The Korean Diasporas in Mexico and Eurasia – The Diplomat
https://thediplomat.com/2021/06/the-korean-diasporas-in-mex...
FEATURES&|&SOCIETY
The$Korean
Diasporas$in
Mexico$and
Eurasia
South&Korea&has
combined&foreign&policy,
soft&power&politics&and
public&diplomacy&in
connecting&with
diaspora&communities
in&Latin&America&and
Eurasia.
By&Victoria$Kim
June&26,&2021
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The Korean Diasporas in Mexico and Eurasia – The Diplomat
https://thediplomat.com/2021/06/the-korean-diasporas-in-mex...
The&mayor&of&Merida,&now&a&twin&city&of
Incheon,&and&then-South&Korean
Ambassador&Kim&Sang-il,&at&the&Korea
Day&festivities&on&May&4,&2019.
Credit:&Facebook
May 4, 2021 marked the 116th
anniversary of the arrival of ethnic
Koreans to Latin America. In April 1905,
the first thousand Korean labor migrants
boarded a British cargo ship in the Korean
port of Chemulpo (present-day Incheon).
The migrants were drawn away from the
increasingly tumultuous Korean
peninsula by the promises of stable work
and regular wages in faraway Mexico. A
month later, on May 4, the ship arrived at
the Mexican port of Progreso, near
Merida, on the Yucatan peninsula.
Arrival&of&the&first&Korean&immigrants&to
Mexico’s&Port&of&Progreso&on&the
Yucatan&peninsula&in&mid-May&1905
(public&archives).
In January 1903, the first shipload of
Koreans had arrived in Hawaii, then a
recently incorporated territory of the
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The Korean Diasporas in Mexico and Eurasia – The Diplomat
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United States, to work on pineapple and
sugar plantations. By 1905 more than
7,000 Korean labor migrants had departed
Chemulpo for work in Hawaii.
British&cargo&ship&S.S.&Ilford&took&the
over&1,000&Koreans&to&Mexico&on&April&4,
1905.&(public&archives)
The history of Korean immigration to the
Americas began with sweat and
exploitation. The British lured Koreans
with promises of four and five-year work
contracts, but upon arrival, the Koreans
found themselves sold into indenture
servitude on the Yucatan’s henequen
plantations, where local Yaqui and other
indigenous groups were also exploited for
labor.
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In 1910, Japan annexed Korea and the
Koreans in Mexico effectively lost their
nationality.
Some Koreans tried to escape from the
dire situation in Mexico to Hawaii
through San Francisco with no success.
Around 1921, when demand for henequen
fiber declined, 288 Korean laborers
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The Korean Diasporas in Mexico and Eurasia – The Diplomat
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managed
to escape
to Cuba
from the
Mexican
port in
San
Francisco
de
Documents&confirming&the&arrival&
ethnic&Koreans&to&the&Port&of
Progreso&on&May&14,&1905.&(p
archives)
Campeche. The roughly thousand-strong
Korean diaspora in Cuba today cites its
roots in those nearly 300 migrants.
With the passage of time, the Koreans who
remained in Mexico managed to not only
survive but eventually integrate
themselves in the local society. Through
them, the wider story of Korean diasporas
became woven into Mexico’s own
complicated history.
A second wave of Korean migration to
Mexico was triggered in part by the
economic crises in South America in the
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The Korean Diasporas in Mexico and Eurasia – The Diplomat
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1970s and ’80s. South Koreans, as well as
Argentine and Paraguayan Koreans, came
to Mexico seeking better opportunities
and living conditions.
Some&of&the&first&Mexican&Korean
laborers&on&Yucatan’s&henequen
haciendas&(public&archives)
At the end of 1990s, there were almost
20,000 ethnic Koreans living in Mexico.
Most recently, the Mexico City Association
of Korean Descendants claimed in midMarch 2021 that around 30,000 ethnic
Koreans resided Mexico.
