Sorokdo
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Sorokdo () is an island in
Goheung County Goheung County (''Goheung-gun'') is a county in Jeollanam-do Province, South Korea. Naro Space Center The Naro Space Center was completed during 2008 in southern Goheung and is operated by the state-run Korea Aerospace Research Institute. The sp ...
,
South Jeolla South Jeolla Province (; ''Jeollanam-do''; ), also known as Jeonnam, is a province of South Korea. South Jeolla has a population of 1,902,324 (2014) and has a geographic area of located in the Honam region at the southwestern tip of the Korea ...
in
South Korea South Korea, officially the Republic of Korea (ROK), is a country in East Asia, constituting the southern part of the Korean Peninsula and sharing a land border with North Korea. Its western border is formed by the Yellow Sea, while its eas ...
. The word ''sorok'' means "small deer", which the island's coastline, viewed from above, is supposed to resemble. The island is approximately one kilometer away from the larger Nokdong Port.


History

Prior to Japanese colonization, Sorokdo had a population of roughly 1000 people living in 170 households. Sorokdo is the site of the largest leper colony in South Korea, housed in Sorokdo National Hospital. The hospital was built in 1916, then known as Sorokdo Charity Clinic. Established during the Japanese colonization of Korea, the hospital and the island were turned into a concentration camp for lepers, with a history of
patient abuse :''This article incorporates "medical abuse", which has a similar meaning but relates more specifically to harmful medical treatment rather than care in general, and may include victims who did not choose to be patients.'' Patient abuse or neglect ...
including slave labor, forced sterilizations,
unethical human experimentation Unethical human experimentation is human experimentation that violates the principles of medical ethics. Such practices have included denying patients the right to informed consent, using pseudoscientific frameworks such as race science, and tortu ...
, and deliberate starvation. The Japanese authorities divided the island geographically - the eastern portion was a zone for non-patients, i.e. hospital staff and their families, while the western area was used to isolate patients. The dividing line between the two was referred to as ''sutanjang'', meaning 'place of sadness'. Patients were allowed to see their families once a month, but were forced to remain at a distance as the disease was believed to be airborne. At its peak in 1940, 6,000 patients with Hansen's disease resided on the island. Following the end of Japanese rule, the South Korean government continued to quarantine people with leprosy on Sorokdo until 1963. In 1962, two Catholic Austrian nurses, Margreth Pissarek and Marianne Stoeger, arrived at Sorokdo to provide treatment for patients and help establish community facilities, such as childcare centers. They are both buried on the island in the patients' cemetery. In 1984
Pope John Paul II Pope John Paul II ( la, Ioannes Paulus II; it, Giovanni Paolo II; pl, Jan Paweł II; born Karol Józef Wojtyła ; 18 May 19202 April 2005) was the head of the Catholic Church and sovereign of the Vatican City State from 1978 until his ...
visited the island; this was considered a watershed moment in the consideration of the human rights of the remaining patients and residents. The Japanese colonial law regarding the quarantine of lepers remained in effect in South Korean until 1991; the South Korean government continued to send lepers to Sorokdo National Hospital and seven leper villages remained on the island .


Present day

In 2009, the Sorokdo bridge opened, connecting the island to the mainland and the neighboring island of Geogeum. Prior to the bridge's opening, formerly infected people were required to show permission from a doctor to take the ferry to leave the island. The Sorokdodo National Hospital predominantly treats patients with dementia, and the island sees roughly 300,000 tourists per year. Sorokdo National Hospital Hansen’s Disease Museum was designated as a national specialized museum by the Ministry of Culture, Sports, and Tourism in 2019. In 1935, Japanese authorities forced patients to build a Shinto shrine to mandate Shinto worship as part of the Japanese assimilationist policy ''naisen ittai'' (). Still standing on the island, it is one of the last remaining Shinto shrines left in South Korea. Other religious buildings, including Catholic and Protestant churches as well as Buddhist temples, have been built on the island.


In films

Portions of the 2016 film Dongju: The Portrait of a Poet were filmed on Sorokdo.


References

{{coord, 34, 30, N, 127, 07, E, source:kolossus-eswiki, display=title Islands of South Jeolla Province Leper colonies Medical and health organizations based in South Korea