Nam Young Park
Bio
Nam Young Park was a Korean interpreter in the Army during the war. He first worked as an anti-Communist student leader which led to his capture. He eventually became an interpreter for the U.S. Army, which led to the opportunity to study in the United States. When he visits Korea yearly, he is now able to reflect on the legacy of the war and how it has led to many changes. Nam Young Park’s life is an example of how war can change the path of someone’s life.
Video Clips
Captured by Communists
Nam Young Park describes how he was captured and imprisoned by Communists in Korea as a result of his anti-Communist activities as a student. He shares his memory of hiding in a ceiling when they came to find him and how his mother screamed. He recounts his surrender and succeeding twenty-seven-day-long imprisonment.
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Life as an Interpreter
Nam Young Park explains what it was like to be an interpreter for the Army during the Korean War. He recalls serving along many important military officials. He believes it was due to his service that he was able to study in the United States.
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Changes in Korea
Nam Young Park shares how he visits Korea at least once per year. He explains what has changed, including the beautification and modernization of Korea over the past fifty years. He details how after studying in the United States, he became a scientist and was asked to go back to work in his home country by President Park, who he believes as a great leader.
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Video Transcript
0:00
N: My name is Nam Park. My whole Korean
0:04
name is Nam Yong Park. I was born in
0:08
North Korea. Actually
0:11
North Korea. I: You were born in North Korea?
0:13
N: North Korea. And I was born in March 15
0:19
- When think I was a 6 years old,
0:25
because my father’s transfer from bank
0:28
to South Cholla Namdo, we moved to Mokpo,
0:35
southwestern corner. I attended Mokpo
0:39
high school, grammar school. Then in
0:43
nineteen fifty, April 30, I still remember,
0:47
after I was admit… accepted to attended Korea
0:52
University, I left my hometown April 31.
0:59
And within some 30 days, unfortunately,
1:05
started the Korean War, June the twenty sixth.
1:09
So my education was suspended due to the
1:14
war and I have to spend the next three
1:17
months in Seoul under the occupation of
1:22
North Korea. The reason why I did not go
1:28
to the, my hometown or I didn’t took
1:34
refugee to Pusan (Busan) was that during
1:37
my high school days I was head of
1:41
what they call, chief of the Ho Gup Tan. How
1:48
we gonna say in English,
1:50
defense… Student Defense Force. And also I
1:56
was actively involved fighting against
1:59
in the communist movement in Mokpo. So I
2:03
was afraid of the, going to the
2:06
hometown. I: Can you tell me a little bit
2:08
about that and what you had to do?
2:12
N: Actually before start war, Korean War, in
2:16
June nineteen forty nine, first part of
2:21
nineteen fifty, communist movement was
2:24
very strong in South Korea, particularly
2:29
after what we call Yosu Sun Chun,
2:33
revolt, and Jeju (Cheju) island’s revolt. So
2:40
in other words in a communist movement
2:43
was very very, very strong in my hometown
2:45
particularly Kim Dae Jung, former president of
2:51
Korea’s hometown was Mokpo was not far
2:55
from my home. I still remember his group
2:59
attacked one of the police station set
3:02
the fire. When I was involved fighting
3:08
against communist movement, the many
3:13
occasion to be killed by the
3:18
communists so actually I was a really
3:22
afraid of going back to my
3:25
hometown when communist occupied the Seoul.
3:30
But anyway at the end of the third
3:36
months I was captured by the some 50
3:42
North Korean soldiers and I stayed… I was
3:48
(im)prisoned about 27 days in Seoul. I: Where were you
3:53
captured at? You were captured in Seoul? N: In
3:55
Seoul. What they called the prison of the defense…
3:58
I think was the what they call the
4:02
defense security forces. I: How were you
4:06
captured? N: Evidently they, every night
4:10
they are looking for the young man or
4:15
whoever they thinks an anti-communist.
4:18
And evidently one of the neighbors saw,
4:22
or realized, I was living in my
4:26
cousin’s home. So I assume they reported.
4:32
Then one night, at two o’clock in the
4:35
morning, two trucks came, surrounded house.
