Joonha Jang seen by Seo-in Yoon

Writer Yoon Seo-in excommunicated. (Online community capture) © News1

“I have to live harder and harder.”

This is the reaction of Jang Ho-jun, son of the late Jang Joon-ha, an independence activist, to an article written by Yoon Seo-in, a webtoon writer who despised the independence activist.

Jang, who is known to have been pastoral in Connecticut, USA, posted a photo of her post on her Facebook page on the 16th and left a heartbreaking post.

Earlier, on the 12th, Yoon posted a picture comparing the homes of pro-Japanese descendants and independence activists’ descendants on his Facebook page and said, “While pro-Japanese descendants lived so hard, what did the independence activists descendants do. “They were people who lived hard, and the independence activists were people who lived roughly.”

Yoon’s behind-the-scenes immediately spread online, and Yoon deleted the post. However, Yoon wrote on the 14th, “It’s good to be attracted to a wide area ag,” and “the number of people who listen to me increases. My interest is not coins, but enlightenment and expansion.” He left an article with a nuance that it is good to draw attention to the criticism of himself.

In response to Yoon’s actions, Jang left a short message, which contained a kind of sadness rather than anger.

Jang said, “After listening to the words, my father was an independence activist, and I was a descendant of an independence activist,” he said. “Of course, I would stop talking about the crap of some crazy guy, but looking back, I wasn’t getting upset at the thought that I wasn’t buying it in vain. I am sad.”

It can be interpreted that just as many of the descendants of independence activists felt frustration and despair in Yoon’s writings, Jang felt similar feelings.

Meanwhile, in Yoon’s writing, the Liberation Association announced a legal response. On the 15th, attorney Chung Cheol-seung, the chairman of the Korean Legislative Association, said on his Facebook page, “I tried to ignore it, but it looks like he was angry at the Liberation Society,” and “Could you give me this ugly guy once?”

Attorney Jeong also said, “The cartoonist Seo-in Yoon, who said that independence activists on SNS were people who lived roughly, was a person who was fined 7 million rounds in the Supreme Court in December last year for defaming the bereaved families of Paik Nam-gi. He did not reflect or self-sufficiently, and did something that caused even greater resentment immediately afterwards,” he said. “It is a behavior that is difficult to understand to the extent that it is like what disease is there, and many say that such behavior of Yoon Seo-in is a cunning calculation aimed at economic profit.” I wrote.

Attorney Jeong said, “So, for this defamation of the independence activists, we will file a criminal complaint as well as a small amount of alimony.” However, only 8,000 members who are direct descendants of those who received medals or packages as independence movements only in the Liberation Association If you go down to the side of the country, there will be at least tens of thousands of households and hundreds of thousands of descendants of independence activists, so if you file a group lawsuit involving only thousands of these people, the total amount of alimony will reach billions of won, even if only a small part of your descendants participate. “I have to make a lot of this money. I want to pay for it with money,” he warned.

Attorney Jeong, the only grandson of the independence activist Yoon Ki-seop, who served as the principal of the Shinheung Military Academy, an independent military training school, and the chairman of the provisional government’s legislature, has also been involved in pro-Japanese property retrieval lawsuits.

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