Tag: Peace Corps

  • Korean Peace Corps Memories

    Korean Peace Corps Memories

    Korean Peace Corps Memories

    Korean Peace Corps Memories

    Korean Peace Corps Memories

    https://wp.me/p7NAzO-3yS

    50 Peace Corps reunion

    This is a shout-out to all the Americans who answered the call to serve in the Peace Corps.  As some of you know I served in Gapyeong, Korea from 1979 to 1981 working as a tuberculous control worker in a rural health center.  Serving in the Peace Corps changed my life in so many ways.  It led to a life-long fascination with South Korea, including becoming reasonably fluent in the language, meeting and marrying my wife whom I met after my service ended, and a MA degree in Korean studies from the University of Washington in 1986.  It also led me to join the Foreign Service and serve in the Embassy from 1991 to 1993 and serving on the Korea desk from 1994 to 1996.

    Before joining the State Department I taught ESL for the US Army, for the Korean Consolidated Administration school, and later at Kyunghee University for three years and Government and Asian Studies for the University of Maryland in Korea.

    Title: The Last Volunteer: Dispatches from the Disbanded Peace Corps

    Tone: Satirical, reflective, dystopian
    Style: Blog-style narrative with historical and personal interjections

    Structure:

    Title: The Last Volunteer: Dispatches from the Disbanded Peace Corps

    Genre: Satire / Dystopian Memoir
    Tags: PeaceCorps, satire, dystopia, politics, memoir, Korea, Trump, resistance, history

    Chapter 1: The Announcement

    In 1980, I served in the Peace Corps working in a public health center as a tuberculous control worker in Gapyeong, a small town in the mountains two hours from Seoul. I shared kimchi recipes with elders, learned the art of bowing without bruising my pride, and discovered that diplomacy often begins with a shared meal.

    We were told we were ambassadors of peace.

    Now, apparently, we were just wasting taxpayer money.

    Chapter 2: The Decree

    It came on a Tuesday. Trump stood at a golden podium flanked by ICE agents and a bald eagle wearing aviators.

    “The Peace Corps is hereby disbanded,” he declared. “We don’t need volunteers spreading peace. We need patriots sealing borders.”

    The budget was rescinded. Volunteers were ordered home. The Peace Corps website redirected to a recruitment page for ICE.

    Chapter 3: The Fallout

    Returned volunteers were stripped of their federal hiring preference. One was reportedly escorted out of a USDA interview for wearing a tie-dye shirt and quoting Mandela.

    Peace Corps offices were converted into detention intake centers. The slogan “Life is calling” was replaced with “Compliance is mandatory.”

    My old training center in Korea? Rumor has it it’s now a drone calibration site.

    Chapter 4: The Broader Purge

    The Presidential Management Fellows program was canceled next. “We don’t need managers,” Trump said. “We need enforcers.”

    The State Department announced it would no longer publish annual human rights reports. “We prefer vibes-based diplomacy,” said the new Undersecretary for Global Branding.

    The U.S. withdrew from the International Labour Organization. All ILO conventions were declared null and void. Labor rights, it seems, were too socialist.

    Chapter 5: Toronto Rising

    Late-night comics were fired. Journalists silenced. And somewhere in the chaos, Toronto became the new capital of dissent.

    Former Peace Corps volunteers, comedians, and exiled diplomats now broadcast nightly from a converted Tim Hortons.

    Their motto: Still serving—just not sanctioned.

    Chapter 6: The Last Volunteer

    I served in Korea from 1979 to 1981. We believed in bridges, not walls. We believed that service could change the world.

    I still do.

    Even if the bridge now leads north to Toronto.

    Author’s Note:

    This piece is satire. But the memories are real. And so is the fear that idealism is being erased, one program at a time.

    If you served, if you dreamed, if you still believe—keep writing. Keep resisting.

    Peace isn’t dead. It’s just been defunded.

    Along the way, Korea changed so much and is not the country I first learned to love back in 1979.  Here are a few of my poetic reflections, followed by additional information on the Peace Corps and my letters to my Congressmen and Senators and the Peace Corps director expressing my frustration over the possibility that the Peace Corps could soon join USAID on the chopping block. I will post any responses I might receive.

    Korean Poems

     

    author at a Korean temple 1980?

    Korea travels

     

    I first came to Korea in 1979

    in the Peace Corps

     

    Stayed in the rural countryside

    in the town of Gapeyong

    where I worked

    in a rural health care center

     

    Where I was one of four non-Koreans

    Had to speak Korean to survive

     

    Stayed on in a variety of jobs

    Including diplomatic service

    I last lived there in 1993.

     

    Non-Korean food was hard to get

    Outside of the GI ghettos

    English speakers were few

    And the country was not foreign-friendly

     

    There were few foreign residents

    Most American service members

    Some missionary types

    Diplomatic corps

    A few English teachers

    A few ex-pat business people

     

    Most women quit after marriage

    As it was a male-dominated society

     

    In the rural countryside

    No one knew a woman’s name

     

    They were referred

    to as so and so “mom”

     

    Or so and so wife,

    Or the generic aunt,

    or grandmother

     

    Public transit was just getting going

    But traffic was not too bad

    Few people could afford cars

     

    Back then the old Korea was still there

    And it was a very different place and time

    Going through the transition

    to the country, it has become

     

    Today’s Korea is a very different place

     

    The rural countryside is deserted

    Wilderness areas are coming back

    Even wildlife is coming back

    In the mountain outback regions

     

    50 percent of the public

    Live in the Seoul metro area

    Including Kyeongi province

    And Incheon city where I reside.

     

    Public transit is among the best

    In the world.

    Internet fast and cheap

    Everywhere connected

     

    Highways are decent but overcrowded

    The KTX train is fast and convenient

    The Incheon airport one of the best

     

    The choices for food are much better

    Used to be it was almost impossible

    To find non-Korean food

    Outside the GI ghetto towns.

     

    Now it is everywhere

    Even saw a Mexican restaurant

    In a suburban Busan neighborhood.

     

    In the end

    Koreans should be proud

    Of all that they have accomplished.

     

    I remain optimistic

    That someday the two Koreans

    Will become one again

    And that they will continue

    To advance and grow

     

    But the essence of Korea will remain

     

    Waiting for Korean Springtime

    poet Hill Korea

     

    The world peace forest

    Stretches five miles

    Through a delightful forest

     

    Including a nice lotus pound

    A winter watering hole for birds

    And a small mountain

     

     

    I welcome the advent of spring

    The cherry trees snowing

    The Tulips and roses blooming

     

    After a cold sometimes hard winter

    Especially during the COVID pandemic

    Which kept so many people

    Trapped indoors

     

    As I walk the path

    With the love of my life

    By my side

     

    Enjoying another springtime

    Filled with love and affection

    That is why I love Korean springtime.

     

    19 lines

    Pastoral free verse

     

    Life in a Korean village

     

    I am living in a Korean village as an exchange student.  One day my host family asks me to go to the local health center to tell them to change the father’s medicine, and give me a note, the old medicine, and instructions.  I am a little apprehensive, but they told me that was fine since the dragon who controlled the village had approved the request already.  I smiled I had met the dragon who seemed to like me which made things in the village go much better.  The daughter is cute.

    First Trip to Korea

    When I first went to Korea

    Almost 45 years ago

    It was a very alien place.

     

    An overwhelming experience,

    I entered a hot, humid, sauna.

    The smells were intense

     

    The food was spicy

    filled with passionate heat.

     

    chaotic

    cacophonous

    discordant sounds

    filled the air.

     

    the language sounded

    like everyone was screaming.

     

    Taxis honking, cars barking.

    People screeching

    Loudspeakers blaring

    Sirens blasted the air.

     

    Millions of strange people

    Military police everywhere

    With guns watching everyone.

     

    I felt I was a stranger in a strange land

    Everyone speaking

    A weird language

    I did not understand anything.

     

    Over time I got used to it

    The smells became normal

    The food was now delicious.

     

    The sounds are less chaotic

    Less cacophonous

     

    Less discordant

    I even eventually learned

    How to speak the weird language.

     

    I fell in love with this strange place

    Which became my second home

    And now I live there half the time

    And half the time in the United States

     

    Neither here nor there

    Am I here

    But I remain a true stranger

    In a still strange land.

    For the rest of the posting see https://wp.me/p7NAzO-2sA

    Buddha Prayer Stones

    ATTACHMENT DETAILS yongdusan-park-Busan-buddha--rotated.jpg Ju
    ATTACHMENT DETAILS
    yongdusan-park-Busan-buddha–rotated.jpg
    Ju

    In Korea mountains

    There is a custom

    Of putting rocks

    On top of other rocks

     

    Building little towers

    Of rocks

    along the mountain path

     

    An ancient shaman tradition

    Taken over the Buddhist temples

    The rocks piles were dedicated

    To the Sanshin mountain spirits

     

    And would grant wishes

    To those who added

    Rock to the cosmic tribute

     

    Sanshin would honor

    Those prayers and wishes

     

    Korean Winter roses

    Red, black and yellow

    In a field of late snow

    Early March

    End of winter

     

    Beneath the early blooming

    cherry trees

    their petals joining the snow

    along the world peace forest.

     

    Visit to Jade Garden

     

    Visiting Jade Garden

    Nar Chungcheong, South Korea

    On a beautiful spring day

     

    The cherry trees were in full flower

    Pink and white petals

    The scent of cherry trees in the air

     

    Other trees just starting to bloom

    Red, yellow and white tulips

    Beginning to bloom

     

    The sounds of spring all around

    Birds singing

    People walking about.

     

    Talking to one another

    As they wander the pathway

    Taking in the springtime splendor.

     

    The sun warming up

    The pathway winding

    .Through the Forrest.

     

    Meeting the Girl of My Dreams in Korea

    The Peace Corps changed my life
    Not in the obvious ways
    That it did

    I learned a new language
    A new culture
    Met many different people
    Did some constructive development work

    And contributed to friendship
    Between Koreans and the US

    All the usual things that Peace Corps
    Is supposed to accomplish

    But the Peace Corps changed me
    And I became the man I am now

    Because of those two years
    I spend in the countryside
    Of South Korea

    I went to graduate school
    I became a diplomat

    But most importantly
    If I had not gone to the Korean peace corps program
    I never would have met the girl of my dreams
    The women I was fated to meet

    I first met Angela in 1974
    When I was in high school

    And fell asleep in a class
    And had the dream that haunted me
    To this day

    In the dream
    I met a beautiful Asian women
    Who was speaking to me
    In a weird language

    And then she disappeared
    Like in Star Trek

    And I fell on the floor

    “Screaming
    You are you?”

    I continued to have these visions
    Every month for seven years

    I eventually learned

    that she was in Korea
    And so I joined the Peace Corps

    to go to Korea
    To find her

    After I finished Peace Corps
    I stuck around for another year

    Thinking I would find her
    But never did

    Just when I was

    due to return to the US
    To go to Graduate school
    I had the final dream

    In this dream
    She said in Korean

    “Don’t worry

    you will meet me soon.”

    That night getting off the bus
    In front of me
    Was the girl in the dream

    I looked at her
    And I knew she was it

    And she looked at me
    And knew I was it

    We met up for coffee
    And we dated

    I proposed to her

    three days after I met her

    And then we married
    Two months later

    Despite her family’s attempts
    To keep us apart

    And we have been

    married 43 years
    And I fall in love with her
    Over and over again

    And I still have the dream
    When I am alone
    Or when I am stressed out

    I see her standing by the bed
    Smiling at me

    Saying
    Everything will be alright
    And it is

    and so thinking back on my life
    My life changed forever

    When I left the US
    To join the Peace Corps

    Long Live the Peace Corps

    this is a true story of the love of my life.  I met her in 1982 when I was teaching in Korea after having finished my Peace Corps service in 1981.  We got married two months after we met and have been married 33 years.  I still recall the dreams of how I would met her from time to time.

    I always thought this would make a great love story movie., perhaps a K Drama?

    Spring Time Sketch in Youngchando, Korea

    In the early morning dawn
    I like to go for a walk
    Down among the cherry trees
    And flowering plants

    Just to welcome
    Another fine spring day
    As the sun comes up
    Dispelling my dismal mood

    And filling me
    With love
    Hope and peace
    As I walk the in
    the world peace forest

    Through the forest
    and over the mountain
    breathing the springtime air
    alive filled with life

    and I think to myself
    this moment
    is the moment
    that I am meant to experience

    life itself
    and nothing more
    nothing less
    Just breath in life

    based on a photo of cherry trees along the world peace forest near my house in Youngchangdo, Korea, and based on the April 21 writers digest poetry prompt to write a poetic sketch © 3 years ago, john Cosmos Aller

    Hiking In Korea

    Korea is a land
    filled with mountain paths
    everywhere you go

    there are paths
    leading deep
    into the mountains

    one of my favorite paths
    is the world peace forrest
    which meanders around
    my town

    linking a lake, a lotus pound
    and a nice mountain peak
    and on the top
    on a clear day

    you can see North Korean
    in the distance
    and the Incheon airport
    near by

    Korean Pottery of Love

    In Korea
    there are many pottery kilns

    ancient art form
    in the land of the morning calm

    I have a few pieces
    I bought years ago

    and enjoy looking
    at my vase

    filled with love
    for my wife

    Korean Springtime

     

    Korean Springtime
    I walk the path with my love
    Still Under her spell

    this is the 42 springtime

    I have enjoyed with the love of my life by my side © a year ago, john Cosmos Aller

    American Coffee Takes Over Korea

    About 30 years ago,
    American-style coffee chains
    Discovered Korea.
    After the 88 Olympics,
    Koreans discovered the joy
    Of real brewed coffee,
    Hot, Sweet, Neat
    The rest is history.