4:40
I was hiding in the ceiling and every
4:44
night when ever getting dark, hide in
4:47
ceiling, or hide underground
4:50
daytime because weather (was) hot. When communist
4:55
start to me and poking with long
4:57
bayonet I realized there is no way
5:01
to survive. Then my mother screamed. Then
5:08
as soon as the North Korean guards
5:14
realized somebody upstairs said I, “we
5:19
gonna shoot you, just come down”. I had
5:25
surrendered then that was the beginning
5:29
of my prison life at the security
5:34
police. I: So you were a prisoner for 27
5:37
days? N: Yes, until the almost week before
5:41
United Nations landed Incheon (Inchon). I: Can you tell
5:46
me a little bit about while you were in
5:47
prison, while you were a prisoner, your
5:50
lifestyle and…? N: But because of the I was
5:52
involved in as a president of the high
5:55
school, president of the student defense
6:00
unit, and and also what they called Han Yong,
6:05
Korean Student Association.
6:07
That was a very strong one of
6:11
student… organization against communist
6:15
student. So when I was a junior,
6:18
senior year we caught a lot of communist
6:21
student. So I was one of the targeted…
6:27
Well interesting thing was the… three
6:31
days after the Communist occupy Seoul,
6:34
Korea University communist student
6:39
come to my uncle’s home to find me
6:43
but I had notified already to my uncles
6:46
whoever comes looking for me just tell
6:50
them I went to the hometown. So I…
6:56
am pretty sure before I reach hometown,
6:59
if I went South I would be
7:00
arrested. That is a part of the beginning
7:05
of a first part of the war story. I: Will you
7:08
tell me a little bit about while you were
7:09
a prisoner though, how did they treat you?
7:14
N: This is another hard, memorable… always
7:20
whenever I give talk to the
7:22
church. Feeding one meal a day, wasn’t
7:28
rice, that’s it. The (Re)public Korea Training
7:32
Center Number One, sent over there.
7:37
During the training period, Korean… one of
7:42
the Korean Military Advisory Group
7:45
approached me, find out where did you
7:49
learn English. Said I was college student
7:53
I picked up my English at the 25th division
7:56
and also 5th US Air Force. Okay, then he
8:02
explained to me here in Jeju Island we
8:08
have a Korean Military Advisory Group. We
8:14
need interpreters.
8:18
Then also they have interpreter section,
8:22
in headquarters. So as soon as you
8:27
finished your training period we gonna
8:32
send you to the… instead of sending
8:35
front line we gonna send you the interpreter
8:38
section. Then I was attached, immediately
8:43
assigned to one of the major as interpreter.
8:47
I: Were you bit relieved that you weren’t gonna be on the
8:50
front lines? N: I heard that within five days
8:53
all my classmate was a dead in front
8:56
line. So I was so lucky to be able to
8:59
work and as the interpreter with the PFC (Private First Class).
9:05
The meaning, meantime so many famous
9:11
generals, like Ben Fritz (sp?), Lee Choi (sp), Baek
9:15
Son Yop (sp) is coming and go. And I was
9:18
translating that training center,
9:21
training section. General Park, Baek Son Yop
9:26
listen to my interpretation, said “Why you
9:32
didn’t become, applied in interpreters
9:35
officers unit?” So I didn’t know it. “Okay,
9:41
you’re going to be a interpreters officer
9:44
with your quality.” Then Korea Military Advisory
9:48
Group recommended me and went to Daegu (Taegu)
9:52
Those days they had Adjutants
9:57
School, interpreters…
10:01
interpreters school for the one month
10:04
train for officers. From PFC to become
10:09
first lieutenant. Haha. I: That’s quite a jump.
10:15
N: Quite a jump from PFC to the first lieutenant.
10:18
And so of course you know there
10:23
now are recording my
10:25
enlistment, three months, or one months the period.
10:30
Korean soldier, enlisted man’s life… Food was so
10:39
poor, not only that the amount of the
10:43
rice and soup just unthinkable. But
10:50
whenever Korean Military Advisory Group
10:53
officers inspect we can get the bowl of…
10:58
full bowl of the rice and a soup with a
11:02
bean sprout. That memory still my,
11:07
rings my head, how the Korean government
11:11
treated all our soldier like, in spite
11:16
of government issue proper amount of the
11:20
food. Now the interesting thing was the
11:25
while I was working as a PFC
11:26
interpreter, English interpreter, I met
11:30
the so many famous American generals.