Despite this long presence in Mexico, it
was only in the early 2000s that the
Mexican Korean diaspora gained greater
recognition. This was facilitated, in part,
by South Korea’s pragmatic foreign policy,
encompassing strong public diplomacy
and cultural soft power, matched with
outreach to various diaspora communities
not only in Eurasia, but in Latin America
as well.
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The Korean Diasporas in Mexico and Eurasia – The Diplomat
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Monument&in&Merida&commemorating
the&100th&anniversary&of&the&first
Koreans’&arrival&&to&Mexico.&(Wikimedia
Commons)
In the last two decades, South Korea has
managed to reconnect itself not only with
the post-Soviet Korean diaspora – known
as the Koryo Saram, they number around
half a million and are spread across the
former Soviet Union – but also with the
tens of thousands of ethnic Koreans
scattered around Mexico.
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Reengaging its diaspora serves many
purposes for South Korea and the
communities of Koreans abroad. On one
hand, the diaspora longs to reconnect
with their cultural and linguistic roots,
which lie in a now prosperous homeland.
On the other, South Korea’s insatiable
demand for energy resources, particularly
its quest to diversify its energy
partnerships beyond the Middle East, has
led Seoul to seek out connections abroad
on which to build.
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The Korean Diasporas in Mexico and Eurasia – The Diplomat
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Descendants&ofðnic&Korean
deportees&in&Uzbekistan&dressed&in
festive&South&Korean&styled&clothes,
waiving&and&pledging&allegiance&to
South&Korean&flag&besides&their
national&flags&(Koryo-saram.ru)
The transitional post-Soviet economies
and the emerging markets of Latin
America are ideal economic partners.
South Korea – a true “middle power” – has
invested in establishing relations,
promoting free trade and travel with
other middle powers similarly “stuck”
between great powers in their respective
regions. There are number of similarities
in South Korea’s models of bilateral
interaction – economic, political, cultural –
with its major trading partners in both
Eurasia and Latin America.
In terms of bilateral trade, Mexico and
Eurasia (in this case referring to Russia
plus the states of Central Asia) are South
Korea’s largest partners in each respective
region. In 2019, South Korea’s total trade
volume with Mexico amounted to $21
billion, having grown over 70 percent in
the last decade; meanwhile, its trade with
Russia reached $22 billion, having grown
over 100 percent in the last 30 years, and
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The Korean Diasporas in Mexico and Eurasia – The Diplomat
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trade with Kazakhstan and Uzbekistan,
combined, hit $15 billion in 2021.
South Korean foreign direct investment
into the same economies is another
important illustration of growing ties. In
2019, South Korean FDI into Central Asia’s
top two economies exceeded $7 billion
and its investments into Russia topped $4
billion in 2020; while FDI into the Mexican
economy hit almost $7 billion by early
2021.
Ethnic&Korean&descendants&in
Uzbekistan&in&April&2019,&together&with
the&Uzbek&and&South&Korean
presidential&couples&at&the&opening
ceremony&of&Korean&Culture&and&Art
House&(Sputniknews.ru)
The above countries share not only a very
high degree of export and import
complementarity with South Korea –
mostly in crude petroleum as a principal
product of exports from both regions (45
percent respectively from Mexico and
Russia and over 90 percent from Central
Asia) and machinery hardware and
vehicle parts being the main categories of
imports from South Korea – but also host
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The Korean Diasporas in Mexico and Eurasia – The Diplomat
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significant numbers of ethnic Korean
immigrants (hundreds of thousands
dispersed across Eurasia and Latin
America).
It is particularly interesting to view in
parallel South Korea’s unique mixture of
foreign policy and public diplomacy
paired with soft power and diaspora
outreach in both regions.
Mayor&of&San&Francisco&de&Campeche
and&descendants&ofðnic&Koreans&in
Mexico&at&the&Korea&Day&celebrations&in
2021&(Facebook)
As a result, ethnic Korean diasporas have
become more than just proponents of
South Korean cultural power, but
important political and economic players
in the efforts of the involved middle
powers to gain market access and
influence.