    I love coffee and was so glad that you could finally get a decent coffee in Korea, prior to the Olympics coffee shops were called tabangs which were where men mostly would hang out drinking instant coffee or Korean tea, and flirting with the cute waitresses.
    © a year ago, john Cosmos Aller

     

    hot humid weather in Korea,

    hot humid weather in Korea,
    outside like walking in a sauna.

    Most people don’t use air conditioning
    due to both expenses,
    fear of air conditioning disease
    (Which is a real thing).

    hanging out at a coffee shop or mall
    discouraged as COVID continues to spread.
    Only two people can dine out at night

    over 2, 00 cases a day now
    only 20 percent are fully vaccinated.

    temperatures will hit 40 degrees (100 + f)
    later this week
    as the monsoon season ends
    and the August heat begins.

    Koreans are learning
    new words to describe this

    heat dome
    tropical nights
    Polar vortex
    Monster typhoons
    Killing floods
    Killing heat waves
    are now common.

    used to be that July and August
    were hot and humid
    but rarely about 100 dF.
    Now that is becoming the norm,
    as global climate change
    begins hitting Korea hard.

    the winters are colder
    but much shorter.
    Late January to early February
    Polar Vortex swept through

    the summer is longer
    starting in May
    and lasting until mid-September.

    Autumn is lasting
    from Mid-September
    to Mid-December.
    Spring just late April to early June

    So far no killer wildfires.
    As the monsoon season
    Came on time
    Monson flooding
    Just before the killer heatwaves

    the prompt was to write about the local weather Korea is experiencing a heat dome highs in the 90’s (40 C) real feel close to 100 F, with tropical nights in the 80s F.  No relief in sight until late august, the second hottest summer in Korea so far but it will probably break the record heat

    Korean Summer Haiku

    Korean summers

    hot, humid, tropical

    24/7 Sauna

     

    Walking Along the Winter Korean Beach

    Walking along the winter
    Korean beach,
    With the love of my life
    By my side,

    She looks at me
    With red hot love
    Flames shooting
    From her black eyes

     

    Seoul 1979 and 2015

    2013 Seoul 1979
    April 7

    When I arrived in Seoul
    Back in the day in 1979

    Seoul was a grim city
    Big, polluted, overwhelming
    Filled with Koreans
    And nothing much to do

    Other than eat Korean food
    And drink Korean booze

    Tourist sites were none existent
    And foreigners were few and far between

    The GI’s stayed in Itaewon
    And there were few other foreigners around

    And there were very few places in town
    To eat non-Korean food

    Just the fancy hotels
    The base and Itaewon

    But Seoul had it’s charms
    It grew on me over the years

    And gradually became less grim
    Less forbidding
    And less foreigner unfriendly

    When I left Seoul in 1984 it was changing
    Before my very eyes

    And when I came back in 1988 it was different city
    And those were the days
    Of the Olympics and Seoul’s emergence
    As a modern city

    2014 Seoul 2015
    April 8

    Seoul is so different now days
    Very little of the old Seoul remains

    The Kangwha moon area downtown
    Still exists as warren of alley ways

    Between big buildings
    Filled with restaurants and shops

    But the old tabangs (tea shops)
    With the tabang girls
    Are long gone

    The karaoke bars and girl bars
    Are still there going strong

    But coffee shops and fancier restaurants
    Are everywhere

    And foreigners are everywhere
    Seoul is no longer a city just for Koreans
    It has truly become a world city
    Must to the dismay of the traditionalists

    Parts of the old Seoul remain
    and the mountains and parks
    have become very popular indeed

    there has been a resurgence in Korean Buddhism
    and in traditional arts and crafts
    and traditional foods as well

    no where more than in Insa dong
    the Mecca of traditional Korean culture
    these days

    and Itaweon has become
    the heart of the expatriate part of Seoul
    with people from around the world
    gathered together

    along with the young and hip
    Koreans

    And there is even a gay quarter now
    unimaginable in the old days

    Seoul has changed
    For the most part for the better

    But I still miss the Seoul of my past
    And will mourn its passing
    As I get older

    Along with the city
    That I have adopted
    As my second home town

    thoughts of life in Seoul in 1979 and 2015 © 7 years ago, john Cosmos Aller      

    Melting away my heart
    Driving out the cold
    of the winter beach.

    Korean beaches are romantic in the winter and I am living in a beach resort island near the Incheon airport, © 8 months ago, john Cosmos Aller

    Love in Korean

    When Sam Adams
    first met her
    The lady of his dreams

    There was as the Koreans
    Would say

    Spark from heart to heart
    이심촌심
    isimchonsim

    truly love at first sight
    첫눈에 반하다
    cheosnun-e banhada

    they both knew
    that it is just fate

    운명
    unyoung

    that they had met
    that date.

    Two months later
    They were married
    It all happened
    40 years ago

    48 years after
    She first came
    To him in his dreams.

    the prompt was to incorporate foreign words into a poem I chose Korean which is my best foreign language as I have been struggling to learn it for 43 years

    https://lovejakecallerworld.tumblr.com › post › 651516125065183232 › venice-in-korea

     

    Jake Cosmos Aller — Venice in Korea

    May 18, 2021Venice in Korea “Venice in Korea and other Korean Stream Bed Parks ARA Canal Incheon Over the last decade, Korea has build hundreds of stream bed parks throughout Seoul and Korea. There are great… Jake Cosmos Aller — Venice in Korea. 1.5M ratings 277k ratings See, that’s what the app is perfect for. Sounds perfect Wahhhh, I don’t …

    https://lovejakecallerworld.tumblr.com › post › 652960510670766080 › ara-canal-incheon-venice-in-korea-manisan

    Jake Cosmos Aller — ARA Canal Incheon Venice in Korea Manisan…

    Jun 3, 2021I have reached three milestones. the World According to Cosmos now has over 4,000 followers from around the world. Thanks to all of you for visiting my site and caring about my musings about Life, the Universe and everything. Second, I have not posted 264 posts over the last few years since I started this blog late in 2019.

    Korean Summer Haiku by jake cosmos aller – FanStory

    Jul 2, 2022Korean Summer Haiku by jake cosmos aller. General Poetry posted July 2, 2022. jake cosmos aller. Retired US Diplomat (State Department) living in South Korea. Served 27 years in 10 countries. Traveled to 55 countries, all 50 states. Grew up in Berkeley, California. Married, no children.

    https://fanstory.com › displaystory.jsp?id=1061790

    Korean travels by jake cosmos aller – fanstory.com

    May 20, 2022jake cosmos aller Retired US Diplomat (State Department) living in South Korea. Served 27 years in 10 countries. Traveled to 55 countries, all 50 states. Grew up in Berkeley, California. Married, no children. A published poet, and short story writer. Finished six nove – more…

    https://lovejakecallerworld.tumblr.com › post › 653430254473494528 › update-korean-riverstream-bed-parks-ara-canal

    The Life of a PCV by jake cosmos aller – FanStory

    Jul 20, 2022by jake cosmos aller. Corners of the world. In 1979-1981. Than my own. I learned to speak Korean. In a town that was in the countryside. Of Seoul or the nearby city of Chuncheon. And foreign agricultural workers as well. Than when I lived there over 43 years ago.

    2

    https://www.poemhunter.com › jake-cosmos-aller › biography

    Jake Cosmos Aller — Yeongjongdo Redevelopment Proposals

    Yeongjongdo Redevelopment Proposals ” Yeongjongdo redevelopment proposals bike rail trail in Yeongjongdo The Korean government has ambitious plans for developing Youngjongdo where I live. Here are my… Jake Cosmos Aller — Yeongjongdo Redevelopment Proposals. 1.5M ratings 277k ratings See, that’s what the app is perfect for. …

    https://tiferetjournal.com › poems-jake-cosmos-aller-2018

    Food Imperalism by jake cosmos aller – fanstory.com

    Jul 17, 2022Food Imperalism by jake cosmos aller. Biographical Fiction posted July 17, 2022. Retired US Diplomat (State Department) living in South Korea. Served 27 years in 10 countries. Traveled to 55 countries, all 50 states. Grew up in Berkeley, California. Married, no children.

    https://spillwords.com › author › jakecosmosaller

    Venice in Korea by The World According to Cosmos

    poetry and rants by the Cosmos. Listen on . Message

    https://www.facebook.com › theworldaccordingtocosmos › posts › 1480226155746852

    Jake Aller – Venice in Korea WHERE TO LISTEN to the World… | Facebook

    Venice in Korea WHERE TO LISTEN to the World According to Cosmos breaker audio Google podcasts radio public Spotify Korea Radio public c: on PocketCasts: Visit to Gangwha Ginseng Market We…

    3

    https://www.poemhunter.com › jake-cosmos-aller › biography

    Jake Cosmos Aller — ARA Canal Incheon Venice in Korea Manisan…

    Jun 3, 2021I have reached three milestones. the World According to Cosmos now has over 4,000 followers from around the world. Thanks to all of you for visiting my site and caring about my musings about Life, the Universe and everything. Second, I have not posted 264 posts over the last few years since I started this blog late in 2019.

    https://lovejakecallerworld.tumblr.com › post › 653430254473494528 › update-korean-riverstream-bed-parks-ara-canal

    Jake Cosmos Aller — Update: Korean River/Stream Bed Parks ARA Canal…

    Jun 8, 2021Update: Korean River/Stream Bed Parks ARA Canal Incheon Updated letter to NPS and updated photos for Cheongjecheon streambed park. Letter to National Parks Director, Minister of Tourism, and KT One of the little-known gems of Korean tourism is all the great river parks and stream bed parks throughout Korea.

    https://spillwords.com › morning-light-by-jake-cosmos-aller

    Jake Aller – Venice in Korea WHERE TO LISTEN to the World… | Facebook

    Venice in Korea WHERE TO LISTEN to the World According to Cosmos breaker audio Google podcasts radio public Spotify Korea Radio public c: on PocketCasts: Visit to Gangwha Ginseng Market We…

    classic.fanstory.com › mypage.jsp?userid=859865

    What a beautiful journey!: Celebrating the 50th … – Peace Corps

    The Korean government has acknowledged these strong ties by hosting several reunions over the years. Last month, about 80 returned Volunteers and family members traveled to Seoul, South Korea, to mark the 50th anniversary of the Peace Corps arrival in the country. We were there to attend the opening of an exhibit on the Peace Corps at the …

    Images for peace corps Korea

    More Images

    https://duckduckgo.com/?q=peace+corps+Korea&atb=v314-1&iax=images&ia=images

     

    Peace Corps Announces Collaboration with the Republic of Korea on Volunteer …

    Peace Corps opened its program in Korea in 1966, and more than 2,000 Peace Corps volunteers served there before operations closed in 1981. Since 2008, the Republic of Korea has recognized the service of Peace Corps/Korea volunteers by hosting return trips for many former volunteers so they can again visit the country. Peace Corps and KOICA …

    https://www.peacecorps.gov › news › library › peace-corps-volunteers-honored-by-the-korea-society

    Peace Corps Volunteers Honored by The Korea Society

    Peace Corps/Korea brought over 2,000 Americans to serve in Korea’s classrooms, farms, and industry. From 1966-1981, the assistance provided by these Volunteers, at a critical period in Korean history, helped to cement U.S.Korea ties. Kevin O’Donnell, the first country director of Peace Corps/Korea, and fourth director of the Peace Corps will …

    https://www.peacecorps.gov › countries

    Countries – Peace Corps

    Peace Corps Volunteers serve in over 60 countries. Find your place in the world. … South Korea 1966-1981 2,060 Volunteers Served Caribbean. The Dominican Republic. 1962-present 13 Volunteers …

    https://www.peacecorps.gov › stories › korea-in-the-side-view-mirror-reflections-of-a-former-peace-corps-volunteer

    Korea in the side-view mirror: Reflections of a former Volunteer

    It was, as the Peace Corps ad says, “The toughest job you will ever love.” When I left Korea in the mid-70s I was certain I would never see it again. As the years passed, the recollections of my life in Korea crystallized into increasingly romanticized memories. They became nearer and dearer to me in my life’s side-view mirror.

