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According to the South Korean Embassy, Japan had been in effective control of the legation by 1905, but it formally bought the building five years later, two months before the annexation. The seven-bedroom property, which lies about a mile from the White House, was quickly sold by Japan to an American buyer in the same year. In the mid-2000s, some Korean-Americans raised about $80,000 as they campaigned to buy the property, but it was far short of the amount needed. The South Korean Embassy began negotiating with the owner in 2007, and the government in 2009 budgeted money to buy and renovate it but only this year met the asking price. The deal was completed in mid-August. South Korean officials are still deliberating exactly how to use the building but expect to reopen it within months. They say the building's structure remains much the same as it was 100 years ago. Amy Lee, an 82-year old granddaughter of Gojong and one of the last survivors of the Korean royal court, said it was important for Korean pride. This year also marks the 130th anniversary of U.S.-Korean relations. "I'm glad we have become strong enough and have enough money to buy it back," said Lee, who had campaigned with Yoon to return the building to Korean control. Lee, who migrated to the United States in 1956 and worked as a Korean specialist librarian at Columbia University in New York for 27 years, wants to elevate the legacy of her grandfather and his efforts to adopt a more open foreign policy for Korea and maintain independence. But she also sees the purchase of the old legation as a riposte to Japan.
She expresses anger at Japan's attitude toward its historical legacy
-- particularly on the issue of the tens of thousands of "comfort women" recruited as sex slaves for Japanese forces. Japan issued a formal apology in 1993 but has failed to convince South Korea it is truly contrite about its wartime record. Suggestions that Japan might review the 1993 statement on the grounds that no direct descriptions of forcible recruitment of "comfort women" have been found in Japanese official records have provoked Korean anger. "They probably don't know what their fathers and grandfathers did, or understand completely," Lee said. "Or it could be political. Whatever the reason is, how dare they think that way?"
[Associated
Press;
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