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LA s Koreans worried, stunned at Kim Jong Il death

ASSOCIATED PRESS
A waitress walks past a big screen TV showing a North Korean woman mourning the death of Kim Jong Il at a restaurant in Los Angeles, Monday, Dec. 19, 2011. Kim Jong Il, North Korea's mercurial and enigmatic leader, has died. He was 69. (AP Photo/Jae C. Hong)

 

LOS ANGELES >> Many in the largest Korean enclave in the United States took word of the death of North Korean leader Kim Jong Il with disbelief, saying it was a day they thought they’d never see. But when their shock wore off, most in Los Angeles’s Koreatown shifted to quiet concern for the future of their native country and its neighbor to the north. 

“Kim Jong Il died? You’re sure about that? No way! I thought he was going to live forever!” said Brian Shin, a 30-year-old native South Korean as he smoked a cigarette in front of his high-rise apartment building on Wilshire Boulevard. He kept expressing doubts until his wife ran downstairs to tell him it was true. 

But while he knew the event was huge, he didn’t think it would lead to significant changes. 

“Even though he died, I don’t think it’s a better situation or a better world,” Shin said.

News of the death played on almost every television in bars, cafes and pool halls in Koreatown, but the mood was quiet in the densely packed neighborhood west of downtown Los Angeles. Few people looked up from their food and drinks at the news reports.

About 200,000 Koreans live in Los Angeles County. Many live, work and shop in the normally bustling Koreatown, which is filled with upscale malls, Korean barbecue restaurants and banks as well as older shops in strip malls where signs read only in Korean.

Some Koreans migrated to the United States after the Korean War ended in 1953, and many more came from the South to work and study after the U.S. eased its immigration rules in 1965.

Karen Fischer of Tempe, Ariz., who was born in South Korea and has lived in the U.S. for 33 years, said she was concerned Kim’s death would have a destabilizing effect on the region. She planned to call her relatives in South Korea to gauge their reaction.

“I have family there — my sisters, brother, nieces and nephews,” she said. “It worries me who’s going to substitute him.”

Daniel Kim, a 20-year old who was playing four-ball billiards at a Koreatown pool hall, said the news was unexpected and somewhat scary.

“The leaders will be changed, but we have no idea how the new one will be,” he said.

One of his opponents, 19-year-old Ian Lim, agreed. 

“I have to serve military service in Korea so that’s kind of my worry,” Lim said. “North Korea is kind of insecure now, and they’ll have to make some incident to show their people they’re on the right track.”

Kim’s death is a symbolic moment for Korean Americans, said Grace Yoo, executive director of the Los Angeles chapter of the Korean American Coalition. Many of her friends were welcoming the news on Facebook, she said.

Hopefully, the new leader will be “someone who cares about their citizens and sees everyone deserving of life,” Yoo said. 

Overall, Kim’s death is good news, and eventually the North Korean government will also fall, said Kee Whan Ha, a South Korea native who serves as president of the Wilshire Center Koreatown Neighborhood Council in Los Angeles.

“I’m sure there’s a lot of Korean Americans with family living in North Korea. I’m sure they hope to see their families,” he said.

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Associated Press writer Michelle Price in Phoenix contributed to this report.

 

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