"S2023-217a"의 두 판 사이의 차이

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==Story==
 
==Story==
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*Jo A-ra (1912-2003, pen name: Sosimdang) is considered the "Mother of Gwangju" for her service in the realm of education, social welfare, human rights, and the democratization movement.
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*Born in Naju, Jo was a Christian and sought to share with the poor and serve the community in the Christian spirit.
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*Jo attended Speer Memorial Girls' School in 1927, where her teacher was Kim Pil-rye (1891-1983), who founded the Gwangju YWCA. After graduating in 1931, she went to work as a teacher at Neel Girl's School. However, in 1933, it was found out that an anti-Japanese group had been organized at Speer Girls' School in 1929 while she was a student, which led to the closure of Speer Girls' School and her losing her position at Neel Girls' School.
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*After Korea's liberation in 1945, Jo A-ra and Kim Pil-rye reopened Speer Girls' School and continued working at the YWCA, which was rebuilt in 1947. Following the Korean War (1950-1953), she founded an orphanage, and later went on to found several schools for young women who had not received education.
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*During the May 18 Democratic Uprising, the YWCA became a center of the resistance operation, and Jo played an active role in organizing and preparing food for the demonstrators. She was arrested and jailed for six months as a result.
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*In 2015, the Sosimdang Jo A-ra Memorial Hall, was built in her honor in Yangnim-dong.
  
 
==Semantic Data==
 
==Semantic Data==
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===Contextual Relations===
 
 
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* type: 해설, 참고, 원문 / 사진, 동영상, 도면, 그림, 지도, 3D_지도, 3D_모델
 
 
==Bibliography==
 
 
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* id: [[인용전거]]
 
* type: 단행본, 논문, 도록, 자료집
 
* online resource: KCI, RISS, DBpia, 네이버 학술정보 .....
 
  
 
==Notes==
 
==Notes==

2024년 3월 9일 (토) 16:44 판


The Faces of Gwangju: Activists 》The Mother of Gwangju: Jo A-ra

Story

  • Jo A-ra (1912-2003, pen name: Sosimdang) is considered the "Mother of Gwangju" for her service in the realm of education, social welfare, human rights, and the democratization movement.
  • Born in Naju, Jo was a Christian and sought to share with the poor and serve the community in the Christian spirit.
  • Jo attended Speer Memorial Girls' School in 1927, where her teacher was Kim Pil-rye (1891-1983), who founded the Gwangju YWCA. After graduating in 1931, she went to work as a teacher at Neel Girl's School. However, in 1933, it was found out that an anti-Japanese group had been organized at Speer Girls' School in 1929 while she was a student, which led to the closure of Speer Girls' School and her losing her position at Neel Girls' School.
  • After Korea's liberation in 1945, Jo A-ra and Kim Pil-rye reopened Speer Girls' School and continued working at the YWCA, which was rebuilt in 1947. Following the Korean War (1950-1953), she founded an orphanage, and later went on to found several schools for young women who had not received education.
  • During the May 18 Democratic Uprising, the YWCA became a center of the resistance operation, and Jo played an active role in organizing and preparing food for the demonstrators. She was arrested and jailed for six months as a result.
  • In 2015, the Sosimdang Jo A-ra Memorial Hall, was built in her honor in Yangnim-dong.

Semantic Data

Node Description

id class groupName partName label hangeul hanja english infoUrl iconUrl
S2023-217a Story Episode The Mother of Gwangju: Jo A-ra The Mother of Gwangju: Jo A-ra http://dh.aks.ac.kr/~gwangju/wiki/index.php/S2023-217a http://dh.aks.ac.kr/~gwangju/icon/episode.png


Notes


Story Network Graph