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Maija Devine - Korean War
Maija Rhee Devine and her twin brother were born into a Korean refugee family in Manchuria in 1943. Her parents could not afford to keep her, so gave her to a friend, who then took Maija to Seoul and gave her to a childless couple. That couple raised Maija as their own daughter, but when they had no male children to carry on the Confucian traditions, her father took in a mistress shortly before the war. Maija talks at length about the family's complicated relationship with the mistress, about her experiences during the Korean War, and about her marriage in 1970 to Michael Devine, a Peace Corps volunteer working in Korea at the time.
Interview Links
Feature Excerpt
Chocolate from soldiers
Abstract
Interview Session 01 (Audio)
Related Materials
See also Maija Devine's entire interview in the 'Immigrant Stories' project collection.
Photos
Caption
Maija Rhee as a baby, taken shortly after her adoption in Seoul in 1943.
Where:
Seoul
When:
1943
Ownership:
Narrator’s photo
Caption
Maija, age eight (left), and her cousin, age five, on the right, circa 1951. The two spent the war years in Masan, South Korea.
Where:
Masan, South Korea
When:
1951
Ownership:
Narrator’s photo
Caption
Maija graduated from Sogang College in Seoul in 1965. Here she is pictured in her cap and gown alongside her adoptive father.
Where:
Seoul
When:
1965
Ownership:
Narrator’s photo
Caption
Maija's older biological brother, Soon-back Rhee, in his Korean Navy uniform circa 1952.
Where:
Unknown
When:
1952
Ownership:
Narrator’s photo