    https://www.peacecorpsconnect.org › companies › friends-of-Korea

    National Peace Corps Association | Friends of Korea – NPCA

    About Friends of Korea. Friends of Korea was founded in 2002 by former Peace Corps volunteers who served in the Republic of Korea between 1966 and 1981. Since Peace Corps ended its program in Korea in 1981, the challenge for Friends of Korea has been to find a mission. Over the past several years we have been engaged in a series of …

    https://peacecorpsworldwide.org › memories-of-serving-as-last-peace-corps-Korea-director

    Memories of serving as the last Peace Corps/Korea Director

    Oct 21, 2020Oct 21 2020. 1. by James Mayer (Korea 1978-81) The Korea Times. Friends of Korea. Peace Corps volunteers and others hold a walk-a-thon to raise funds for heart surgery in 1981. / Courtesy of Nancy Kelly. No one likes to be last. But I had that distinction as the Peace Corps Korea country director, and I am forever grateful that it happened.

    https://www.peacecorps.gov

    Peace Corps – Connect With the Peace Corps

    Connect With the Peace Corps. The Peace Corps. We are inspired by hands-on, grassroots-driven, and lasting impact. Learn more about our mission. In a changing world, building a better future together. New Opportunities Now Available. Dozens of new Volunteering openings are live on our site.

    https://www.peacecorpsconnect.org › articles › peace-corps-volunteers-and-the-making-of-korean-studies-in-the-united-states

    Some 2,000 Peace Corps Volunteers Served in Korea. They Have Also …

    Peace Corps Volunteers and the Making of Korean Studies in the United States. Edited by Seung-Kyung Kim and Michael Robinson. Center for Korea Studies, University of Washington. Reviewed by Steven Boyd Saum . The Peace Corps sent more than 2,000 Volunteers to South Korea 1966-81, to teach English and advise on healthcare.

    https://www.peacecorpsconnect.org › events › peace-corps-korea-all-group-volunteers-staff-and-friends-reunion-2018

    National Peace Corps Association | Peace Corps Korea All-Group … – NPCA

    Mention you’re with the Korea Peace Corps Reunion. Dan Strickland (K-18; danstrickland2001@yahoo.com) is our reunion point person and is available to answer questions or make suggestions. Let us know you’re coming by sending Dan an email with your name(s), your Korean name, K-group #, and check-in/out dates.

     

     

    🗳️ Congressional Representative for Medford, Oregon

     

    Rep. Cliff Bentz (OR-2)

    • District Office:

    14 N Central Ave., Suite 112

    Medford, OR 97501

    Phone: (541) 776-4646

    • Washington, D.C. Office:

    409 Cannon House Office Building

    Washington, D.C. 20515

    Phone: (202) 225-6730

    • Website

     

    🏛️ U.S. Senators from Oregon

    Sen. Jeff Merkley

    • Medford Office:

    10 South Bartlett Street, Suite 201

    Medford, OR 97501

    Phone: (541) 608-9102

    • Washington, D.C. Office:

    531 Hart Senate Office Building

    Washington, D.C. 20510

    Phone: (202) 224-3753

    • Website

    Sen. Ron Wyden

    • Medford Office:

    310 West 6th St., Room 118

    Medford, OR 97501

    Phone: (541) 858-5122

    • Washington, D.C. Office:

    221 Dirksen Senate Office Building

    Washington, D.C. 20510

    Phone: (202) 224-5244

    • Website

     

    🌐 Director of the Peace Corps

    Carol Spahn

    • Peace Corps Headquarters:

    1275 First Street NE

    Washington, DC 20526

    Phone: (855) 855-1961

    • Director’s Bio
    • Peace Corps Contact Page

     

    Rep. Cliff Bentz (OR-2)

    • District Office:

    14 N Central Ave., Suite 112

    Medford, OR 97501

    Phone: (541) 776-4646

    • Washington, D.C. Office:

    409 Cannon House Office Building

    Washington, D.C. 20515

    Phone: (202) 225-6730

    • Website

     

    🏛️ U.S. Senators from Oregon

    Sen. Jeff Merkley

    • Medford Office:

    10 South Bartlett Street, Suite 201

    Medford, OR 97501

    Phone: (541) 608-9102

    • Washington, D.C. Office:

    531 Hart Senate Office Building

    Washington, D.C. 20510

    Phone: (202) 224-3753

    • Website

    Sen. Ron Wyden

    • Medford Office:

    310 West 6th St., Room 118

    Medford, OR 97501

    Phone: (541) 858-5122

    • Washington, D.C. Office:

    221 Dirksen Senate Office Building

    Washington, D.C. 20510

    Phone: (202) 224-5244

    • Website

     

    🌐 Director of the Peace Corps

    Carol Spahn

    • Peace Corps Headquarters:

    1275 First Street NE

    Washington, DC 20526

    Phone: (855) 855-1961

     

    Dear  Cliff Bentz

     

    Rep. Cliff Bentz (OR-2)

    • District Office:

    14 N Central Ave., Suite 112

    Medford, OR 97501

     

    I am writing as a proud Returned Peace Corps Volunteer who served in Gapyeong, South Korea from 1979 to 1981, working in a rural health center as a tuberculosis control worker. My time in the Peace Corps shaped not only my worldview but also the trajectory of my life. It led me to pursue a Master’s degree in Korean Studies and ultimately serve 27 years in the U.S. Foreign Service before retiring in 2016.

    Today, I spend part of the year in South Korea, maintaining the personal and professional ties that were forged through public service and people-to-people diplomacy. I can attest firsthand to the long-lasting goodwill, cultural understanding, and strategic partnerships that Peace Corps volunteers generate. The Peace Corps is not simply a volunteer program—it is a cornerstone of American soft power and one of the most effective tools of diplomacy we’ve ever known.

    I urge you, in the strongest terms, to oppose any efforts to dismantle, defund, or diminish the Peace Corps. As geopolitical tensions rise, especially in Asia, it is more crucial than ever to maintain programs that build bridges, not walls.

    Please support robust funding for the Peace Corps, protect its independence, and preserve its legacy. The future of diplomacy begins in villages, classrooms, and clinics—not just embassies.

    Sincerely,

    Jake Aller

    Peace Corps Korea K-49 Group

    (1979–1981)
    U.S. Foreign Service Officer (Ret.)

     

    What a beautiful journey!: Celebrating the 50th … – Peace Corps

    The Korean government has acknowledged these strong ties by hosting several reunions over the years. Last month, about 80 returned Volunteers and family members traveled to Seoul, South Korea, to mark the 50th anniversary of the Peace Corps arrival in the country. We were there to attend the opening of an exhibit on the Peace Corps at the …

    Images for peace corps Korea

    More Images

    https://duckduckgo.com/?q=peace+corps+Korea&atb=v314-1&iax=images&ia=images

     

    Peace Corps Announces Collaboration with the Republic of Korea on Volunteer …

    Peace Corps opened its program in Korea in 1966, and more than 2,000 Peace Corps volunteers served there before operations closed in 1981. Since 2008, the Republic of Korea has recognized the service of Peace Corps/Korea volunteers by hosting return trips for many former volunteers so they can again visit the country. Peace Corps and KOICA …

    https://www.peacecorps.gov › news › library › peace-corps-volunteers-honored-by-the-korea-society

    Peace Corps Volunteers Honored by The Korea Society

    Peace Corps/Korea brought over 2,000 Americans to serve in Korea’s classrooms, farms, and industry. From 1966-1981, the assistance provided by these Volunteers, at a critical period in Korean history, helped to cement U.S.Korea ties. Kevin O’Donnell, the first country director of Peace Corps/Korea, and fourth director of the Peace Corps will …

    https://www.peacecorps.gov › countries

    Countries – Peace Corps

    Peace Corps Volunteers serve in over 60 countries. Find your place in the world. … South Korea 1966-1981 2,060 Volunteers Served Caribbean. The Dominican Republic. 1962-present 13 Volunteers …

    https://www.peacecorps.gov › stories › korea-in-the-side-view-mirror-reflections-of-a-former-peace-corps-volunteer

    Korea in the side-view mirror: Reflections of a former Volunteer

    It was, as the Peace Corps ad says, “The toughest job you will ever love.” When I left Korea in the mid-70s I was certain I would never see it again. As the years passed, the recollections of my life in Korea crystallized into increasingly romanticized memories. They became nearer and dearer to me in my life’s side-view mirror.

    https://www.peacecorpsconnect.org › companies › friends-of-Korea

    National Peace Corps Association | Friends of Korea – NPCA

    About Friends of Korea. Friends of Korea was founded in 2002 by former Peace Corps volunteers who served in the Republic of Korea between 1966 and 1981. Since Peace Corps ended its program in Korea in 1981, the challenge for Friends of Korea has been to find a mission. Over the past several years we have been engaged in a series of …

    https://peacecorpsworldwide.org › memories-of-serving-as-last-peace-corps-Korea-director

    Memories of serving as the last Peace Corps/Korea Director

    Oct 21, 2020Oct 21 2020. 1. by James Mayer (Korea 1978-81) The Korea Times. Friends of Korea. Peace Corps volunteers and others hold a walk-a-thon to raise funds for heart surgery in 1981. / Courtesy of Nancy Kelly. No one likes to be last. But I had that distinction as the Peace Corps Korea country director, and I am forever grateful that it happened.

    https://www.peacecorps.gov

    Peace Corps – Connect With the Peace Corps

    Connect With the Peace Corps. The Peace Corps. We are inspired by hands-on, grassroots-driven, and lasting impact. Learn more about our mission. In a changing world, building a better future together. New Opportunities Now Available. Dozens of new Volunteering openings are live on our site.

    https://www.peacecorpsconnect.org › articles › peace-corps-volunteers-and-the-making-of-korean-studies-in-the-united-states

    Some 2,000 Peace Corps Volunteers Served in Korea. They Have Also …

    Peace Corps Volunteers and the Making of Korean Studies in the United States. Edited by Seung-Kyung Kim and Michael Robinson. Center for Korea Studies, University of Washington. Reviewed by Steven Boyd Saum . The Peace Corps sent more than 2,000 Volunteers to South Korea 1966-81, to teach English and advise on healthcare.

    https://www.peacecorpsconnect.org › events › peace-corps-korea-all-group-volunteers-staff-and-friends-reunion-2018

    National Peace Corps Association | Peace Corps Korea All-Group … – NPCA

    Mention you’re with the Korea Peace Corps Reunion. Dan Strickland (K-18; danstrickland2001@yahoo.com) is our reunion point person and is available to answer questions or make suggestions. Let us know you’re coming by sending Dan an email with your name(s), your Korean name, K-group #, and check-in/out dates.

    Here’s the latest on the future of the Peace Corps as of mid-2025, including perspectives from across the political spectrum and a list of countries where volunteers are currently serving.

     

    🌍 Current Status of the Peace Corps

    The Peace Corps is facing significant restructuring and budget cuts under the Trump administration. The Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) has recommended deep staff reductions—up to 80% at headquarters and 25% globally—which could shutter some country programs. While the agency insists it will remain operational, many volunteers and applicants are anxious about its viability.

     

    🗞️ Left-Leaning Analysis

    • The Hill: Reports that the cuts could “cripple” the Peace Corps and undermine decades of goodwill and soft diplomacy. Critics argue this is part of a broader dismantling of America’s international development efforts.
    • Peace Corps Connect: The National Peace Corps Association warns that reduced staffing and federal hiring freezes threaten volunteer support and training. They’re urging Congress to restore funding and protect the agency’s mission.
    • Peace Corps Worldwide: Advocates propose transforming the Peace Corps into an NGO or merging it with AmeriCorps to preserve its legacy and adapt to modern global challenges.

     

    📰 Right-Leaning or Neutral Analysis

    • EconoTimes: Highlights Trump’s plan to expand and modernize the Peace Corps with a $2 billion budget, focusing on strategic regions like Southeast Asia and Eastern Europe. The goal is to align volunteer efforts with U.S. foreign policy interests.
    • Next Gen Business: Notes that while some see the cuts as fiscally responsible, others worry they will weaken U.S. influence abroad. The restructuring is framed as part of a broader government streamlining effort.
    • The Independent: Covers the DOGE-led downsizing and staff buyouts, noting that some posts may close and that the agency’s soft power role is at risk.

     

    📍 Countries Where Peace Corps Volunteers Are Currently Serving

    According to the Peace Corps official site, volunteers are actively serving in over 60 countries. Here are some with open opportunities:

    • Africa: Benin, Botswana, Cameroon, Eswatini, Liberia, Malawi, Namibia, Rwanda, Togo, Zambia
    • Asia: Kyrgyz Republic, Mongolia, Nepal, Philippines, Timor-Leste
    • Europe: Albania, Armenia, Georgia, Kosovo, Moldova, North Macedonia, Ukraine
    • Pacific Islands: Palau, Tonga, Vanuatu
    • Latin America & Caribbean: Belize, Colombia, Costa Rica, Dominican Republic, Ecuador, Guyana, Jamaica, Panama, Paraguay, Peru, St. Lucia, St. Vincent and the Grenadines, Grenada, Dominica

    Some programs have been paused or closed recently, including those in Mozambique, Ethiopia, Cameroon, Kyrgyz Republic, and South Africa.

