Mullae Park | |
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Location | Mullae-dong, Yeongdeungpo District, Seoul, South Korea |
Coordinates | 37°30′58″N 126°53′38″E / 37.516019°N 126.893767°E |
Established | 1986 |
Mullae Park (Korean: 문래공원; Hanja: 文來公園) is a park in Mullae-dong, Yeongdeungpo District, Seoul, South Korea. The park was established in 1986, and is widely used for leisure and exercise by nearby residents.[1]
Before it was a park, it hosted a number of military facilities. Now, a large number of civilian amenities fill the area, including walkways, exercise equipment, playgrounds, and air purifiers.[2]
Relationship to Park Chung Hee
The park was once host to the South Korean Army's 6th District Headquarters: the birthplace of the May 16 Coup of 1961. It was during this coup that Park Chung Hee seized power.[2][3] All that remains of the former bases is an underground bunker, the entrance to which is now behind a locked and unmarked door, near a children's playground.[4]
Bust of Park
To commemorate this part of history, a bust depicting Park during his military years has been in the park since 1985.[3] In 2000, after the Center for Historical Truth and Justice unveiled research on Park's blood oath of loyalty to Japan, the bust had a Japanese Rising Sun Flag tied to it, was knocked over, and dragged to the campus of Hongik University.[4] The bust's nose was damaged in the process. The statue was reinstalled, and the nose was repaired by a memorial foundation to Park in 2006.[4] In December 2016, during protests for the impeachment of Park's daughter President Park Geun-hye, Choe Hwang (최황) wrote "remove" ("철거하라") in red spray paint on the statue. Choe wrote angrily on Facebook about Park Chung Hee's role as a pro-Japanese collaborator ("chinilpa") and military dictator. For this, he was fined one million won.[4]
The bust is now protected behind an iron fence. A nearby sign, prepared by the memorial foundation to Park, warns people of consequences for vandalism towards either the bust or the bunker.[4]
References
- ↑ "기후위기 극복 도시숲, 서울 영등포 문래공원에서 만나요". 생명의숲. Retrieved 2024-01-09.
- 1 2 "철공소 골목의 변신! 문래근린공원·문래창작촌". mediahub.seoul.go.kr (in Korean). Retrieved 2024-01-09.
- 1 2 "향토문화유적 - 문화관광". www.ydp.go.kr. Retrieved 2024-01-09.
- 1 2 3 4 5 손, 호철 (2021-07-23). "철거냐 존치냐, 서울 복판 박정희 흉상을 보며". www.pressian.com (in Korean). Retrieved 2024-01-09.
External links
- 박정희 전 대통령 흉상 페인트로 훼손 / YTN (Yes! Top News) on YouTube – News report on the spray paint incident. The 2000 incident is also mentioned. (in Korean)