

Korean Schools in Japan
In 1948, after the Japan’s defeat, the General Headquarters and Japanese government ordered that the Chosen gakko, schools for Koreans in Japan,ō be shut down. Koreans in Osaka strongly resisted, and 16-year-old Kim Taeil was even shot and killed by the police. This was the Hanshin Education Incident. 70 years have passed, but the Japanese oppression continues. They've removed the Chosen gakkoō from being eligible for free education. Gaining strength from the growing hatred from the conservatives, the Abe administration is misusing the educational issue as a means to cause political strife. In the midst of ongoing conflicts in Japan, nonfiction writer KO Chanyu has directed Korean Schools in Japan, compiling a history of the Koreans' fight for education.
You may like

The Voices of the Silenced

One for All, All for One

Discrimination

Chang Akio, Fallen leaves in sea

Soup and Ideology

Twinsters

Dear Pyongyang

Arirang Rhapsody

Kim Il Sung's Children

I Am From Chosun

Memories Showers Seas

Children Gone to Poland

Strangers on the Field

Ikaino

The Hanbok on the Court

Our School

To Be Takei

Avatar: Creating the World of Pandora

Heart of a Dog

Seduced and Abandoned

Night Will Fall

The Battered Bastards of Baseball

The Mole: Undercover in North Korea

The Class of ‘92