    Medium

    Medium

    Substack

    Korean Peace Corps Memories

    Wattpad


    Wattpad

    THe End

    July 18, 2025, 6:47 pm 0 boosts 0 favorites

    50 Peace Corps reunion

    This is a shout-out to all the Americans who answered the call to serve in the Peace Corps.  As some of you know I served in Gapyeong, Korea from 1979 to 1981 working as a tuberculous control worker in a rural health center.  Serving in the Peace Corps changed my life in so many ways.  It led to a life-long fascination with South Korea, including becoming reasonably fluent in the language, meeting and marrying my wife whom I met after my service ended, and a MA degree in Korean studies from the University of Washington in 1986.  It also led me to join the Foreign Service and serve in the Embassy from 1991 to 1993 and serving on the Korea desk from 1994 to 1996.

    Before joining the State Department I taught ESL for the US Army, for the Korean Consolidated Administration school, and later at Kyunghee University for three years and Government and Asian Studies for the University of Maryland in Korea.

    Title: The Last Volunteer: Dispatches from the Disbanded Peace Corps

    Tone: Satirical, reflective, dystopian
    Style: Blog-style narrative with historical and personal interjections

    Structure:

    Title: The Last Volunteer: Dispatches from the Disbanded Peace Corps

    Genre: Satire / Dystopian Memoir
    Tags: PeaceCorps, satire, dystopia, politics, memoir, Korea, Trump, resistance, history

    Chapter 1: The Announcement

    In 1980, I served in the Peace Corps working in a public health center as a tuberculous control worker in Gapyeong, a small town in the mountains two hours from Seoul. I shared kimchi recipes with elders, learned the art of bowing without bruising my pride, and discovered that diplomacy often begins with a shared meal.

    We were told we were ambassadors of peace.

    Now, apparently, we were just wasting taxpayer money.

    Chapter 2: The Decree

    It came on a Tuesday. Trump stood at a golden podium flanked by ICE agents and a bald eagle wearing aviators.

    “The Peace Corps is hereby disbanded,” he declared. “We don’t need volunteers spreading peace. We need patriots sealing borders.”

    The budget was rescinded. Volunteers were ordered home. The Peace Corps website redirected to a recruitment page for ICE.

    Chapter 3: The Fallout

    Returned volunteers were stripped of their federal hiring preference. One was reportedly escorted out of a USDA interview for wearing a tie-dye shirt and quoting Mandela.

    Peace Corps offices were converted into detention intake centers. The slogan “Life is calling” was replaced with “Compliance is mandatory.”

    My old training center in Korea? Rumor has it it’s now a drone calibration site.

    Chapter 4: The Broader Purge

    The Presidential Management Fellows program was canceled next. “We don’t need managers,” Trump said. “We need enforcers.”

    The State Department announced it would no longer publish annual human rights reports. “We prefer vibes-based diplomacy,” said the new Undersecretary for Global Branding.

    The U.S. withdrew from the International Labour Organization. All ILO conventions were declared null and void. Labor rights, it seems, were too socialist.

    Chapter 5: Toronto Rising

    Late-night comics were fired. Journalists silenced. And somewhere in the chaos, Toronto became the new capital of dissent.

    Former Peace Corps volunteers, comedians, and exiled diplomats now broadcast nightly from a converted Tim Hortons.

    Their motto: Still serving—just not sanctioned.

    Chapter 6: The Last Volunteer

    I served in Korea from 1979 to 1981. We believed in bridges, not walls. We believed that service could change the world.

    I still do.

    Even if the bridge now leads north to Toronto.

    Author’s Note:

    This piece is satire. But the memories are real. And so is the fear that idealism is being erased, one program at a time.

    If you served, if you dreamed, if you still believe—keep writing. Keep resisting.

    Peace isn’t dead. It’s just been defunded.

    Along the way, Korea changed so much and is not the country I first learned to love back in 1979.  Here are a few of my poetic reflections, followed by additional information on the Peace Corps and my letters to my Congressmen and Senators and the Peace Corps director expressing my frustration over the possibility that the Peace Corps could soon join USAID on the chopping block. I will post any responses I might receive.

    Korean Poems

     

    author at a Korean temple 1980?

    Korea travels

     

    I first came to Korea in 1979

    in the Peace Corps

     

    Stayed in the rural countryside

    in the town of Gapeyong

    where I worked

    in a rural health care center

     

    Where I was one of four non-Koreans

    Had to speak Korean to survive

     

    Stayed on in a variety of jobs

    Including diplomatic service

    I last lived there in 1993.

     

    Non-Korean food was hard to get

    Outside of the GI ghettos

    English speakers were few

    And the country was not foreign-friendly

     

    There were few foreign residents

    Most American service members

    Some missionary types

    Diplomatic corps

    A few English teachers

    A few ex-pat business people

     

    Most women quit after marriage

    As it was a male-dominated society

     

    In the rural countryside

    No one knew a woman’s name

     

    They were referred

    to as so and so “mom”

     

    Or so and so wife,

    Or the generic aunt,

    or grandmother

     

    Public transit was just getting going

    But traffic was not too bad

    Few people could afford cars

     

    Back then the old Korea was still there

    And it was a very different place and time

    Going through the transition

    to the country, it has become

     

    Today’s Korea is a very different place

     

    The rural countryside is deserted

    Wilderness areas are coming back

    Even wildlife is coming back

    In the mountain outback regions

     

    50 percent of the public

    Live in the Seoul metro area

    Including Kyeongi province

    And Incheon city where I reside.

     

    Public transit is among the best

    In the world.

    Internet fast and cheap

    Everywhere connected

     

    Highways are decent but overcrowded

    The KTX train is fast and convenient

    The Incheon airport one of the best

     

    The choices for food are much better

    Used to be it was almost impossible

    To find non-Korean food

    Outside the GI ghetto towns.

     

    Now it is everywhere

    Even saw a Mexican restaurant

    In a suburban Busan neighborhood.

     

    In the end

    Koreans should be proud

    Of all that they have accomplished.

     

    I remain optimistic

    That someday the two Koreans

    Will become one again

    And that they will continue

    To advance and grow

     

    But the essence of Korea will remain

     

    Waiting for Korean Springtime

    poet Hill Korea

     

    The world peace forest

    Stretches five miles

    Through a delightful forest

     

    Including a nice lotus pound

    A winter watering hole for birds

    And a small mountain

     

     

    I welcome the advent of spring

    The cherry trees snowing

    The Tulips and roses blooming

     

    After a cold sometimes hard winter

    Especially during the COVID pandemic

    Which kept so many people

    Trapped indoors

     

    As I walk the path

    With the love of my life

    By my side

     

    Enjoying another springtime

    Filled with love and affection

    That is why I love Korean springtime.

     

    19 lines

    Pastoral free verse

     

    Life in a Korean village

     

    I am living in a Korean village as an exchange student.  One day my host family asks me to go to the local health center to tell them to change the father’s medicine, and give me a note, the old medicine, and instructions.  I am a little apprehensive, but they told me that was fine since the dragon who controlled the village had approved the request already.  I smiled I had met the dragon who seemed to like me which made things in the village go much better.  The daughter is cute.

    First Trip to Korea

    When I first went to Korea

    Almost 45 years ago

    It was a very alien place.

     

    An overwhelming experience,

    I entered a hot, humid, sauna.

    The smells were intense

     

    The food was spicy

    filled with passionate heat.

     

    chaotic

    cacophonous

    discordant sounds

    filled the air.

     

    the language sounded

    like everyone was screaming.

     

    Taxis honking, cars barking.

    People screeching

    Loudspeakers blaring

    Sirens blasted the air.

     

    Millions of strange people

    Military police everywhere

    With guns watching everyone.

     

    I felt I was a stranger in a strange land

    Everyone speaking

    A weird language

    I did not understand anything.

     

    Over time I got used to it

    The smells became normal

    The food was now delicious.

     

    The sounds are less chaotic

    Less cacophonous

     

    Less discordant

    I even eventually learned

    How to speak the weird language.

     

    I fell in love with this strange place

    Which became my second home

    And now I live there half the time

    And half the time in the United States

     

    Neither here nor there

    Am I here

    But I remain a true stranger

    In a still strange land.

    For the rest of the posting see https://wp.me/p7NAzO-2sA

    Buddha Prayer Stones

    ATTACHMENT DETAILS yongdusan-park-Busan-buddha--rotated.jpg Ju
    ATTACHMENT DETAILS
    yongdusan-park-Busan-buddha–rotated.jpg
    Ju

    In Korea mountains

    There is a custom

    Of putting rocks

    On top of other rocks

     

    Building little towers

    Of rocks

    along the mountain path

     

    An ancient shaman tradition

    Taken over the Buddhist temples

    The rocks piles were dedicated

    To the Sanshin mountain spirits

     

    And would grant wishes

    To those who added

    Rock to the cosmic tribute

     

    Sanshin would honor

    Those prayers and wishes

     

    Korean Winter roses

    Red, black and yellow

    In a field of late snow

    Early March

    End of winter

     

    Beneath the early blooming

    cherry trees

    their petals joining the snow

    along the world peace forest.

     

    Visit to Jade Garden

     

    Visiting Jade Garden

    Nar Chungcheong, South Korea

    On a beautiful spring day

     

    The cherry trees were in full flower

    Pink and white petals

    The scent of cherry trees in the air

     

    Other trees just starting to bloom

    Red, yellow and white tulips

    Beginning to bloom

     

    The sounds of spring all around

    Birds singing

    People walking about.

     

    Talking to one another

    As they wander the pathway

    Taking in the springtime splendor.

     

    The sun warming up

    The pathway winding

    .Through the Forrest.

     

    Meeting the Girl of My Dreams in Korea

    The Peace Corps changed my life
    Not in the obvious ways
    That it did

    I learned a new language
    A new culture
    Met many different people
    Did some constructive development work

    And contributed to friendship
    Between Koreans and the US

    All the usual things that Peace Corps
    Is supposed to accomplish

    But the Peace Corps changed me
    And I became the man I am now

    Because of those two years
    I spend in the countryside
    Of South Korea

    I went to graduate school
    I became a diplomat

    But most importantly
    If I had not gone to the Korean peace corps program
    I never would have met the girl of my dreams
    The women I was fated to meet

    I first met Angela in 1974
    When I was in high school

    And fell asleep in a class
    And had the dream that haunted me
    To this day

    In the dream
    I met a beautiful Asian women
    Who was speaking to me
    In a weird language

    And then she disappeared
    Like in Star Trek

    And I fell on the floor

    “Screaming
    You are you?”

    I continued to have these visions
    Every month for seven years

    I eventually learned

    that she was in Korea
    And so I joined the Peace Corps

    to go to Korea
    To find her

    After I finished Peace Corps
    I stuck around for another year

    Thinking I would find her
    But never did

    Just when I was

    due to return to the US
    To go to Graduate school
    I had the final dream

    In this dream
    She said in Korean

    “Don’t worry

    you will meet me soon.”

    That night getting off the bus
    In front of me
    Was the girl in the dream

    I looked at her
    And I knew she was it

    And she looked at me
    And knew I was it

    We met up for coffee
    And we dated

    I proposed to her

    three days after I met her

    And then we married
    Two months later

    Despite her family’s attempts
    To keep us apart

    And we have been

    married 43 years
    And I fall in love with her
    Over and over again

    And I still have the dream
    When I am alone
    Or when I am stressed out

    I see her standing by the bed
    Smiling at me

    Saying
    Everything will be alright
    And it is

    and so thinking back on my life
    My life changed forever

    When I left the US
    To join the Peace Corps

    Long Live the Peace Corps

    this is a true story of the love of my life.  I met her in 1982 when I was teaching in Korea after having finished my Peace Corps service in 1981.  We got married two months after we met and have been married 33 years.  I still recall the dreams of how I would met her from time to time.

    I always thought this would make a great love story movie., perhaps a K Drama?

