Sunday, January 19, 2014

Kugok Pokpo: Ice Climbing

Kugok pokpo (waterfall) is located a 30-40 minute leisurely walk from Gangchon Resort, a small village built by the Bukan River and caters mostly to tourists. During the summer time it is especially popular with its multiple forms of "entertainment" like the much-liked carnival ride, the Viking, bungee jumping on a small scale, and mountain bike and four-wheeler rentals to take out on a dedicated bicycle path as well as other recreational attractions. There really is a lot to attract people besides it being an easy escape from Seoul.

Chicken barbecue restaurants are the very popular local cuisine but other gastronomical treats are offered too. However, in the off-season don't expect to find much open. Business thrives in the summertime for families and during the warmer weeks of spring and fall for college students, particularly couples looking for a romantic getaway on a train with an incredible view and a gorgeously landscaped gentle hike up to the waterfall. But during the colder parts of the year until the sheets of ice form on the well-known 67-meter high Kugok pokpo, the village basically shuts down. Once the ice freezes over on the waterfall, however, people once again flock to the place to see the ice and to watch a growing number of climbers chop their way to the top.

I wrote about this waterfall before and introduced how to get there and some of the dynamics formerly used to attract people, namely that people were misled to believe in the early 1990s that the village above the waterfall was an undiscovered village and untainted by tourism. Haha, you can read about that in my Gugok Pokpo - Oct 3 blog entry.

Comparing to the soft green beauty of spring and summer, the winter reveals the rough rocks shaping the mountains and reveals the wells of water springing from those rocks. On the way to the larger waterfall, two smaller waterfalls cascaded in frozen grandeur near the entrance of the park.




Years ago the trail was pretty harsh, but now it's like a paved road with its highly compressed and graded surface. It certainly is easy to walk and isn't slippery. With the leaves gone and only stark tree limbs throwing their skeletal arms in the air, the waterfall peaks out through the trees as one approaches.


I've been here in the winter before but it's been several years. What I'm most amazed at is the increased number of climbers. It's a fact that Koreans are now pursuing some extreme sports very heartily but the number of climbers flocking to the waterfall on this day is significantly more than before. I'm not sure why one group of climbers is pitching a tent but maybe they're having a weekend ice-climbing excursion. Other groups seem to have camping equipment as well, or maybe it's just a lot of climbing equipment in heavy backpacks. The climbing ropes are pretty sizable, even when rolled. Notice in the first picture below one of the climbers blowing a piri, a traditional wooden flute. The music sounded so mysterious and lonely in this setting. Sounds don't seem to carry too well in near the waterfall, but the piri notes floated hauntingly around.




And now to see the climbers in action. Previously I was told that ice climbers climb with two ropes, just on the off-chance that they might pick-ax one and sever their only connection to the above, safety and life itself. All of the climbers today were using only one rope. I'm having to reformulate my understanding of ice climbing. The gentleman to the left in the picture below is top-lining, that is, he's climbing an already threaded rope, the safest way to climb. However, someone has to climb and thread that rope. The guy in the orange coat is also top-lining, while the guy in the green coat is threaded his own line. He has to climb so much more carefully although he is secured by his previous piton hammered in a chock (here's a list of climbing terms).




Looking up close at the last picture makes me really wonder at the quality of the ice. It looks like it has bubbles in it and so the appearance doesn't assure me that I'd feel safe climbing it. Kudos to them for entertaining themselves, and us. The few spectators including myself were quite fascinated by their slow and careful maneuvers to the top.

Tuesday, January 7, 2014

A Peek at Korean Shamanism

"Shamanism in Korea is rooted in ancient indigenous beliefs shared by many traditional religions in northeast Asia. It is one of the great components of Korean national identity and an intangible cultural heritage. Part of a much larger and global cultural expression, Korean shamanism has successfully survived centuries of ridicule and persecution and preserves its unique elements. Shamanism is a process of religion in which people use supernatural forces of gods in order to help their lives. It is a religious structure performed through rituals. The substantial purpose of shamanism is to satisfy people's instinctive desires to prevent misfortune and maintain comfort ..." (excerpt from the Royal Asiatic Society Korean Branch notes on the lecture.

Dr. Yang Jongsun, a long-standing member of the shamanist community in Korea, has worked closely with shamans around Korea studying their craft as both practitioner and scholar. He earned his PhD in folklore from Indiana University, Bloomington, and has written articles and books which document and analyze Korean shamanism. As former senior curator at the National Folk Museum, Dr. Yang built up their collection and added public programming focusing on shamanism. He is also President of the Korean Society for Shamanism Studies, and has a large amassed personal collection on Korean shaman materials.

During his lecture, he was assisted by two shamans -- Ji Gan-nan (born 1945) and Lee You-jin (born 1955) whose relationship is spiritual mother-spiritual daughter. Ji Gan-nan became a shaman when she was 9 years old when she had possession and was diagnosed with the shamanic disease "sin-byoung" (the possession sickness). Her spiritual daughter had her initiation ritual as a shaman when she was 32 years old, and since that time has been the spiritual daughter of Ji Gan-nan. Together they work together in both their shamanic practice and in business.

In the lecture, Dr. Yang shared some interesting and little-known facts about Korean shamanism. As is commonly known, shamanism has been somewhat repressed in development since the age of computers and advanced scientific technology in Korea; however, it still is used when initiating business. One example is having an exorcism of bad spirits from the building grounds and requests for blessings on the success of the new business. There are guestimated 300,000 Korean shamans in South Korea, although the Korean government denies the existence of these shamans. Among that number, about 25% of them are male shamans, which is definitely different than in traditional Korean society when the majority of shamans were women. The large number of women predominating as shamans in traditional society probably was influenced by so few acceptable jobs being available for women, especially women working outside of the home, and being a shaman gave not only a job but was socially acceptable and in some, perhaps many, cases a respectable position.

Picture taken from "Korean Shamanism and Picking the Date" on the blog "In Yeon" (a unique word for "destiny"

Basically, there are two types of shamans. The 강신무 and the 세슴무당. The 강신무 is a person who experiences 신병, the shamanic disease of possession, and is the most common type of shaman. Sometimes they are called the "disease shaman" but caution needs to be taken when translating the word disease (as well as exorcism and possession) as all three of these words do not take the highly negative connotations that are felt when using the English words. The name "disease shaman" is more of a labeling on how the person became a shaman and suggests his or her right to heredity or experience as a shaman. The other type of shaman, the 세슴무당, is one who was born as a shaman and so learned their "performing arts" from birth. In other words, they are like a heritage shaman. As said, traditionally shamans or 무당 were women and the 세슴무당 were based on matrilineal inheritance.