11:34
They so impressed and said “We have a
11:39
lot of Korean English interpreter officers
11:42
with the rank of first lieutenant,
11:46
you are PFC.” Yes, but the lucky… General
11:53
Baek Son Yop after looks like he just
11:58
found me said, “You cannot stay here
12:00
uhh are we going to make you first
12:02
lieutenant.” Well those days, you know, just
12:05
one word from general completely change
12:09
from PFC to first lieutenant. I: Can you, can
12:13
you tell me how the pay changed from
12:15
whenever you first decided to join the
12:17
US military to you getting promoted from
12:21
PFC to lieutenant how did the pay change?
12:23
N: Pay scale? Well of course when I worked in
12:26
American unit, those days, I don’t how
12:29
much I made, but plenty of money,
12:34
plenty of money to spend with
12:37
friends at night. Of course while I was
12:40
working at unit sleeping
12:42
quarters, good meal three days, I can
12:45
drink coffee in any time just 24 hours.
12:48
Was it KATUSA (Korean Augmentee to the United States Army?). N: No, no the civilian.
12:52
Then when I joined Korean Army,
12:55
I don’t know maybe one dollars. But take
13:00
less than one dollar, couldn’t buy a
13:01
toothpaste. So those days most of the
13:05
enlisted men if have connection with
13:08
family, have money, parents visit training
13:13
center, I got money. Then when I become
13:19
officer, I had a officer quarter. Food are
13:27
completely different in compared to
13:31
which I used to eat. Officer meal was
13:35
about 1,000 times different. Meat with
13:39
in a soup, you know of course had the
13:42
kimchi then a couple of side dish at
13:46
officers mess hall. And paycheck was
13:49
about twenty dollars month. Then
13:54
clean uniform. One thing had the freedom go
13:58
out every night and come back. I: So it was
14:04
a good raise, good promotion? N: That’s a kind
14:08
of heaven and the hells. I2: Was it in
14:11
Jeju (Cheju)? N: Yeah, Jeju and then come to
14:13
Nonsan. I2: Nonsan.
14:16
N: Then I was outside Nonsan. So those days… I2: When was that, when did
14:19
you go to Jeju Do? N: 1951. I2: 51. N: Yes.
14:24
I2: What was your major mission there
14:26
in Jeju Do? N: Training center. I2: Training, so
14:30
you trained the other Korean? N: No, sent to the
14:33
for the training, basic
14:36
training, infantry training. I2: Ohh, I see. N: Then
14:40
they found me, but I have to have a
14:45
one-month (garbled) or three months of the
14:47
training period then
14:48
officially become Republic of Korea’s Army.
14:54
Then I was assigned to another
14:56
interpreter. Then later officer so my
15:01
life style was a completely just changed
15:04
so happy. I2: As an interpreter what was your
15:09
main mission, who did you actually help? What
15:12
was the main mission? N: At the beginning
15:17
in the Korean Army we had a 500 Korean
15:24
Military Advisory Group, what called KMAG,
15:28
Korean Military… All American advisors
15:32
attached to the all Korean unit. They
15:35
were the one responsible, supplying even
15:39
checking how the soldiers got the food
15:45
designated amount, so on. Interpreters
15:50
officers, men in front-line, the
15:53
coordinating when I did United Nations
15:55
Army particularly when drop the bomb, firing
16:00
the cannons, whatever. Then when
16:04
advance, during the advancement,
16:07
retreatment. All interpreter officers acted
16:12
they had a great job working. But I was
16:16
luckily assigned again to number two,
16:19
Number Two RO (Republic of) Korean Training Center,
16:26
Nonsan. Then in the army, those days,
16:34
interpreters officer, medical officer and
16:41
what they call the law…
16:46
what they called… bok kwan? I2: Judge. N: Judge, elite
16:54
group. They are picked up all, they all
16:57
from the college student or college
16:59
educated. So particularly interpreter
17:01
officers were considered one of the
17:04
elite group. Quite number of the English
17:10
interpreter officers become adjunct
17:14
general to general… for the general…
17:19
chongsok bukwan. I: Were there other,
17:21
many interpreters? N: Yes, at Nonsan we had
17:25
about 18 interpreter officers. We have
17:29
interpreter officers unit. So every day go
17:33
out with the military advisor and
17:37
checking, interpreting training sessions.