    Spring Time Sketch in Youngchando, Korea

    In the early morning dawn
    I like to go for a walk
    Down among the cherry trees
    And flowering plants

    Just to welcome
    Another fine spring day
    As the sun comes up
    Dispelling my dismal mood

    And filling me
    With love
    Hope and peace
    As I walk the in
    the world peace forest

    Through the forest
    and over the mountain
    breathing the springtime air
    alive filled with life

    and I think to myself
    this moment
    is the moment
    that I am meant to experience

    life itself
    and nothing more
    nothing less
    Just breath in life

    based on a photo of cherry trees along the world peace forest near my house in Youngchangdo, Korea, and based on the April 21 writers digest poetry prompt to write a poetic sketch © 3 years ago, john Cosmos Aller

    Hiking In Korea

    Korea is a land
    filled with mountain paths
    everywhere you go

    there are paths
    leading deep
    into the mountains

    one of my favorite paths
    is the world peace forrest
    which meanders around
    my town

    linking a lake, a lotus pound
    and a nice mountain peak
    and on the top
    on a clear day

    you can see North Korean
    in the distance
    and the Incheon airport
    near by

    Korean Pottery of Love

    In Korea
    there are many pottery kilns

    ancient art form
    in the land of the morning calm

    I have a few pieces
    I bought years ago

    and enjoy looking
    at my vase

    filled with love
    for my wife

    Korean Springtime

     

    Korean Springtime
    I walk the path with my love
    Still Under her spell

    this is the 42 springtime

    I have enjoyed with the love of my life by my side © a year ago, john Cosmos Aller

    American Coffee Takes Over Korea

    About 30 years ago,
    American-style coffee chains
    Discovered Korea.
    After the 88 Olympics,
    Koreans discovered the joy
    Of real brewed coffee,
    Hot, Sweet, Neat
    The rest is history.

    I love coffee and was so glad that you could finally get a decent coffee in Korea, prior to the Olympics coffee shops were called tabangs which were where men mostly would hang out drinking instant coffee or Korean tea, and flirting with the cute waitresses.
    © a year ago, john Cosmos Aller

     

    hot humid weather in Korea,

    hot humid weather in Korea,
    outside like walking in a sauna.

    Most people don’t use air conditioning
    due to both expenses,
    fear of air conditioning disease
    (Which is a real thing).

    hanging out at a coffee shop or mall
    discouraged as COVID continues to spread.
    Only two people can dine out at night

    over 2, 00 cases a day now
    only 20 percent are fully vaccinated.

    temperatures will hit 40 degrees (100 + f)
    later this week
    as the monsoon season ends
    and the August heat begins.

    Koreans are learning
    new words to describe this

    heat dome
    tropical nights
    Polar vortex
    Monster typhoons
    Killing floods
    Killing heat waves
    are now common.

    used to be that July and August
    were hot and humid
    but rarely about 100 dF.
    Now that is becoming the norm,
    as global climate change
    begins hitting Korea hard.

    the winters are colder
    but much shorter.
    Late January to early February
    Polar Vortex swept through

    the summer is longer
    starting in May
    and lasting until mid-September.

    Autumn is lasting
    from Mid-September
    to Mid-December.
    Spring just late April to early June

    So far no killer wildfires.
    As the monsoon season
    Came on time
    Monson flooding
    Just before the killer heatwaves

    the prompt was to write about the local weather Korea is experiencing a heat dome highs in the 90’s (40 C) real feel close to 100 F, with tropical nights in the 80s F.  No relief in sight until late august, the second hottest summer in Korea so far but it will probably break the record heat

    Korean Summer Haiku

    Korean summers

    hot, humid, tropical

    24/7 Sauna

     

    Walking Along the Winter Korean Beach

    Walking along the winter
    Korean beach,
    With the love of my life
    By my side,

    She looks at me
    With red hot love
    Flames shooting
    From her black eyes

     

    Seoul 1979 and 2015

    2013 Seoul 1979
    April 7

    When I arrived in Seoul
    Back in the day in 1979

    Seoul was a grim city
    Big, polluted, overwhelming
    Filled with Koreans
    And nothing much to do

    Other than eat Korean food
    And drink Korean booze

    Tourist sites were none existent
    And foreigners were few and far between

    The GI’s stayed in Itaewon
    And there were few other foreigners around

    And there were very few places in town
    To eat non-Korean food

    Just the fancy hotels
    The base and Itaewon

    But Seoul had it’s charms
    It grew on me over the years

    And gradually became less grim
    Less forbidding
    And less foreigner unfriendly

    When I left Seoul in 1984 it was changing
    Before my very eyes

    And when I came back in 1988 it was different city
    And those were the days
    Of the Olympics and Seoul’s emergence
    As a modern city

    2014 Seoul 2015
    April 8

    Seoul is so different now days
    Very little of the old Seoul remains

    The Kangwha moon area downtown
    Still exists as warren of alley ways

    Between big buildings
    Filled with restaurants and shops

    But the old tabangs (tea shops)
    With the tabang girls
    Are long gone

    The karaoke bars and girl bars
    Are still there going strong

    But coffee shops and fancier restaurants
    Are everywhere

    And foreigners are everywhere
    Seoul is no longer a city just for Koreans
    It has truly become a world city
    Must to the dismay of the traditionalists

    Parts of the old Seoul remain
    and the mountains and parks
    have become very popular indeed

    there has been a resurgence in Korean Buddhism
    and in traditional arts and crafts
    and traditional foods as well

    no where more than in Insa dong
    the Mecca of traditional Korean culture
    these days

    and Itaweon has become
    the heart of the expatriate part of Seoul
    with people from around the world
    gathered together

    along with the young and hip
    Koreans

    And there is even a gay quarter now
    unimaginable in the old days

    Seoul has changed
    For the most part for the better

    But I still miss the Seoul of my past
    And will mourn its passing
    As I get older

    Along with the city
    That I have adopted
    As my second home town

    thoughts of life in Seoul in 1979 and 2015 © 7 years ago, john Cosmos Aller      

    Melting away my heart
    Driving out the cold
    of the winter beach.

    Korean beaches are romantic in the winter and I am living in a beach resort island near the Incheon airport, © 8 months ago, john Cosmos Aller

    Love in Korean

    When Sam Adams
    first met her
    The lady of his dreams

    There was as the Koreans
    Would say

    Spark from heart to heart
    이심촌심
    isimchonsim

    truly love at first sight
    첫눈에 반하다
    cheosnun-e banhada

    they both knew
    that it is just fate

    운명
    unyoung

    that they had met
    that date.

    Two months later
    They were married
    It all happened
    40 years ago

    48 years after
    She first came
    To him in his dreams.

    the prompt was to incorporate foreign words into a poem I chose Korean which is my best foreign language as I have been struggling to learn it for 43 years

    https://lovejakecallerworld.tumblr.com › post › 651516125065183232 › venice-in-korea

     

    Jake Cosmos Aller — Venice in Korea

    May 18, 2021Venice in Korea “Venice in Korea and other Korean Stream Bed Parks ARA Canal Incheon Over the last decade, Korea has build hundreds of stream bed parks throughout Seoul and Korea. There are great… Jake Cosmos Aller — Venice in Korea. 1.5M ratings 277k ratings See, that’s what the app is perfect for. Sounds perfect Wahhhh, I don’t …

    https://lovejakecallerworld.tumblr.com › post › 652960510670766080 › ara-canal-incheon-venice-in-korea-manisan

    Jake Cosmos Aller — ARA Canal Incheon Venice in Korea Manisan…

    Jun 3, 2021I have reached three milestones. the World According to Cosmos now has over 4,000 followers from around the world. Thanks to all of you for visiting my site and caring about my musings about Life, the Universe and everything. Second, I have not posted 264 posts over the last few years since I started this blog late in 2019.

    Korean Summer Haiku by jake cosmos aller – FanStory

    Jul 2, 2022Korean Summer Haiku by jake cosmos aller. General Poetry posted July 2, 2022. jake cosmos aller. Retired US Diplomat (State Department) living in South Korea. Served 27 years in 10 countries. Traveled to 55 countries, all 50 states. Grew up in Berkeley, California. Married, no children.

    https://fanstory.com › displaystory.jsp?id=1061790

    Korean travels by jake cosmos aller – fanstory.com

    May 20, 2022jake cosmos aller Retired US Diplomat (State Department) living in South Korea. Served 27 years in 10 countries. Traveled to 55 countries, all 50 states. Grew up in Berkeley, California. Married, no children. A published poet, and short story writer. Finished six nove – more…

    https://lovejakecallerworld.tumblr.com › post › 653430254473494528 › update-korean-riverstream-bed-parks-ara-canal

    The Life of a PCV by jake cosmos aller – FanStory

    Jul 20, 2022by jake cosmos aller. Corners of the world. In 1979-1981. Than my own. I learned to speak Korean. In a town that was in the countryside. Of Seoul or the nearby city of Chuncheon. And foreign agricultural workers as well. Than when I lived there over 43 years ago.

    2

    https://www.poemhunter.com › jake-cosmos-aller › biography

    Jake Cosmos Aller — Yeongjongdo Redevelopment Proposals

    Yeongjongdo Redevelopment Proposals ” Yeongjongdo redevelopment proposals bike rail trail in Yeongjongdo The Korean government has ambitious plans for developing Youngjongdo where I live. Here are my… Jake Cosmos Aller — Yeongjongdo Redevelopment Proposals. 1.5M ratings 277k ratings See, that’s what the app is perfect for. …

    https://tiferetjournal.com › poems-jake-cosmos-aller-2018

    Food Imperalism by jake cosmos aller – fanstory.com

    Jul 17, 2022Food Imperalism by jake cosmos aller. Biographical Fiction posted July 17, 2022. Retired US Diplomat (State Department) living in South Korea. Served 27 years in 10 countries. Traveled to 55 countries, all 50 states. Grew up in Berkeley, California. Married, no children.

    https://spillwords.com › author › jakecosmosaller

    Venice in Korea by The World According to Cosmos

    poetry and rants by the Cosmos. Listen on . Message

    https://www.facebook.com › theworldaccordingtocosmos › posts › 1480226155746852

    Jake Aller – Venice in Korea WHERE TO LISTEN to the World… | Facebook

    Venice in Korea WHERE TO LISTEN to the World According to Cosmos breaker audio Google podcasts radio public Spotify Korea Radio public c: on PocketCasts: Visit to Gangwha Ginseng Market We…

    3

    https://www.poemhunter.com › jake-cosmos-aller › biography

    Jake Cosmos Aller — ARA Canal Incheon Venice in Korea Manisan…

    Jun 3, 2021I have reached three milestones. the World According to Cosmos now has over 4,000 followers from around the world. Thanks to all of you for visiting my site and caring about my musings about Life, the Universe and everything. Second, I have not posted 264 posts over the last few years since I started this blog late in 2019.

    https://lovejakecallerworld.tumblr.com › post › 653430254473494528 › update-korean-riverstream-bed-parks-ara-canal

    Jake Cosmos Aller — Update: Korean River/Stream Bed Parks ARA Canal…

    Jun 8, 2021Update: Korean River/Stream Bed Parks ARA Canal Incheon Updated letter to NPS and updated photos for Cheongjecheon streambed park. Letter to National Parks Director, Minister of Tourism, and KT One of the little-known gems of Korean tourism is all the great river parks and stream bed parks throughout Korea.

    https://spillwords.com › morning-light-by-jake-cosmos-aller

    Jake Aller – Venice in Korea WHERE TO LISTEN to the World… | Facebook

    Venice in Korea WHERE TO LISTEN to the World According to Cosmos breaker audio Google podcasts radio public Spotify Korea Radio public c: on PocketCasts: Visit to Gangwha Ginseng Market We…

    classic.fanstory.com › mypage.jsp?userid=859865

    What a beautiful journey!: Celebrating the 50th … – Peace Corps

    The Korean government has acknowledged these strong ties by hosting several reunions over the years. Last month, about 80 returned Volunteers and family members traveled to Seoul, South Korea, to mark the 50th anniversary of the Peace Corps arrival in the country. We were there to attend the opening of an exhibit on the Peace Corps at the …

    Images for peace corps Korea

    More Images

    https://duckduckgo.com/?q=peace+corps+Korea&atb=v314-1&iax=images&ia=images

     

    Peace Corps Announces Collaboration with the Republic of Korea on Volunteer …

    Peace Corps opened its program in Korea in 1966, and more than 2,000 Peace Corps volunteers served there before operations closed in 1981. Since 2008, the Republic of Korea has recognized the service of Peace Corps/Korea volunteers by hosting return trips for many former volunteers so they can again visit the country. Peace Corps and KOICA …

    https://www.peacecorps.gov › news › library › peace-corps-volunteers-honored-by-the-korea-society

    Peace Corps Volunteers Honored by The Korea Society

    Peace Corps/Korea brought over 2,000 Americans to serve in Korea’s classrooms, farms, and industry. From 1966-1981, the assistance provided by these Volunteers, at a critical period in Korean history, helped to cement U.S.Korea ties. Kevin O’Donnell, the first country director of Peace Corps/Korea, and fourth director of the Peace Corps will …

    https://www.peacecorps.gov › countries

    Countries – Peace Corps

    Peace Corps Volunteers serve in over 60 countries. Find your place in the world. … South Korea 1966-1981 2,060 Volunteers Served Caribbean. The Dominican Republic. 1962-present 13 Volunteers …

    https://www.peacecorps.gov › stories › korea-in-the-side-view-mirror-reflections-of-a-former-peace-corps-volunteer

