Grief-stricken and angry South Korean parents bid final goodbyes to
Halloween disaster victims
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[November 03, 2022]
By Ju-min Park, Heekyong Yang and Jihoon Lee
SEOUL (Reuters) - "Dad, I'm going out" were
the last words Jung Hae-moon heard his daughter utter, at the end of a
chat they had on the telephone on Saturday as she turned down an
invitation to dinner.
Hours later, 30-year-old Jung Joo-hee was among 156 people, most of them
in their teens and twenties, killed in the South Korean capital while
celebrating Halloween free of COVID restrictions for the first time in
three years.
On Thursday, the young woman's family buried her ashes in a peaceful
family plot outside Seoul, with a planted sapling and bouquets by her
grave stone and a sombre ceremony of prayers and tears.
"Rest well. Mum and dad will come see you," Jung Hae-moon said as the
family stood by, together with his daughter's pet poodle.
As news of the disaster unfolded on Saturday, Jung Hae-moon dashed to
Itaewon, a district of narrow streets full of bars and boutiques, to be
met with chaos as distraught youngsters milled about in their Halloween
costumes and rows of ambulances collected victims.
More than 12 hours later, he found Joo-hee in a morgue, lifeless,
swollen and bruised.
Joo-hee's mother, Lee Hyo-sook, said her daughter was a delight, a best
friend who loved animals and wine.
"The space she leaves is too big. The place she left in the family is
too much, the emptiness," Lee told Reuters after the funeral, speaking
at a cafe that Joo-hee ran.
The cafe is closed with a sign in black reading: "In mourning."
The anguish of Joo-hee's family is being felt by all of the 156 bereaved
families as a traditional three-day wake comes to an end and their loved
one is placed in a coffin to be viewed for the last time before burial
or cremation.
Their grief is being shared by the county as a whole struggling to come
to terms with the disaster that ended so many young lives on what should
have been an evening of fun.
Of the 156 dead, 101 were female, the government said.
Another grieving father, Song Jae-woong, said his daughter, Young-ju,
24, was a gentle soul who was quick to befriend classmates, more than
200 of whom came to her funeral.
Young-ju had dreamed of becoming an actress, her father said, speaking
at a funeral home in Seoul.
"Then, things turned out like this," Song said.
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Jung Hae-moon, 62, father of Jung
Joo-hee, 30, who was one of the victims of a crowd crush that
happened during Halloween festivities, leaves his daughter's grave
holding her portrait, in Namyangju, South Korea, November 3, 2022.
REUTERS/Kim Hong-Ji
"Her friends told me that my daughter had a habit of seeking out and
befriending anyone. She had a kind soul."
"It’s all over now."
'IMPOSSIBLE'
Some families had no idea their children were even in the crowd in
the Itaewon entertainment district on Saturday evening.
"I had no idea she was there. It was impossible, I couldn't believe
it," Lim's father said at a funeral home as he and his family
observed funeral rites.
The father asked that he and his daughter be identified by just
their family name, Lim.
The man usually lives abroad and had not seen their only child for
three years as COVID disrupted travel. He first heard of the
disaster when an acquaintance sent him a text message about it, with
neither knowing the daughter was caught up in it.
Struggling with grief, he pulled out his telephone to show the
message.
"She was so creative and pretty," the man said, adding that he had
often strolled with his daughter through Itaewon. He used to park
their car at the Hamilton Hotel next to the alley where Lim died.
"I know that street very well."
For many parents, anger is seething with the grief.
They wonder why their children were celebrating Halloween in the
first place, a totally foreign concept for older Koreans.
But the biggest question for many of those mourning their children
is why no safety measures were enforced to control the crowd.
"I am beyond angry. It is outrageous because in any emergency
situation, the country should protect its people and keep them
safe," said Lee, the mother of Joo-hee.
(Reporting by Heekyong Yang, Ju-min Park, Jihoon Lee, Hyunyoung Yi,
Dogyun Kim, Writing by Jack Kim; Editing by Robert Birsel and Raju
Gopalakrishnan)
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