The future of the Australian Chosun I. Introduction The church of Australia has two important roles as a responsible ambassador of Christ. First, since the church needs worship and a shepherd, we must be responsible for the ministry of second generation Korean Christians. The second, urgent task is to develop a functional immigration theology using evangelical methods and idyllic care of the National Church. As the second generation Democratic People's Republic of Korea - Japan - Australians, I am most concerned about the future of the Australian Church, because I am countless of the second generation Christian youth from Korean nationality It was because I witnessed an outflow of silence.
Korean culture is maintained throughout the church organization, Korean schools and Korean culture camp are maintained in Korean American community. Since the beginning of this century, the Protestant Church in Korea opened Korean culture and language courses. In 1990, an estimated 490 Korean language schools were operated in the United States. There are about 31,000 students in these schools and they are managed by 3,700 teachers. Classes are held weekly, sometimes weekend. In the "Rice-Korean review" from April to May 1994, 19 summer Korean culture camps were posted nationwide. These camps are mainly located in California, Minnesota, New Jersey, and New York, where Korean American children (usually adoptors) are on legacy with other Korean-American children Provide opportunities to learn.
Lee Min-jin first remembered a person who would become a pinball machine in 1989. While attending college, she participated in a speech by an American missionary. She started writing novels about Koreans in Korea in 1996; when she lived in Tokyo for four years in 2007, she resumed her ongoing novels. For nearly 30 years, as Mr. Pachinko said in the interview, Mr. Lee decided to "reject, erase, despise". Juno Diaz said that "Pachinko" confirmed Lee's best position as a novelist. "
In fact, all the people of the Democratic People's Republic of Korea and Democratic People's Republic of Korea are Koreans and speak Korean. Korean was written more than 5000 years ago in the mid-15th century when King Sejong Great invented the speech alphabet called "Hangul" for the first time. The king made alphabet so that not only the aristocrat who knew the kanji, but also all the Koreans were able to learn to read and write. Therefore, North Korea and South Korea are among the countries with the highest literacy rate in the world.