Lee sun hee biography meaning

When My Name Was Keoko


by Linda Sue Park (New York: Clarion Books, 2002)

Introduction

In 1910, Japan conquered Korea. The conquerors passed many laws intended to destroy Korean culture. If the Koreans no longer had a distinguishable culture and identity, the desire to be free of their captors might decrease.

Lee Sun hee (singer) ~ Complete Biography with [ Photos ...

Laws were passed against a Korean being the head of any organization, business, school, etc. Koreans could be vice-presidents or vice-principals, but never the president or the principal. Only Japanese citizens could be in charge—the president or the principal. All school lessons were in Japanese. Students were required to attend school and learn Japanese culture, language, literature, and history.

[Time Capsule] Lee Sun Hee – Fate - TheKMeal

Japanese was to be spoken in public. And Koreans were even required to attend Japanese temples on the Emperor’s birthday. Eventually, a law was passed that required all Koreans to take a Japanese name and be addressed by this name in public.

Summary

Sun-hee is the daughter of Lee Sun-hee (singer) - Wikipedia ZUGE