Hunminjeongeum Society | |
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Hangul | 훈민정음학회 |
Hanja | 訓民正音學會 |
Revised Romanization | Hunmin Jeongeum Hakhoe |
McCune–Reischauer | Hunmin Chŏngŭm Hakhoe |
The Hunminjeongeum Society, sometimes called the "Hunminjeongeum Research Institute" in English-language newspaper accounts, is a private organization in Seoul dedicated to the propagation of hangul to all the unwritten languages of the world.[1] (Hunminjeongeum was the original name of hangul.) The society was founded by Lee Ki-nam, a retired real-estate agent, in 2007, after she had failed to bring hangul to the Tungusic Oroqen of Heilongjiang, China; the Chepang of Nepal; and the Lahu of Chiang Mai, Thailand; she attributed these failures to a reliance on Korean Christian missionaries in those countries, whose primary focus was not linguistics or literacy.[1]
The society, chaired by linguistics professor Kim Ju-won of Seoul National University, and its current focus is on countries which send large number of people to work in Korea. In 2009 it succeeded in getting the city of Bau-Bau, on Buton Island in Sulawesi, Indonesia, to adopt hangul for the Cia-Cia language. The society has published a series of hangul Cia-Cia textbooks for use in schools, using an orthography designed by Kim,[2] and are now working on getting hangul accepted by other communities on the island of Buton. They plan on opening a Korean cultural center, and to send Korean-language teachers to Bau-Bau.