Date: Friday, 20 March
Distance: 14.39
Time: 3:04:08
Walk to Soccer Field, hit the track for speed run, and then back through ‘hood.
Date: Sunday, 22 March
Distance: 8 laps on track
Time: 22:13
Leisurely jog into campus, then aerobic workout on steps of Amphitheater.
Date: Monday, 23 March
Distance: 3864 steps Yonsei Amphitheater
Time: 25:02
Seodaemun-gu run past Gu office around back on Ansan, past Independence Park, through Kyonggi University Campus back into Sinchon and home
Date: Wednesday, 25 March
Distance: 7.14 miles
Time: 1:22:52
Time is piling up like dirty laundry and I really need to get back on schedule with the blog, so here are the latest stats. Yes, I have been, thankfully, staying on schedule with the runs, just not disciplining myself to be accountable via the blogging. The building is in the final stages of construction and we have spent considerable time there the last few days. As we move into relocation mode and develop work schedules for a variety of projects, even Jenny gets ignored. Running this week has an added urgency, as I try to shed one more kilogram before the wedding of Andrew Linkhart and Yuri Kang on Saturday. Not sure it will stick—these last two week, I have a ravenous appetite following the long runs.
The Comfort women are back in the news. These women, survivors of WWII, continue to testify of the horror and violence of being kept as prostitutes for the Japanese army during that dark time. Unfortunately is it not so different today. A recent entry on outreach-international.org goes, “When we think of poverty, images of sick children, starving mothers, war and more come to mind. But there are many more abuses of the poor. Most residents in impoverished communities do not own their homes, making them susceptible to the whim of the owners. Homes are made of impermanent materials and need repair often. When unskilled
families attempt to fix things themselves, leaking roofs and broken toilets remain…Sometimes parents allow their children to migrate to find jobs in other regions, but it is risky because they can become victims of sex- and labor-trafficking industries. Even when children remain in school, some teachers require them to spend long hours cleaning the school, rather than learning in it, and even require children to buy food and equipment from them personally. Outreach International helps persons who are taken advantage of. Helping people come together in a working community … People become empowered to resist abuse. And meet their challenges in new ways.”
The Japanese occupation in Korea was one of abject poverty. To force young women into army brothels was often seen as a step up from the squalor of their living conditions created by an unjust and violent occupation of their homes. Join me in running to end poverty one child, one family, one village at a time.
No comments:
Post a Comment