    Korea in the side-view mirror: Reflections of a former Volunteer

    It was, as the Peace Corps ad says, “The toughest job you will ever love.” When I left Korea in the mid-70s I was certain I would never see it again. As the years passed, the recollections of my life in Korea crystallized into increasingly romanticized memories. They became nearer and dearer to me in my life’s side-view mirror.

    https://www.peacecorpsconnect.org › companies › friends-of-Korea

    National Peace Corps Association | Friends of Korea – NPCA

    About Friends of Korea. Friends of Korea was founded in 2002 by former Peace Corps volunteers who served in the Republic of Korea between 1966 and 1981. Since Peace Corps ended its program in Korea in 1981, the challenge for Friends of Korea has been to find a mission. Over the past several years we have been engaged in a series of …

    https://peacecorpsworldwide.org › memories-of-serving-as-last-peace-corps-Korea-director

    Memories of serving as the last Peace Corps/Korea Director

    Oct 21, 2020Oct 21 2020. 1. by James Mayer (Korea 1978-81) The Korea Times. Friends of Korea. Peace Corps volunteers and others hold a walk-a-thon to raise funds for heart surgery in 1981. / Courtesy of Nancy Kelly. No one likes to be last. But I had that distinction as the Peace Corps Korea country director, and I am forever grateful that it happened.

    https://www.peacecorps.gov

    Peace Corps – Connect With the Peace Corps

    Connect With the Peace Corps. The Peace Corps. We are inspired by hands-on, grassroots-driven, and lasting impact. Learn more about our mission. In a changing world, building a better future together. New Opportunities Now Available. Dozens of new Volunteering openings are live on our site.

    https://www.peacecorpsconnect.org › articles › peace-corps-volunteers-and-the-making-of-korean-studies-in-the-united-states

    Some 2,000 Peace Corps Volunteers Served in Korea. They Have Also …

    Peace Corps Volunteers and the Making of Korean Studies in the United States. Edited by Seung-Kyung Kim and Michael Robinson. Center for Korea Studies, University of Washington. Reviewed by Steven Boyd Saum . The Peace Corps sent more than 2,000 Volunteers to South Korea 1966-81, to teach English and advise on healthcare.

    https://www.peacecorpsconnect.org › events › peace-corps-korea-all-group-volunteers-staff-and-friends-reunion-2018

    National Peace Corps Association | Peace Corps Korea All-Group … – NPCA

    Mention you’re with the Korea Peace Corps Reunion. Dan Strickland (K-18; danstrickland2001@yahoo.com) is our reunion point person and is available to answer questions or make suggestions. Let us know you’re coming by sending Dan an email with your name(s), your Korean name, K-group #, and check-in/out dates.

     

     

    🗳️ Congressional Representative for Medford, Oregon

     

    Rep. Cliff Bentz (OR-2)

    • District Office:

    14 N Central Ave., Suite 112

    Medford, OR 97501

    Phone: (541) 776-4646

    • Washington, D.C. Office:

    409 Cannon House Office Building

    Washington, D.C. 20515

    Phone: (202) 225-6730

    • Website

     

    🏛️ U.S. Senators from Oregon

    Sen. Jeff Merkley

    • Medford Office:

    10 South Bartlett Street, Suite 201

    Medford, OR 97501

    Phone: (541) 608-9102

    • Washington, D.C. Office:

    531 Hart Senate Office Building

    Washington, D.C. 20510

    Phone: (202) 224-3753

    • Website

    Sen. Ron Wyden

    • Medford Office:

    310 West 6th St., Room 118

    Medford, OR 97501

    Phone: (541) 858-5122

    • Washington, D.C. Office:

    221 Dirksen Senate Office Building

    Washington, D.C. 20510

    Phone: (202) 224-5244

    • Website

     

    🌐 Director of the Peace Corps

    Carol Spahn

    • Peace Corps Headquarters:

    1275 First Street NE

    Washington, DC 20526

    Phone: (855) 855-1961

    • Director’s Bio
    • Peace Corps Contact Page

     

    Rep. Cliff Bentz (OR-2)

    • District Office:

    14 N Central Ave., Suite 112

    Medford, OR 97501

    Phone: (541) 776-4646

    • Washington, D.C. Office:

    409 Cannon House Office Building

    Washington, D.C. 20515

    Phone: (202) 225-6730

    • Website

     

    🏛️ U.S. Senators from Oregon

    Sen. Jeff Merkley

    • Medford Office:

    10 South Bartlett Street, Suite 201

    Medford, OR 97501

    Phone: (541) 608-9102

    • Washington, D.C. Office:

    531 Hart Senate Office Building

    Washington, D.C. 20510

    Phone: (202) 224-3753

    • Website

    Sen. Ron Wyden

    • Medford Office:

    310 West 6th St., Room 118

    Medford, OR 97501

    Phone: (541) 858-5122

    • Washington, D.C. Office:

    221 Dirksen Senate Office Building

    Washington, D.C. 20510

    Phone: (202) 224-5244

    • Website

     

    🌐 Director of the Peace Corps

    Carol Spahn

    • Peace Corps Headquarters:

    1275 First Street NE

    Washington, DC 20526

    Phone: (855) 855-1961

     

    Dear  Cliff Bentz

     

    Rep. Cliff Bentz (OR-2)

    • District Office:

    14 N Central Ave., Suite 112

    Medford, OR 97501

     

    I am writing as a proud Returned Peace Corps Volunteer who served in Gapyeong, South Korea from 1979 to 1981, working in a rural health center as a tuberculosis control worker. My time in the Peace Corps shaped not only my worldview but also the trajectory of my life. It led me to pursue a Master’s degree in Korean Studies and ultimately serve 27 years in the U.S. Foreign Service before retiring in 2016.

    Today, I spend part of the year in South Korea, maintaining the personal and professional ties that were forged through public service and people-to-people diplomacy. I can attest firsthand to the long-lasting goodwill, cultural understanding, and strategic partnerships that Peace Corps volunteers generate. The Peace Corps is not simply a volunteer program—it is a cornerstone of American soft power and one of the most effective tools of diplomacy we’ve ever known.

    I urge you, in the strongest terms, to oppose any efforts to dismantle, defund, or diminish the Peace Corps. As geopolitical tensions rise, especially in Asia, it is more crucial than ever to maintain programs that build bridges, not walls.

    Please support robust funding for the Peace Corps, protect its independence, and preserve its legacy. The future of diplomacy begins in villages, classrooms, and clinics—not just embassies.

    Sincerely,

    Jake Aller

    Peace Corps Korea K-49 Group

    (1979–1981)
    U.S. Foreign Service Officer (Ret.)

     

    What a beautiful journey!: Celebrating the 50th … – Peace Corps

    The Korean government has acknowledged these strong ties by hosting several reunions over the years. Last month, about 80 returned Volunteers and family members traveled to Seoul, South Korea, to mark the 50th anniversary of the Peace Corps arrival in the country. We were there to attend the opening of an exhibit on the Peace Corps at the …

    Images for peace corps Korea

    More Images

    https://duckduckgo.com/?q=peace+corps+Korea&atb=v314-1&iax=images&ia=images

     

    Peace Corps Announces Collaboration with the Republic of Korea on Volunteer …

    Peace Corps opened its program in Korea in 1966, and more than 2,000 Peace Corps volunteers served there before operations closed in 1981. Since 2008, the Republic of Korea has recognized the service of Peace Corps/Korea volunteers by hosting return trips for many former volunteers so they can again visit the country. Peace Corps and KOICA …

    https://www.peacecorps.gov › news › library › peace-corps-volunteers-honored-by-the-korea-society

    Peace Corps Volunteers Honored by The Korea Society

    Peace Corps/Korea brought over 2,000 Americans to serve in Korea’s classrooms, farms, and industry. From 1966-1981, the assistance provided by these Volunteers, at a critical period in Korean history, helped to cement U.S.Korea ties. Kevin O’Donnell, the first country director of Peace Corps/Korea, and fourth director of the Peace Corps will …

    https://www.peacecorps.gov › countries

    Countries – Peace Corps

    Peace Corps Volunteers serve in over 60 countries. Find your place in the world. … South Korea 1966-1981 2,060 Volunteers Served Caribbean. The Dominican Republic. 1962-present 13 Volunteers …

    https://www.peacecorps.gov › stories › korea-in-the-side-view-mirror-reflections-of-a-former-peace-corps-volunteer

    Korea in the side-view mirror: Reflections of a former Volunteer

    It was, as the Peace Corps ad says, “The toughest job you will ever love.” When I left Korea in the mid-70s I was certain I would never see it again. As the years passed, the recollections of my life in Korea crystallized into increasingly romanticized memories. They became nearer and dearer to me in my life’s side-view mirror.

    https://www.peacecorpsconnect.org › companies › friends-of-Korea

    National Peace Corps Association | Friends of Korea – NPCA

    About Friends of Korea. Friends of Korea was founded in 2002 by former Peace Corps volunteers who served in the Republic of Korea between 1966 and 1981. Since Peace Corps ended its program in Korea in 1981, the challenge for Friends of Korea has been to find a mission. Over the past several years we have been engaged in a series of …

    https://peacecorpsworldwide.org › memories-of-serving-as-last-peace-corps-Korea-director

    Memories of serving as the last Peace Corps/Korea Director

    Oct 21, 2020Oct 21 2020. 1. by James Mayer (Korea 1978-81) The Korea Times. Friends of Korea. Peace Corps volunteers and others hold a walk-a-thon to raise funds for heart surgery in 1981. / Courtesy of Nancy Kelly. No one likes to be last. But I had that distinction as the Peace Corps Korea country director, and I am forever grateful that it happened.

    https://www.peacecorps.gov

    Peace Corps – Connect With the Peace Corps

    Connect With the Peace Corps. The Peace Corps. We are inspired by hands-on, grassroots-driven, and lasting impact. Learn more about our mission. In a changing world, building a better future together. New Opportunities Now Available. Dozens of new Volunteering openings are live on our site.

    https://www.peacecorpsconnect.org › articles › peace-corps-volunteers-and-the-making-of-korean-studies-in-the-united-states

    Some 2,000 Peace Corps Volunteers Served in Korea. They Have Also …

    Peace Corps Volunteers and the Making of Korean Studies in the United States. Edited by Seung-Kyung Kim and Michael Robinson. Center for Korea Studies, University of Washington. Reviewed by Steven Boyd Saum . The Peace Corps sent more than 2,000 Volunteers to South Korea 1966-81, to teach English and advise on healthcare.

    https://www.peacecorpsconnect.org › events › peace-corps-korea-all-group-volunteers-staff-and-friends-reunion-2018

    National Peace Corps Association | Peace Corps Korea All-Group … – NPCA

    Mention you’re with the Korea Peace Corps Reunion. Dan Strickland (K-18; danstrickland2001@yahoo.com) is our reunion point person and is available to answer questions or make suggestions. Let us know you’re coming by sending Dan an email with your name(s), your Korean name, K-group #, and check-in/out dates.

    Here’s the latest on the future of the Peace Corps as of mid-2025, including perspectives from across the political spectrum and a list of countries where volunteers are currently serving.

     

    🌍 Current Status of the Peace Corps

    The Peace Corps is facing significant restructuring and budget cuts under the Trump administration. The Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) has recommended deep staff reductions—up to 80% at headquarters and 25% globally—which could shutter some country programs. While the agency insists it will remain operational, many volunteers and applicants are anxious about its viability.

     

    🗞️ Left-Leaning Analysis

    • The Hill: Reports that the cuts could “cripple” the Peace Corps and undermine decades of goodwill and soft diplomacy. Critics argue this is part of a broader dismantling of America’s international development efforts.
    • Peace Corps Connect: The National Peace Corps Association warns that reduced staffing and federal hiring freezes threaten volunteer support and training. They’re urging Congress to restore funding and protect the agency’s mission.
    • Peace Corps Worldwide: Advocates propose transforming the Peace Corps into an NGO or merging it with AmeriCorps to preserve its legacy and adapt to modern global challenges.

     

    📰 Right-Leaning or Neutral Analysis

    • EconoTimes: Highlights Trump’s plan to expand and modernize the Peace Corps with a $2 billion budget, focusing on strategic regions like Southeast Asia and Eastern Europe. The goal is to align volunteer efforts with U.S. foreign policy interests.
    • Next Gen Business: Notes that while some see the cuts as fiscally responsible, others worry they will weaken U.S. influence abroad. The restructuring is framed as part of a broader government streamlining effort.
    • The Independent: Covers the DOGE-led downsizing and staff buyouts, noting that some posts may close and that the agency’s soft power role is at risk.

