OTHER PROFESSIONAL OPPERTUNITIES
2023
On Sept. 20 (KST), the Masan, Changwon, and Jinhae Civil Assembly for Japanese Military Sexual Slaves (Machangjin) hosted, and the South Gyeongsang Province Office of Education sponsored, an international conference Looking for Countermeasures Against the Denial of the Japanese Military Sexual Slavery History. The conference examined recent attempts to deny and distort the history of Japanese military sexual slavery before and during WWII. Speakers from the U.S., ROK, Japan, Philippines, Germany, and Australia presented their current situation analyses and recommendations. Sung spoke on the collective efforts made to preserve “comfort women” history in the U.S., including the SF “comfort women” memorial installation process and educational initiatives in California.
2022
UC Berkeley H-SS Project invites Ethnic Studies teachers from across the Bay Area to apply to participate in a regional community of practice on Nov. 29, 2022.
For more information, go to https://ucbhssp.berkeley.edu/ethnic-studies-community
For more information, go to https://ucbhssp.berkeley.edu/ethnic-studies-community
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International Forum for Igniting History Education on
Japanese Military "Comfort Women"
June 3–4, 2022
Changwon, South Gyeongsang Province
South Korea
Program
ESJF Presenters
Sung Sohn is the co-founder and executive director of the Education for Social Justice Foundation. Before co-founding ESJF and being a full-time mom, she worked as a bilingual classroom and resource teacher in the San Francisco Unified School District, SFUSD. Working together with the district, she founded the SFUSD Korean/English Two-Way Immersion Program in 1994. Sung is the author of Korean Two-Way Immersion Curriculum Guide (1994), “Comfort Women” History and Issues: Teacher Resource Guide (2018), and “Comfort Women” History and Issues: Student Resource Guide (2018). She is committed to honoring sidelined voices and remembering injustices from the past and today.
Faye Kwan was born and raised in the Bay Area. She earned a Bachelor’s Degree in Art. In 2007, she began working with youth as a group home counselor, where she fell in love with providing residents a nurturing home and helping them see their potential. This inspired her to become a teacher. She has taught Special Education around the Bay Area and feels passionate about ensuring all students have the tools they need to reach their goals and gain access to higher education. Most recently, she earned her Master’s Degree in Educational Leadership with a social justice focus. In her spare time, she loves to go into nature, spend time with friends, and eat delicious food.
Erin Hanlon-Young has been teaching Modern World History at a public high school in the San Francisco Unified School District for five years. She is committed to incorporating the voices and experiences of marginalized groups into her curriculum and teaching her students about important events whose impacts are still felt to this day.
Eric Mar is Professor Emeritus at San Francisco State University and Advisory Board member of Education for Social Justice Foundation. As a member of the SF Board of Supervisors in 2015 he helped lead the battle to approve and install the City’s memorial to “Comfort Women.” He is the past President of the SF Board of Education and has been active in social justice movements for over 35 years. He is editor of Mountain Movers: Student Activism and the Emergence of Asian American Studies. (UCLA Asian American Studies Press, 2019).
Faye Kwan was born and raised in the Bay Area. She earned a Bachelor’s Degree in Art. In 2007, she began working with youth as a group home counselor, where she fell in love with providing residents a nurturing home and helping them see their potential. This inspired her to become a teacher. She has taught Special Education around the Bay Area and feels passionate about ensuring all students have the tools they need to reach their goals and gain access to higher education. Most recently, she earned her Master’s Degree in Educational Leadership with a social justice focus. In her spare time, she loves to go into nature, spend time with friends, and eat delicious food.
Erin Hanlon-Young has been teaching Modern World History at a public high school in the San Francisco Unified School District for five years. She is committed to incorporating the voices and experiences of marginalized groups into her curriculum and teaching her students about important events whose impacts are still felt to this day.