17:42
Then so many American generals, even a
17:47
French, those there with the French were
17:50
foreign officers coming to observe
17:53
training center so I was translating.
17:58
Meantime I met all famous generals like
18:04
Ben Fritz (sp?) and so on. Then, even, I was
18:12
attached to the general, general’s aide. That
18:19
what called aide-de-camp. Aide-de-camp
18:22
in the French. So I become a general’s
18:24
aide. So my life in the Army wasn’t bad
18:30
in associating with the general, making
18:35
arrangement, all were acting as a secret…
18:37
secretary or so on. Then, I…
18:41
meantime 1953-54 many of the interpreter
18:48
officers going to the US, abroad so I did
18:54
the same way. I applied in
18:59
U.S. a school. 1956 I came to the
19:04
Davison College. I had a special
19:10
order by the, by the defense minister
19:14
discharge, come to us I studied abroad. So
19:18
I was educated at the North Carolina,
19:20
majored in history. Then I did my
19:27
graduate work, history again at the
19:29
University Houston. I went to the… but
19:32
Houston was a booming town, at the oil is
19:36
nineteen sixty. I switched to the geology
19:42
and later I become what they call
19:47
micro-paleontologist specializing
19:52
fossils, most actually calcareous nannofossils,
19:56
specializing calcareous nannofossils.
19:59
So I become… Those days I was really
20:03
lucky. Electron microscopes come in
20:06
nineteen sixty. The new field of studying
20:11
nannofossils applying to find a oil, I
20:16
was the first one. Gulf Oil hired me and
20:21
sent me training, Columbia
20:23
University, Miami University. In the US,
20:29
those day, only three specialized
20:33
professors. Oil company didn’t have enough money
20:36
so Gulf research sent me to personal
20:41
train from one-to-one ratio professors.
20:45
You know how to apply (to) finding oil.
20:48
Those days very popular with the other
20:51
subject so I become kinda curious in
20:57
nannofossils, specializing. Even later I
21:00
was assigned the training of south, south,
21:03
Latin American
21:05
geologist. So I had a good time working 31
21:09
years with Gulf Research Center. So I
21:16
settled here Houston. I was the first
21:18
one come to the Houston 1960 with my
21:21
wife, those days who was the majoring in a
21:25
French. I: Did you meet your wife in Korea?
21:27
N: No, this is another interesting story, a blind
21:31
date in North Carolina my senior year. I
21:35
never met the Korean about three years.
21:39
In south in those days is very hard to find
21:42
Korean ladies. At the Davison College
21:50
they had some winter dance so
21:54
fraternity brother made (garbled), you know
21:58
you find a Korean girl, made a blind date.
22:03
Finally, two years later we married.
22:06
settled in Houston. Then I realized
22:12
enough Koreans start coming so
22:14
about five Korean get together we
22:16
organized Korean American Association,
22:20
that was the beginning. I: Y’all started
22:23
that? N: Yes, so at the beginning 1961 only
22:30
nine or eight Koreans, beside 14 Korean
22:41
GI married families settled here. They
22:45
are the one, actually, really try to help
22:49
organize… Korean Association.
22:53
Because they are lonely, uneducated ladies
22:57
so whoever comes to school they are the
23:01
one asking, and encouraging let us
23:05
organize some Korean organization and
23:09
get together. I: Can you tell the audience
23:12
some of the differences between the
23:14
North and South Korean lifestyle?
23:19
How is it different? N: Lots of women
23:22
watching seeing news, newsletters and
23:25
news, and now a days the email. I don’t know
23:28
the South Korea they can watch
23:31
the North Korean email or not but I’ve
23:33
been receiving North Korean the
23:35
lifestyle every day. Such poor, the so
23:40
many hungry people, hungry children. They…
23:45
So many our church in a Houston sending
23:48
you know missionaries and food, right
23:51
now is suspended. Whoever
23:55
visited, whoever the observed in North
23:59
Korean lifestyle we know it. Then you
24:04
look at South Korea, now left as an
24:08
economically just way up. Whenever
24:13
I visit the Korea, normally I visit
24:15
once a year, South Koreans actually
24:19
well-dressed. I think I’m (proud of that,)
24:22
better than America. They are well
24:25
dressed up and every night go to the
24:29
bars, karaoke, (ordinary) eat good
24:32
food, enjoy the life. How could the people,
24:38
you know, forgetting that the Korean War
24:41
the communist invasion? You know
24:43
they are just becoming a pro communist.
