"E2024-G182"의 두 판 사이의 차이
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| 10번째 줄: | 10번째 줄: | ||
==Story Map== | ==Story Map== | ||
*[[S2024-G027| Compassionate Hearts: Medicine, Care, and Social Service]] | *[[S2024-G027| Compassionate Hearts: Medicine, Care, and Social Service]] | ||
| − | ** [[E2024-G158|The People of | + | ** [[E2024-G158|The People of Jejung Hospital]] |
** [[E2024-G178|The Mother of Gwangju: Jo A-ra]] | ** [[E2024-G178|The Mother of Gwangju: Jo A-ra]] | ||
** [[E2024-G181|Minister Choe Heung-jong and His Devotion to Leprosy Patients]] | ** [[E2024-G181|Minister Choe Heung-jong and His Devotion to Leprosy Patients]] | ||
2025년 10월 11일 (토) 15:45 기준 최신판
Bak Sun-i and Her Devotion To Orphans
Narrative
Bak Sun-i (1921-1995) is known for having founded Choonghyunwon, the oldest childcare facility in Gwangju. She came to be known by the family of the missionary Robert M. Wilson (1880-1963) (1880-1963) from a young age, doing sewing work for the family to make a living. Through this, she naturally became familiar with the Western missionaries and the Gwangju Yangnim Church. In 1944, she married the singer Kim Saeng-ok, who had studied in Tokyo. However, she lost her husband in 1948 in the Yeosu-Suncheon Rebellion. From then on, she devoted herself to caring for 45 orphans at Missionary Wilson’s House in Yangnim History and Culture Village from 1949 to 1952, as the family had returned to America in 1948. Then, in 1952, she officially founded Choonghyunwon Orphanage in 1952 in Yangnim Village, with her work being continued by her daughter-in-law, Yu Hye-ryang.
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