The largest concentration of Koreans is in the
Yanbian Korean Autonomous Prefecture in eastern Jilin
Province. Under its jurisdiction are the cities of Yanji and
Tumen, and the counties of Yanji, Helong, Antu, Huichun,
Wangqing and Dunhua, covering a total area of 41,500 sq. km.
The Yanbian Korean Autonomous Prefecture is a
beautiful, majestic land of high mountains and deep valleys.
The land rises to 2,744 meters above sea level to the
highest peak of the Changbai Mountains -- White Head Summit.
This is an extinct volcano, from the crater lake of which
spring the Yalu and Tumen rivers, flowing south and north
respectively, and forming the boundary with the Democratic
People's Republic of Korea to the east.
The
area is accessible nowadays by both road and rail, except
for the mountain-locked Hunchun District. The prefecture has
1,600 km of railways and 3,700 km of highways and branch
roads.
Another community of Koreans lives in
the Changbai Korean Autonomous County in southeastern Jilin.
The area is one of China's major sources of
timber and forest products, including ginseng, marten pelts
and deer antlers. It is also a habitat for many wild
animals, including tigers.
Copper, lead, zinc
and gold have been mined here since the Qing Dynasty
(1644-1911), and the area also has deposits of iron,
antimony, phosphorus, graphite, quartz, limestone and oil
shale.
Yanbian is also blessed with
agricultural riches and is a major tobacco producer. It is
famous for apples and pears, which have been exported since
1955.
The ancestors of the Korean ethnic group
migrated from the Korean peninsula from about the late 17th
century, mostly peasants fleeing from their oppressive
feudal landlords. Especially following a severe famine in
the northern part of Korea in 1869, they settled down in
large numbers in what is now the Yanbian area. Another wave
of migration took place in the early years of this century
when Japan annexed Korea and drove many peasants off the
land. The Japanese seizure of the Manchurian provinces
further served to drive landless Koreans to settle in
Northeast China.
The Koreans have their own
spoken and written language, which is thought to belong to
the Altaic family. Their alphabet is a simple, ingenious
one, and the Koreans are very proud of
it.
Customs
The traditional
Korean dress is white, a symbol of simplicity and serenity.
Men wear baggy trousers fastened at the ankles and a jacket
which fastens on the right; sometimes they wear a
high-crowned black horsehair hat. Women wear voluminous
skirts and a tight jacket which reaches just below the
armpits.
Their cuisine is very spicy and
includes kimchi (pickled vegetables), cold noodles, sticky
rice cakes and dog meat.
Yanbian is fairly
evenly populated, with villages set a few miles apart from
each other and ranging in size from about a dozen households
to several scores. The houses are built of wood with
low-eaved tile or thatched roofs. They are heated by flues
running under a raised platform in the main rooms, which
serves as a bed and also a place to sit on. Shoes are
removed before entering the house.
The Koreans
are very fond of music. They sometimes sing and dance to the
accompaniment of drums and flutes in the fields or on
construction sites. Traditional festivals are celebrated
heartily, especially the Lunar New Year, and the Mid-Autumn
Festival. Other occasions for merriment are the 100th day
after a baby's birth and a person's 60th
birthday.
In the old days, men labored in the
fields while women worked around the house. The eldest son
became the head of the family upon the death or
incapacitation of the father. Monogamy was practiced but
early marriage and adoption of child brides and boys to
carry on the family tree were common.
Cultural
Progress
Culturally, the Koreans suffered
worst of all the peoples enslaved by the Japanese; they were
forced to speak the Japanese language and adopt Japanese
surnames. But Japan's attempt to destroy Korean culture came
to naught in 1945, and there was a resurgence of cultural
awareness among the Koreans.
Newspapers in the
Korean language sprang up, including the Jilin Daily (later
renamed the Yanbian Daily), Heilongjiang Daily and the
Liaoning Daily. In 1947, the Yanbian Korean Publishing House
was founded in Yanji, and the Yanbian People's Radio went on
the air. Special Korean programs are also aired by the
Central People's Broadcasting Station and the Heilongjiang
People's Broadcasting Station.
Particular
attention was paid to education. In 1949, the Yanbian
University was founded in Yanji. Other institutions of
higher learning established during the early post-liberation
period include the Yanbian Medical Institute, the Yanbian
Amateur Agricultural University and a teachers college.
Universal secondary education was realized as far back as
1958.
As a result, there are now large numbers
of people of Korean origin at all levels of leadership in
many areas of China, and at renowned educational
institutions in China's major cities. The Yanbian
area is noted also for its culture and art troupes and
cultural organizations. At the prefectural level, these
include the United Association of Yanbian Culture and Art
Workers and the Yanbian Branch of the Chinese Writers
Association. The Yanbian song and dance, modern drama and
theatrical companies are famous all over the country, and
many Korean artists study at advanced institutes in other
parts of China.
The Korean ethnic minority has
set up an efficient network of health care centers and
hospitals, including the Yanbian Hospital, a tuberculosis
treatment center, an anti-epidemic hospital and a
psychiatric sanatorium. The Yanbian Korean Autonomous
Prefecture boasts high standards of maternity, childcare and
family planning, as well as an enviable record in the fight
against endemic diseases.