Monk’s crusade helps Korean history go home
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 TOKYO — A pledge by Japan to hand over cultural artefacts from the Korean peninsula’s last dynasty has been welcomed in South Korea — particularly by a monk who spent four years trying to make it happen. Shocked  to discover that valuable items — including royal records of the Chosun  Dynasty (1392-1910) — were still held by Japan after its 1910  annexation of the peninsula, Hye Moon, now 37, began a campaign for  their return in 2006. “I wondered why such precious cultural properties had yet to be returned to our country,” Hye, who lives in Seoul, told AFP. Then  on Tuesday, after more than 40 trips to Japan intended to persuade  politicians and lawmakers, Hye finally got the news he had long sought  ahead of the Aug. 29 centenary of the annexation. Source: The Daily Tribune URL: http://www.tribuneonline.org/commentary/20100814com1.html | 
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