24:47
Just I couldn’t understand. So younger
24:50
people today just they don’t know what’s
24:53
going on, seems to me. The Houston is the same.
24:57
Older people who experienced the
25:00
Korean War are really against the
25:06
communist movement, pro-communist groups.
25:10
I: You said that you go back to Korea about
25:12
once every year can you tell me about
25:14
some things you witnessed and how it
25:16
grew to be as successful as it is today?
25:23
N: When I visit, even 10 years ago, the
25:28
building’s, physical, just buildings,
25:32
streets, and the beautification. Then all
25:38
hospitals, etc. just modernize and super.
25:47
This is what word development, Korean
25:52
government. Then, meantime, for the last, what
25:56
50 years, look at Koreans are
26:00
well-educated at the first class
26:02
universities, colleges they are
26:06
dedicating. I: You never thought that South
26:08
Korea would or could ever flourish the
26:10
way that it did and just expand and grow
26:13
and rise on top? N: But, we expected growth
26:18
slowly, not like that is so rough time element.
26:22
Of course we had a wonderful
26:26
leadership in Korea. Personally speaking at
26:31
the beginning I opposed when a military
26:35
took over government, President Park. But
26:39
he did a wonderful job. He was the one
26:44
approached the Korean scientists in the US,
26:50
1971, he said, “Please come to the Korea
26:54
then observe what we are doing. If you
27:00
would like to work for Korea
27:02
we’re gonna pay your same scale what you
27:05
are making.” He invited Korean
27:09
scientists, first time in nineteen
27:12
seventy one, fifty Korean scientists. I
27:16
was one, went to Korea; well treated.
27:20
Then he was begging, “please come to your
27:26
native country, show what you learned and then
27:32
dedicate for
27:34
Korea. Then Korean was KIST (Korean Institute of Science and Technology), Korean
27:36
science, the organization that’s
27:39
just popping up and everything’s
27:41
changing. Then president Park, when he
27:47
made a highway system, then economic
27:51
situation completely changed. As
27:55
everybody knows our incomes averaged
27:57
ninety dollars in in 1960s, 70. Now, well
28:03
yesterday when I was reading a Time
28:05
magazine, our pay scale is almost same as
28:08
the USA. It’s amazing, for such a small
28:14
country. I: Do you think it’s important for
28:17
younger generations to understand and
28:19
know the sacrifices and contributions
28:21
made during the Korean War? N: Of course
28:24
because of the… Now younger Koreans
28:29
are well educated but then they want to
28:32
learn too but, but they are not the kind
28:39
of deeply concerned what we have
28:42
experienced in the during the nineteen
28:44
fifty Korean War. So some of the young
28:47
men they don’t know actually what our
28:54
generation, like our generation, have
28:56
experienced under the communist invasion.
29:00
So many refugees, the destructions, hunger.
29:08
Still I think… when I think of nineteen
29:12
fifty under the communist occupation I
29:14
ate one meal a day then when United
29:16
Nations came back from Incheon, such
29:20
poor people are just begging food. Now
29:28
young people, as I mentioned before, well
29:31
dressed, over well dressed. In
29:37
every major main street good food, good
29:42
music, westernized, hairstyles are
29:47
unbelievable. But the way of dress,
29:50
girl and boys are different. You know I
29:53
am happy. You know Korean living
29:56
standards (gestures hands upward) for that much. If our young
30:04
generation think of what we have
30:06
experienced, maybe different story.
30:16
I think we can do it. We’re going to
30:18
achieve but I’d like to see before I
30:22
die, I’m 84 years old, the time is
30:27
coming, unfortunately in our complicated
30:33
in Korean political situation we are
30:37
leaving an age of turmoil and
30:39
uncertainty. But, as I’m Christian, I
30:44
totally believe what God will do for us. Thank you.