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Imagine not seeing a member of your family for six decades and then seeing them again
for the first time. It looks something like this.
*Hugging Crying*
Dozens of Korean families separated by the Korean War saw each other for the first time
in this reunion put together by North and South Korea. (Via YTN)
Many came in wheelchairs and even some in ambulances due to health concerns, but it
was all worth it when the families were able to reunite.
One man in his 70s who participated in the reunion told the BBC, "It's a true miracle;
I'm so elated. All that was missing in my life was my brother, and now that I can see
him again, I'd have no regrets whatsoever if I were to die tomorrow."
Since the end of the Korean War, phone calls, letters and emails between the two countries
were all forbidden, leaving families who were split by the peninsula with no way of contacting
one another. (Via PBS)
These emotional reunions happened three times a year for about eight years straight with
no problems, but in 2010, the reunions abruptly stopped and didn't start up again until now.
Many are touting this reunion as a small sign of progress for relations between the two
nations.
"I think it's a small but significant sign that relations at the moment are better than
they have been." (Via BBC)
More than 70,000 South Koreans are on a waiting list for the family reunions and nearly half
of those are over 80. According to the New York Times, 3,800 of those on the waiting
list die each year without attending the Korean reunion.