This is especially important from the
position of leading members of the
Korean diasporas in Mexico and Eurasia,
those actively engaged in (and engaging
with) local governments, promoting South
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The Korean Diasporas in Mexico and Eurasia – The Diplomat
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Korean economic, social, and political
agendas under the banner of mutual
cultural cooperation.
The&first&Korea&Day&in&Mexico&on&May&4,
2019&with&festivities&in&Yucatan&and
Campeche&(Facebook)
For instance, the head of the South KoreaMexico Friendship Society, David Bautista
Rivera Morena, is also a deputy in the
Mexican Congress. On March 18, 2021, the
Mexican Chamber of Deputies approved
with an overwhelming majority of votes a
proposal from Morena to mark May 4
each year as Korean Immigrant Day
across Mexico.
Morena’s initiative brought what had
been a local holiday, marked on May 4 in
the states of Yucatan and Campeche since
2019, to the national level. Korea Day was
originally (and still is) celebrated in
Yucatan and Campeche after direct efforts
by the South Korean Embassy, then under
Ambassador Kim Sang-il, to mark the
100th anniversary of the provisional
Korean government in 1919.
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The Korean Diasporas in Mexico and Eurasia – The Diplomat
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A day before the Korean Immigrant Day
vote, the statue of Greetingman or El
hombre que saluda – created by South
Korean sculptor Yoo Yong-ho in 2020 to
commemorate the 115th anniversary of
the departure of the first Korean labor
migrants to Mexico – was installed in
Merida, a twin city of Incheon since 2007,
on the Avenue of the Republic of Korea.
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A
turquoise
nude male
figure
inclined in
a
traditional
Koreanstyle
courteous
bow
represents
the
gratitude
to
Mexico’s
generosity
in
ingman’s&unveiling&ceremony
receiving
public&of&Korea&avenue&in
Korean
&in&mid-March&2021
migrants
ook)
over a
century
ago in
spite of the dark slave trade history
behind their original arrival.
The street itself was renamed thusly in
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The Korean Diasporas in Mexico and Eurasia – The Diplomat
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December 2017, following efforts by then
South Korean Ambassador Chun Bee-ho to
celebrate the 55th anniversary of the
establishment of diplomatic relationship
between South Korea and Mexico.
Similarly, the Korea-Mexico Friendship
Hospital was opened in Merida in 2005
after South Korean President Roh Moohyun’s visit to Mexico.
In each of the above cases, South Korea
has deftly wielded diplomatic and cultural
tools to both reach out to the Korean
diaspora in Mexico and through them
connect with the Mexican government.
The marking of the arrival of the first
ethnic Koreans to Mexico with a federal
level holiday underscores the efforts of
the South Koreans and the position of
ethnic Koreans in the region. This is
something no other Asian diaspora in
Mexico and no other Korean diaspora
community in the world has achieved.
Please check out part 2, “Embracing
Shared Interests, Mis-remembering
History: South Korean Diaspora
Outreach.”
Victoria Kim previously wrote about the
Soviet deportation of Koreans to
Uzbekistan (available in parts
one, two and three), about General Nam Il,
who signed the armistice on behalf of
North Korea in 1950, and about her
recent journey through North Korea on a
passenger train for The Diplomat.
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AUTHORS
GUEST$AUTHOR
Victoria$Kim
Victoria&Kim&is&a&multimedia&journalist&and
independent&researcher&from&Uzbekistan.
She&holds&an&MA&in&Korean&Studies&from
the&Johns&Hopkins&University&SAIS&(USA)
and&an&MA&in&International&Multimedia
Journalism&from&the&University&of&Bolton
(UK).
TAGS
Features
Society
Korean&diaspora
South&Korea
Uzbekistan
North&Korean&diaspora
South&Korea-Mexico&relations
South&Korea-Uzbekistan&relations
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