Hosted by the YU Multicultural Education & Research Institute at the Daegu Myungduk Elementary School auditorium at 1 P.M. on November 2
Opportunity for cultural exchange such as multi-cultural experience booth and Korean cultural experience event
[Oct 31, 2013]
YU (President Noh, Seok Kyun) will host the 'Eoulleong-Deoulleong Multi-cultural Festival'.
YU is the 'regional hub university of the Yeungnam region for the 'Multi-cultural/North Korean Defector student mentoring project'' that is being pursued together by the Ministry of Education(MOE) and the Korea Student Aid Foundation(KOSAF). Furthermore, in December of last year YU received the '1st Korea Education Donation Award' from the MOE and has been taking the initiative to provide educational support for multi-cultural families and to improve the social perception of multi-cultures in order to construct an 'open multi-cultural community'.
This festival, which will be held as an extension of the above, was prepared in order to give them a sense of belonging to the community while enrooting a sense of pride as constituents of the community through the invitation and the voluntary participation. 'Eoulleong-Deoulleong' is a Jeju dialect that means 'mingle and be together'.
This event, which will be sponsored by the Daegu Metropolitan Office of Education (Superintendent Woo, Tong Ki) and hosted by the YU Multicultural Education & Research Institute (director Park, Seung Woo) will be joined by multi-cultural families and students, as well as the general public residing in Daegu at the Daegu Myungduk Elementary School auditorium from 1 P.M. to 6 P.M. on November 2.
This festival will be comprised of a multi-cultural experience booth where visitors can taste the foods and teas of different countries, straw crafting booths, traditional Hanbok wearing booths, and a booth for making Jangmyeongnu (bracelet), which was made in the past with five-colored threads in hopes of long life for children. There will also be a stage performance, multi-cultural recreation, door prizes and talent shows.
In particular, the 'Rainbow Troupe' made up of women who married Korean men and immigrated to Korea will offer a congratulatory performance, while 10 teams made up of multi-cultural families and students living in Daegu will put on a talent show comprised of dance, song and narration of the fairy tale.
Park, Seung Woo, the director of the YU Multicultural Education & Research Institute, who prepared for the event said, "YU became the first in the region to establish a multi-cultural education research center in 2009. For the past 4 years, we have been engaged in a wide range of multi-cultural education projects such as online mentoring for students from multi-cultural families, multi-cultural family leader schools, and bilingual speech contests for students from multi-cultural families." He also added, "I hope that through this festival, various cultures can communicate and mix with each other to become a new driving force for our society."