Korean
media gave a lot of space to the fact that almost 90 percent of those
over fifty voted in the presidential election, and were considered by
many to be the reason the first female president of the country was
elected. On the open forum page of the Catholic Times, a Jesuit
professor at Sogang University reflects on what this means for our
country.
The media did consider the difference between the young and the older generation in this election. The older voters experienced the Korean War, seen the industrialization of the country, and had been leaders
in the democratization of the country. They took care of their parents
but did not expect the same from their children. They were concerned
about their old age and tended to be progressives; they now want security.
The professor believes there is a difference in thinking and sensitivity between the generation of the 20s
and 30s, and the over 50's. A gap between
the young and the old is not new. However, Korea is becoming
older, the government can't help but be concerned about those who voted
for them. The difference in the voting by the young and the old has to
be remembered for the future of the country. A great number of the
voters are over fifty, and that means that the future of the country,
which shortly will be in the hands of the young, will be the ones who will have to
deal with the results of what the older think important now.
There
is also a difference in the sensitivity to our problems felt by the old
and the young. The interest that the young have about environmental
problems and employment is not the same as it is for the older
generation. The young, from the time they were children, have been
hearing about global warming, while the older generation has an interest
in development and industrialization and less concern about the environment.
The young are concerned with employment while the older generation is concerned with the
industrialization of the country. They had no difficulty in accepting
the blue-collar and the white-collar difference in society. However,
over half of those in their twenties are either in college or are
graduates who have to consider that half of them will face the
possibility of being a non-regular worker. The older generation has
difficulty in understanding what this highly educated, young generation
feels about the future. The older generation tends to feel that the
young are lazy and want to avoid the difficult jobs in society, while looking for the easy life.
Without understanding the sensibilities of the young, the professor says
we will continue to look back to the past and fail to see the future.
We will continue to push the interest of the young into the background
and just be concerned with the issues of the elders in society. This
means not only that there will be a generation gap but that the young peoples' rights will be exploited.
The professor recalls that
Jesus began his public life when young. "He is not yet fifty" was heard
by Jesus. The ones who followed our Lord were the young. With these
young people, he changed the world. The world of the young is the world
of the future. A society able to see the joy, hope, tears and
frustrations of the young will be a society with hope. What the society
of today needs is the wisdom and sensitivity to be concerned for the younger generation.