remembers seeing red skies after atomic bombs were dropped on Japan and her mother warning, "Don't you go outside! You're going to be sick." As American bombs fell on her own country during the Korean War, she and her family fled south with hundreds of other refugees to escape the fighting. They ate insects and slept in rice paddies to survive.
"I don't have a happy life when I was young," she said. "I have a hard life."
Although conditions improved after the war, she was still living in poverty in 1962 when she met Ben King, a young soldier from Davie County. He fell in love with her, and he vowed not to leave South Korea without her.
She was 23 when she married him and left her family behind in Seoul. She built her own family in a new country.
Her children grew up with plenty of food and without fear of bombs falling in the night. King, now 68, watched with pride as they married and started forming their own families.
Despite all that she had, King mourned what she had lost.
Wednesday, July 16, 2008
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