She has been in the work with migrants 
for the last eight years, she says. In the past, it was with the heart, 
but now it is mostly with the mind. She is not trying to fathom the 
workings of the migrant's inner feelings and desires, but is more 
interested in helping them get ahead in the business world. It is now my
 desire, she says, to help make the life of the migrants understandable 
to our citizens.
An important aspect in her approach is to deal 
with the conflicted feelings concerning international marriages. 
Compared to how it was viewed a few years ago, much as changed--for the 
good. It is now something that is accepted as natural, and she is asked 
by many of the Christians to introduce some foreign girls to their sons.
 She has little difficulty in doing this,  but it is another matter to 
have these marriages turn out healthy, and  the family developing 
happily. 
Most people have heard stories of  international 
marriages in which the woman has abandoned her husband and family, left 
to find work in a factory to earn money, found a man from her own 
country, or has not been faithful. There are many such stories.
Because
 of these stories, many have qualms and fears about international 
marriages. Our increasingly closely knit world is likely to bring us 
more, not less, of these marriages. But there is no need to see this 
negatively; we need only open ourselves, without prejudice, to the 
different cultures of the world.
If we ask whether the poor women
 who come to Korea are of an inferior status, most will answer no. When 
we see  things that are strange, we should ask for an explanation. When 
we see something we don't understand, we should be tolerant and try to 
explain our own culture. At times, it is our feeling of superiority in 
dealing with the immigrants from the poorer countries that is the 
problem.
International marriages can be as happy, she insists, as
 any other marriage. It requires getting beyond the financial 
difficulties and seeing others with a more open and understanding heart.
 We are all citizens of the world, she is fond of repeating, and we all 
share its joys and its sorrows. This is not all that difficult. We have 
the example of Jesus, who had no prejudice and considered everyone 
equal. He is our teacher.
 
 
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