     

    📍 Countries Where Peace Corps Volunteers Are Currently Serving

    According to the Peace Corps official site, volunteers are actively serving in over 60 countries. Here are some with open opportunities:

    • Africa: Benin, Botswana, Cameroon, Eswatini, Liberia, Malawi, Namibia, Rwanda, Togo, Zambia
    • Asia: Kyrgyz Republic, Mongolia, Nepal, Philippines, Timor-Leste
    • Europe: Albania, Armenia, Georgia, Kosovo, Moldova, North Macedonia, Ukraine
    • Pacific Islands: Palau, Tonga, Vanuatu
    • Latin America & Caribbean: Belize, Colombia, Costa Rica, Dominican Republic, Ecuador, Guyana, Jamaica, Panama, Paraguay, Peru, St. Lucia, St. Vincent and the Grenadines, Grenada, Dominica

    Some programs have been paused or closed recently, including those in Mozambique, Ethiopia, Cameroon, Kyrgyz Republic, and South Africa.

    Medium

    Medium

    Substack

    Korean Peace Corps Memories

    Wattpad


    Wattpad

    THe End

  • Peace Corps Korea Reflections

    Peace Corps Korea Reflections

    Peace  Corps Korea Reflections

    This is a shout-out to all the Americans who answered the call to serve in the Peace Corps.  As some of you know I served in Gapyeong, Korea from 1979 to 1981, working as a tuberculous control worker in a rural health center.  Serving in the Peace Corps changed my life in so many ways.  It led to a life-long fascination with South Korea, including becoming reasonably fluent in the language, meeting and marrying my wife whom I met after my service ended, and a MA degree in Korean studies from the University of Washington in 1986.  It also led me to join the Foreign Service and serve in the Embassy from 1991 to 1993 and serving on the Korea desk from 1994 to 1996.

    Before joining the State Department, I taught ESL for the US Army, for the Korean Consolidated Administration school, and later at Kyunghee University for three years and Government and Asian Studies for the University of Maryland in Korea. I lived in Korea from 1979 to 1984, 1988 to 1991, and from 1991 to 1993, and have resided there as a retiree from 2016 to 2018, and from 2019 to now, residing in Yong Jong International City, near the Incheon Airport, and now in Gimpo City.

    Along the way, Korea changed so much and is not the country I first learned to love back in 1979.  Here are a few of my poetic reflections.

    Korean Poems

    Korea travels

    I first came to Korea in 1979 in the Peace Corps
    Stayed in the rural countryside
    Where I was one of four non-Koreans
    Had to speak Korean to survive

    Stayed on in a variety of jobs
    Including diplomatic service
    I last lived there in 1993.

    Non-Korean food was hard to get
    Outside of the GI ghettos
    English speakers were few
    And the country was not foreign-friendly

    There were few foreign residents
    Most American service members
    Some missionary types
    Diplomatic corps

    A few English teachers
    A few ex-pat business people

    Most women quit after marriage
    As it was a male-dominated society

    In the rural countryside
    No one knew a woman’s name

    They were referred
    to as so and so “mom”
    Or so and so wife,

    Or the generic aunt,
    or grandmother

    Public transit was just getting going
    But traffic was not too bad
    Few people could afford cars

    Back then the old Korea was still there
    And it was a very different place and time
    Going through the transition
    to the country, it has become

    Today’s Korea is a very different place
    The rural countryside is deserted
    Wilderness areas are coming back
    Even wildlife is coming back
    In the mountain outback regions

    50 percent of the public
    Live in the Seoul metro area
    Including Kyeongi province
    And Incheon city where I reside.

    Public transit is among the best
    In the world.

    Internet fast and cheap
    Everywhere connected
    Highways are decent but overcrowded

    The KTX train is fast and convenient
    The Incheon airport one of the best
    The choices for food are much better

    Used to be it was almost impossible
    To find non-Korean food
    Outside the GI ghetto towns.

    Now it is everywhere
    Even saw a Mexican restaurant
    In a suburban Busan neighborhood.

    In the end
    Koreans should be proud
    Of all that they have accomplished.

    I remain optimistic
    That someday the two Koreans
    Will become one again

    And that they will continue
    To advance and grow

    But the essence of Korea will remain

    Waiting for Korean Springtime

    poet in springtime
    poet in springtime

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

    The world peace forest
    Stretches five miles
    Through a delightful forest
    Including a nice lotus pound

    A winter watering hole for birds
    And a small mountain

    I welcome the advent of spring
    The cherry trees snowing
    The Tulips and roses blooming

    After a cold sometimes hard winter
    Especially during the COVID pandemic
    Which kept so many people
    Trapped indoors

    As I walk the path
    With the love of my life
    By my side

    Enjoying another springtime
    Filled with love and affection
    That is why I love Korean springtime.

    Life in a Korean village

    I am living in a Korean village as an exchange student.  One day my host family asks me to go to the local health center to tell them to change the father’s medicine, and give me a note, the old medicine, and instructions.  I am a little apprehensive, but they told me that was fine since the dragon who controlled the village had approved the request already.  I smiled I had met the dragon who seemed to like me which made things in the village go much better.  The daughter is cute.

    First Trip to Korea

    When I first went to Korea
    Almost 45 years ago
    It was a very alien place.
    An overwhelming experience,

    I entered a hot, humid, sauna.
    The smells were intense
    The food was spicy
    filled with passionate heat.

    chaotic
    cacophonous
    discordant sounds
    filled the air.

    the language sounded
    like everyone was screaming.
    Taxis honking, cars barking.

    People screeching
    Loudspeakers blaring
    Sirens blasted the air.

    Millions of strange people
    Military police everywhere
    With guns watching everyone.

    I felt I was a stranger
    in a strange land
    Everyone speaking
    A weird language

    I did not understand anything.
    Over time I got used to it
    The smells became normal

    The food was now delicious.
    The sounds are less chaotic
    Less cacophonous
    Less discordant

    I even eventually learned
    How to speak the weird language.
    I fell in love with this strange place
    Which became my second home

    And now I live there half the time
    And half the time in the United States

    Neither here nor there
    Am I here
    But I remain a true stranger
    In a still strange land.

    Buddha Prayer Stones

    In Korea mountains
    There is a custom
    Of putting rocks
    On top of other rocks

    Building little towers
    Of rocks
    along the mountain path
    An ancient shaman tradition
    Taken over the Buddhist temples

    The rocks piles were dedicated
    To the Sanshin mountain spirits

    And would grant wishes
    To those who added
    Rock to the cosmic tribute

    Sanshin would honor
    Those prayers and wishes

    Winter roses

    Red, black and yellow
    In a field of late snow
    Early March

    End of winter
    Beneath the early blooming
    cherry trees
    their petals joining the snow
    along the world peace forest.

    Visiting Jade Garden

     

    Jade garden 7
    jade garden 7

     

     

     

     

     

     

    jake garden 8
    jade garden 8 jpg

     

     

     

     

     

     

    jade garden 6
    jade garden 6

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

    Near Chungcheong, South Korea

    On a beautiful spring day
    The cherry trees were in full flower

    Pink and white petals
    The scent
    of cherry trees in the air

    Other trees just starting to bloom
    Red, yellow and white tulips
    Beginning to bloom

    The sounds of spring all around
    Birds singing
    People walking about.

    Talking to one another
    As they wander the pathway
    Taking in the springtime splendor.

    The sun warming up
    The pathway winding
    Through the Forrest.

    Meeting the Girl of My Dreams in Korea

    April 3

    The Peace Corps changed my life
    Not in the obvious ways
    That it did

    I learned a new language
    A new culture
    Met many different people
    Did some constructive
    development work

    And contributed to friendship
    Between Koreans and the US

    All the usual things that Peace Corps
    Is supposed to accomplish

    But the Peace Corps changed me
    And I became the man I am now

    Because of those two years
    I spend in the countryside
    Of South Korea

    I went to graduate school
    I became a diplomat

    But most importantly
    If I had not gone
    to the Korean peace corps program
    I never would have
    met the girl of my dreams
    The women I was fated to meet

    I first met Angela in 1974
    When I was in high school

    And fell asleep in a class
    And had the dream that haunted me
    To this day

    In the dream
    I met a beautiful Asian women
    Who was speaking to me
    In a weird language

    And then she disappeared
    Like in Start treck

    And I fell on the floor

    “Screaming
    You are you?”

    I continued to have these visions
    Every month for seven years

    I eventually learned that she was in Korea
    And so, I joined the Peace Corps
    to go to Korea to find her

    After I finished Peace Corps
    I stuck around for another year

    Thinking I would find her
    But never did

    Just when I was due to return to the US
    To go to Graduate school
    I had the final dream

    In this dream
    She said in Korean
    Don’t worry you will meet me soon

    That night getting off the bus
    In front of me
    Was the girl in the dream

    I looked at her
    And I knew she was it

    And she looked at me
    And knew I was it

    We met up for coffee
    And we dated

    I proposed to her three days
    after I met her

    And then we married
    Two months later

    Despite her family’s attempts
    To keep us apart

    And we have been married 40 years
    And I fall in love with her
    Over and over again

    And I still have the dream
    When I am alone
    Or when I am stressed out

    I see her standing by the bed
    Smiling at me

    Saying
    Everything will be alright
    And it is

    and so thinking back on my life
    My life changed forever

    When I left the US
    To join the Peace Corps

    Long Live the Peace Corps

    this is a true story of the love of my life.  I met her in 1982 when I was teaching in Korea after having finished my Peace Corps service in 1981.  We got married two months after we met and have been married 33 years.  I still recall the dreams of how I would met her from time to time.

    I always thought this would make a great love story movie.

    © 7 years ago, john Cosmos Aller    love • spiritual • • wedding • reincarnation   

    Spring Time Sketch in Youngjongdo, Korea

     

     

     

     

     

     

    In the early morning dawn
    I like to go for a walk
    Down among the cherry trees
    And flowering plants

    Just to welcome
    Another fine spring day
    As the sun comes up
    Dispelling my dismal mood

    And filling me
    With love
    Hope and peace
    As I walk the in
    the world peace forest

    Through the forest
    and over the mountain
    breathing the springtime air
    alive filled with life

    and I think to myself
    this moment
    is the moment
    that I am meant to experience

    life itself
    and nothing more
    nothing less
    Just breath in life

    based on a photo of cherry trees along the world peace forest near my house in Youngjongdo, Korea, and based on the April 21 writers digest poetry prompt to write a poetic sketch

    Hiking In Korea

    Korea is a land
    filled with mountain paths
    everywhere you go

    there are paths
    leading deep
    into the mountains

    one of my favorite paths
    is the world peace forrest
    which meanders around
    my town

    linking a lake, a lotus pound
    and a nice mountain peak
    and on the top
    on a clear day

    you can see North Korean
    in the distance
    and the Incheon airport
    near by

    Korean Pottery of Love

    In Korea

    there are many pottery kilns
    ancient art form
    in the land of the morning calm

    I have a few pieces
    I bought years ago

    and enjoy looking
    at my vase

    filled with love
    for my wife

    Korean Springtime

    Korean Springtime
    I walk the path with my love
    Still Under her spell

    this is the 40th springtime I have enjoyed with the love of my life by my side © a year ago, john Cosmos Aller

    one of my favorite places to hike in Korea © 2 years ago, john Cosmos Aller      

    American Coffee Takes Over Korea

     

     

     

     

     

     

    About 30 years ago,
    American-style coffee chains
    Discovered Korea.
    After the 88 Olympics,
    Koreans discovered the joy
    Of real brewed coffee,
    Hot, Sweet, Neat
    The rest is history.

    I love coffee and was so glad that you could finally get a decent coffee in Korea, prior to the Olympics coffee shops were called tabangs which were where men mostly would hang out drinking instant coffee or Korean tea, and flirting with the cute waitresses.
    © a year ago, john Cosmos Aller

    hot humid weather in Korea,

    hot humid weather in Korea,
    outside like walking in a sauna.

    Most people don’t use air conditioning
    due to both expenses,
    fear of air conditioning disease
    (Which is a real thing).

    hanging out at a coffee shop or mall
    discouraged as COVID continues to spread.
    Only two people can dine out at night

    over 2, 00 cases a day now
    only 20 percent are fully vaccinated.

    temperatures will hit 40 degrees (100 + f)
    later this week
    as the monsoon season ends
    and the August heat begins.

    Koreans are learning
    new words to describe this

    heat dome
    tropical nights
    Polar vortex
    Monster typhoons
    Killing floods
    Killing heat waves
    are now common.

    used to be that July and August
    were hot and humid
    but rarely about 100 dF.
    Now that is becoming the norm,
    as global climate change
    begins hitting Korea hard.

    the winters are colder
    but much shorter.
    Late January to early February
    Polar Vortex swept through

    the summer is longer
    starting in May
    and lasting until mid-September.