Eric Mar is Professor Emeritus at San Francisco State University and Advisory Board member of Education for Social Justice Foundation. As a member of the SF Board of Supervisors in 2015 he helped lead the battle to approve and install the City’s memorial to “Comfort Women.” He is the past President of the SF Board of Education and has been active in social justice movements for over 35 years. He is editor of Mountain Movers: Student Activism and the Emergence of Asian American Studies. (UCLA Asian American Studies Press, 2019).
Registration
In-person: Available to the first 30 registrants
Online : Zoom link will be provided after completing the registration
Registration link: https://docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLSfOuob-vfEy6QZTgwNroenyxxxhr5Ioj7gWMK5glF7ZKJyFiA/viewform
There will be a simultaneous interpretation in English and Korean available
Sponsor: South Gyeongsang Province Office of Education
Host: The Masan, Changwon, and Jinhae Civil Assembly for Japanese Military Sexual Slaves
Online : Zoom link will be provided after completing the registration
Registration link: https://docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLSfOuob-vfEy6QZTgwNroenyxxxhr5Ioj7gWMK5glF7ZKJyFiA/viewform
There will be a simultaneous interpretation in English and Korean available
Sponsor: South Gyeongsang Province Office of Education
Host: The Masan, Changwon, and Jinhae Civil Assembly for Japanese Military Sexual Slaves
2021
Panel Discussion: Making art about horrific subjects, panel discussion
October 10, 2-4 pm
1100 Florence Gallery and live streamed
Presenters:
Rose Camastro-Pritchett, international artist, Evanston based
Sung Sohn, co-founder and executive director of the Education for Social Justice Foundation, San Francisco
Jeri Frederickson, poet and creative director of Awakenings Gallery, Chicago
Rose Camastro-Pritchett, international artist, Evanston based
Sung Sohn, co-founder and executive director of the Education for Social Justice Foundation, San Francisco
Jeri Frederickson, poet and creative director of Awakenings Gallery, Chicago
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30th Anniversary of Kim Hak-Soon Halmoni's Public Testimony
Friday, August 13
Saturday, August 14
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ESJF at the 2021 Teaching History Conference
Saturday, May 8
10:15–11:45 a.m.
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2020
2019
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ESJF has been invited to the first international educators’ workshop on teaching “comfort women.” In observance of the 5th International Day for the Elimination of Sexual Violence in Conflict, the Korean Council has an array of important events during the week of the June 17th. The conference will kick off with the first international educators’ workshop on pedagogies on teaching the history and issues of “comfort women” in different countries. Two active high school history teachers from the San Francisco Unified School District and I will present on the educational system in California and the inquiry-based teaching strategies that incorporate comparative and analytic approaches based on primary and secondary source documents. Educators from South Korea, Japan, Canada, and the United States will attend the workshop.
At the conference, sexual violence in armed conflict will be discussed, and solutions will be sought. Rashida Manjoo, Professor of Public Law at University of Cape Town, former UN Special Rapporteur on Violence Against Women, will begin the second day with her keynote speech, followed by reports from the Korean Council and representatives from Uganda.
Other events taking place during the conference include testimony from Vasfije Krasniqi Goodman, a Kosovo survivor; a photo exhibition highlighting the situations in Uganda by Jean Jung, a photojournalist; and an award ceremony for the 2019 Kim Bok-dong Peace Prize Winner.
Stay tuned for the exciting updates from Seoul.
At the conference, sexual violence in armed conflict will be discussed, and solutions will be sought. Rashida Manjoo, Professor of Public Law at University of Cape Town, former UN Special Rapporteur on Violence Against Women, will begin the second day with her keynote speech, followed by reports from the Korean Council and representatives from Uganda.
Other events taking place during the conference include testimony from Vasfije Krasniqi Goodman, a Kosovo survivor; a photo exhibition highlighting the situations in Uganda by Jean Jung, a photojournalist; and an award ceremony for the 2019 Kim Bok-dong Peace Prize Winner.
Stay tuned for the exciting updates from Seoul.
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2018
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