    Autumn is lasting
    from Mid-September
    to Mid-December.
    Spring just late April to early June

    So far no killer wildfires.
    As the monsoon season
    Came on time
    Monson flooding
    Just before the killer heatwaves

    the prompt was to write about the local weather Korea is experiencing a heat dome highs in the 90’s (40 C) real feel close to 100 F, with tropical nights in the 80s F.  No relief in sight until late august, the second hottest summer in Korea so far but it will probably break the record heat

    Walking Along the Winter Korean Beach

    Walking along the winter
    Korean beach,
    With the love of my life
    By my side,

    She looks at me
    With red hot love
    Flames shooting
    From her black eyes

    Seoul 1979 and 2015

    2013 Seoul 1979
    April 7

    When I arrived in Seoul
    Back in the day in 1979

    Seoul was a grim city
    Big, polluted, overwhelming
    Filled with Koreans
    And nothing much to do

    Other than eat Korean food
    And drink Korean booze

    Tourist sites were none existent
    And foreigners were few and far between

    The GI’s stayed in Itaewon
    And there were few other foreigners around

    And there were very few places in town
    To eat non-Korean food

    Just the fancy hotels
    The base and Itaewon

    But Seoul had it’s charms
    It grew on me over the years

    And gradually became less grim
    Less forbidding
    And less foreigner unfriendly

    When I left Seoul in 1984 it was changing
    Before my very eyes

    And when I came back in 1988

    it was different city
    And those were the days
    Of the Olympics and Seoul’s emergence
    As a modern city

     

    2014 Seoul 2015
    April 8

    Seoul is so different now days
    Very little of the old Seoul remains

    The Kangwha moon area downtown
    Still exists as warren of alley ways

    Between big buildings
    Filled with restaurants and shops

    But the old tabangs (tea shops)
    With the tabang girls
    Are long gone

    The karaoke bars and girl bars
    Are still there going strong

    But coffee shops and fancier restaurants
    Are everywhere

    And foreigners are everywhere
    Seoul is no longer a city just for Koreans
    It has truly become a world city
    Must to the dismay of the traditionalists

    Parts of the old Seoul remain
    and the mountains and parks
    have become very popular indeed

    there has been a resurgence in Korean Buddhism
    and in traditional arts and crafts
    and traditional foods as well

    no where more than in Insa dong
    the Mecca of traditional Korean culture
    these days

    and Itaweon has become
    the heart of the expatriate part of Seoul
    with people from around the world
    gathered together

    along with the young and hip
    Koreans

    And there is even a gay quarter now
    unimaginable in the old days

    Seoul has changed
    For the most part for the better

    But I still miss the Seoul of my past
    And will mourn its passing
    As I get older

    Along with the city
    That I have adopted
    As my second home town

    thoughts of life in Seoul in 1979 and 2015 © 7 years ago, john Cosmos Aller      

    Melting away my heart
    Driving out the cold
    of the winter beach.

    Korean beaches are romantic in the winter and I am living in a beach resort island near the Incheon airport, © 8 months ago, john Cosmos Aller

    Love in Korean

    Love in Korean Dew Drop Inn

    When sam Adams
    first met her
    The lady of his dreams

    There was as the Koreans
    Would say

    Spark from heart to heart
    이심촌심
    isimchonsim

    truly love at first sight
    첫눈에 반하다
    cheosnun-e banhada

    they both knew
    that it is just fate

    운명
    unyoung

    that they had met
    that date.

    Two months later
    They were married
    It all happened
    40 years ago

    48 years after
    She first came
    To him in his dreams.

    the prompt was to incorporate foreign words into a poem I chose Korean which is my best foreign language as I have been struggling to learn it for 43 years

    https://lovejakecallerworld.tumblr.com › post › 651516125065183232 › venice-in-korea

    Jake Cosmos Aller — Venice in Korea

     

     

     

     

     

     

    May 18, 2021Venice in Korea “Venice in Korea and other Korean Stream Bed Parks ARA Canal Incheon Over the last decade, Korea has build hundreds of stream bed parks throughout Seoul and Korea. There are great… Jake Cosmos Aller — Venice in Korea. 1.5M ratings 277k ratings See, that’s what the app is perfect for. Sounds perfect Wahhhh, I don’t …

    https://lovejakecallerworld.tumblr.com › post › 652960510670766080 › ara-canal-incheon-venice-in-korea-manisan

    Jake Cosmos Aller — ARA Canal Incheon Venice in Korea Manisan…

    manisan top

    Jun 3, 2021I have reached three milestones. the World According to Cosmos now has over 4,000 followers from around the world. Thanks to all of you for visiting my site and caring about my musings about Life, the Universe and everything. Second, I have not posted 264 posts over the last few years since I started this blog late in 2019.

    Korean Summer Haiku by jake cosmos aller – FanStory

    Jul 2, 2022Korean Summer Haiku by jake cosmos aller. General Poetry posted July 2, 2022. jake cosmos aller. Retired US Diplomat (State Department) living in South Korea. Served 27 years in 10 countries. Traveled to 55 countries, all 50 states. Grew up in Berkeley, California. Married, no children.

    https://fanstory.com › displaystory.jsp?id=1061790

    Korean travels by jake cosmos aller – fanstory.com

    May 20, 2022jake cosmos aller Retired US Diplomat (State Department) living in South Korea. Served 27 years in 10 countries. Traveled to 55 countries, all 50 states. Grew up in Berkeley, California. Married, no children. A published poet, and short story writer. Finished six nove – more…

    https://lovejakecallerworld.tumblr.com › post › 653430254473494528 › update-korean-riverstream-bed-parks-ara-canal

    The Life of a PCV by jake cosmos aller – FanStory

    Jul 20, 2022by jake cosmos aller. Corners of the world. In 1979-1981. Than my own. I learned to speak Korean. In a town that was in the countryside. Of Seoul or the nearby city of Chuncheon. And foreign agricultural workers as well. Than when I lived there over 43 years ago.

    https://www.poemhunter.com › jake-cosmos-aller › biography

    Jake Cosmos Aller — Yeongjongdo Redevelopment Proposals

    Yeongjongdo Redevelopment Proposals ” Yeongjongdo redevelopment proposals bike rail trail in Yeongjongdo The Korean government has ambitious plans for developing Youngjongdo where I live. Here are my… Jake Cosmos Aller — Yeongjongdo Redevelopment Proposals. 1.5M ratings 277k ratings See, that’s what the app is perfect for. …

    https://tiferetjournal.com › poems-jake-cosmos-aller-2018

    Food Imperalism by jake cosmos aller – fanstory.com

    Jul 17, 2022Food Imperalism by jake cosmos aller. Biographical Fiction posted July 17, 2022. Retired US Diplomat (State Department) living in South Korea. Served 27 years in 10 countries. Traveled to 55 countries, all 50 states. Grew up in Berkeley, California. Married, no children.

    https://spillwords.com › author › jakecosmosaller

    Venice in Korea by The World According to Cosmos

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

    poetry and rants by the Cosmos. Listen on . Message

    https://www.facebook.com › theworldaccordingtocosmos › posts › 1480226155746852

    Jake Aller – Venice in Korea WHERE TO LISTEN to the World… | Facebook

    Venice in Korea WHERE TO LISTEN to the World According to Cosmos breaker audio Google podcasts radio public Spotify Korea Radio public c: on PocketCasts: Visit to Gangwha Ginseng Market We…

    https://www.poemhunter.com › jake-cosmos-aller › biography

    Jake Cosmos Aller — ARA Canal Incheon Venice in Korea Manisan…

    Jun 3, 2021I have reached three milestones. the World According to Cosmos now has over 4,000 followers from around the world. Thanks to all of you for visiting my site and caring about my musings about Life, the Universe and everything. Second, I have not posted 264 posts over the last few years since I started this blog late in 2019.

    https://lovejakecallerworld.tumblr.com › post › 653430254473494528 › update-korean-riverstream-bed-parks-ara-canal

    Jake Cosmos Aller — Update: Korean River/Stream Bed Parks ARA Canal…

    Jun 8, 2021Update: Korean River/Stream Bed Parks ARA Canal Incheon Updated letter to NPS and updated photos for Cheongjecheon streambed park. Letter to National Parks Director, Minister of Tourism, and KT One of the little-known gems of Korean tourism is all the great river parks and stream bed parks throughout Korea.

    https://spillwords.com › morning-light-by-jake-cosmos-aller

    Jake Aller – Venice in Korea WHERE TO LISTEN to the World… | Facebook

    Venice in Korea WHERE TO LISTEN to the World According to Cosmos breaker audio Google podcasts radio public Spotify Korea Radio public c: on PocketCasts: Visit to Gangwha Ginseng Market We…

    classic.fanstory.com › mypage.jsp?userid=859865

    Finally here are a few pictures of my Peace Corps days my friend Robert Voetsch who served in Yangpyeong, Korea just sent me.

    And a few other photos from here and there

    What a beautiful journey!: Celebrating the 50th … – Peace Corps

    The Korean government has acknowledged these strong ties by hosting several reunions over the years. Last month, about 80 returned Volunteers and family members traveled to Seoul, South Korea, to mark the 50th anniversary of the Peace Corps arrival in the country. We were there to attend the opening of an exhibit on the Peace Corps at the …

    Images for peace corps Korea

    More Images

    https://duckduckgo.com/?q=peace+corps+Korea&atb=v314-1&iax=images&ia=images

    Peace Corps Announces Collaboration with the Republic of Korea on Volunteer …

    Peace Corps opened its program in Korea in 1966, and more than 2,000 Peace Corps volunteers served there before operations closed in 1981. Since 2008, the Republic of Korea has recognized the service of Peace Corps/Korea volunteers by hosting return trips for many former volunteers so they can again visit the country. Peace Corps and KOICA …

    https://www.peacecorps.gov › news › library › peace-corps-volunteers-honored-by-the-korea-society

    Peace Corps Volunteers Honored by The Korea Society

    Peace Corps/Korea brought over 2,000 Americans to serve in Korea’s classrooms, farms, and industry. From 1966-1981, the assistance provided by these Volunteers, at a critical period in Korean history, helped to cement U.S.Korea ties. Kevin O’Donnell, the first country director of Peace Corps/Korea, and fourth director of the Peace Corps will …

    https://www.peacecorps.gov › countries

    Countries – Peace Corps

    Peace Corps Volunteers serve in over 60 countries. Find your place in the world. … South Korea 1966-1981 2,060 Volunteers Served Caribbean. The Dominican Republic. 1962-present 13 Volunteers …

    https://www.peacecorps.gov › stories › korea-in-the-side-view-mirror-reflections-of-a-former-peace-corps-volunteer

    Korea in the side-view mirror: Reflections of a former Volunteer

    It was, as the Peace Corps ad says, “The toughest job you will ever love.” When I left Korea in the mid-70s I was certain I would never see it again. As the years passed, the recollections of my life in Korea crystallized into increasingly romanticized memories. They became nearer and dearer to me in my life’s side-view mirror.

    https://www.peacecorpsconnect.org › companies › friends-of-Korea

    National Peace Corps Association | Friends of Korea – NPCA

    About Friends of Korea. Friends of Korea was founded in 2002 by former Peace Corps volunteers who served in the Republic of Korea between 1966 and 1981. Since Peace Corps ended its program in Korea in 1981, the challenge for Friends of Korea has been to find a mission. Over the past several years we have been engaged in a series of …

    https://peacecorpsworldwide.org › memories-of-serving-as-last-peace-corps-Korea-director

    Memories of serving as the last Peace Corps/Korea Director

    Oct 21, 2020Oct 21 2020. 1. by James Mayer (Korea 1978-81) The Korea Times. Friends of Korea. Peace Corps volunteers and others hold a walk-a-thon to raise funds for heart surgery in 1981. / Courtesy of Nancy Kelly. No one likes to be last. But I had that distinction as the Peace Corps Korea country director, and I am forever grateful that it happened.

    https://www.peacecorps.gov

    Peace Corps – Connect With the Peace Corps

    Connect With the Peace Corps. The Peace Corps. We are inspired by hands-on, grassroots-driven, and lasting impact. Learn more about our mission. In a changing world, building a better future together. New Opportunities Now Available. Dozens of new Volunteering openings are live on our site.

    https://www.peacecorpsconnect.org › articles › peace-corps-volunteers-and-the-making-of-korean-studies-in-the-united-states

    Some 2,000 Peace Corps Volunteers Served in Korea. They Have Also …

    Peace Corps Volunteers and the Making of Korean Studies in the United States. Edited by Seung-Kyung Kim and Michael Robinson. Center for Korea Studies, University of Washington. Reviewed by Steven Boyd Saum . The Peace Corps sent more than 2,000 Volunteers to South Korea 1966-81, to teach English and advise on healthcare.

    https://www.peacecorpsconnect.org › events › peace-corps-korea-all-group-volunteers-staff-and-friends-reunion-2018

    National Peace Corps Association | Peace Corps Korea All-Group … – NPCA

    Mention you’re with the Korea Peace Corps Reunion. Dan Strickland (K-18; danstrickland2001@yahoo.com) is our reunion point person and is available to answer questions or make suggestions. Let us know you’re coming by sending Dan an email with your name(s), your Korean name, K-group #, and check-in/out dates.

    The End