Spring sets in
Spring has set in. I see white cherry and off-white magnolia in the campus and pink jindaley blooming in the hills at the backyard of the Sungkonghoe University (SKHU). Pine trees that lost their lifeblood in the cold winter have started greening.

Social eveningI wanted to have some fun. As a first step, I organized a small party at my apartment on Friday evening, 6 April, with support from Francis. Among the participants were President and Vice-President of SKHU, my colleagues in the university, namely, Cho Hee-Youn, Hur Song-Woo, Park Kyung-Tae and Yi Ki-Ho. Among ARENA (Asia Regional Exchange for New Alternatives) Fellows were Samuel Lee and Seejae Lee who attended with respective queens, and off course Lee Jung-Ok and Francis were there. Our faculty staff Hyeji also attended and extended her helping hands, without which the party would have been a disaster. She also helped me to buy few essentials on the previous day. Oh Jae Shik and Jin Young-Jong could not attend because of other engagements. I cooked two dishes including chicken curry that I ventured after about twelve years. Guests came with lot of presents including holy water, cake, tea and souvenirs. We spent the time drinking, eating, chatting, teasing and laughing. We could finish only half of the cognac brought by the President. I am now left with a huge stock of beverage that would probably last until I leave.
MaquilapolisThe 9th Women’s Film Festival in Seoul was held from 5 to 12 April. We decided that we would watch at least one film in a group on Saturday, 7 April. Hur Song-Woo was kind enough to arrange tickets for all MAINS students and me. Jim, the friend of ARENA, guided us, to a downtown cinema hall in the afternoon and watched a US-Mexican joint ventured movie titled Maquilapolis: City of Factories, directed jointly by Vicky Funari and Surgio DeLa Torre. The story centers round the plight of women workers at the work place, as well as their sufferings in the neighborhood because of pollution cased by factories. It covered episodes on workers displacement because of shifting of a factory from a Mexican city to Indonesia where cheap labor power could be bought and workers' movement for entitlements. The movie was a visual expression of what I incorporated in my curriculum on globalization, flow of global finance, neo-liberal terrorism and gender. This also reminds me of the plight of about two million women workers in the garments industry of Bangladesh, who have been fighting for fair wage and decent working conditions, but are always denied of these, as the consumers in the North want cheap clothes. We also watched a second film immediately after this, a documentary on how a village was bulldozed to make way for the expansion of an US military base in Korea.
Oriental medicineEarlier I told Jung-Ok that I had been taking medicines for last twenty years since I had a cardiac arrest. Can I try something else in Korea? She informed me that the practice of oriental medicine is gaining popularity in Korea and She suggested me that Deok-Su Sohn, wife of Samuel Lee, would be an appropriate person to consult. During the party at my apartment, it was discussed and decided that I would consult their son who practices oriental medicine. He was trained in China and runs a consultation center named Healing & Joy.
On 8 April, Cho Hee-Youn almost ruined my sleep with his midnight telephone call only to say that he would take me to Healing & Joy in the following morning. In the morning, we went there and met Samuel’s son Min-hyung Lee. I lied down on a bed. He touched and gripped my both arms and tried to feel something. He did it several times. This was followed by some acupuncture. Then he gave me suggestions in print. He also suggested that I might stop taking medicines except aspirin. But if I feel bad, I may take medicine or come to him. His diagnosis was as follows:
HepatoniaYou are annoyed by perspiration when you are in excellent physical condition, and notice its absence during a week period. That you feel no physical weariness only when you are in a sweat is the result of inherent constitution. It is good for you, therefore, to take frequent hot baths. You better try to speak as little as possible and abstain from drinking alcohol Harmful dietAll shell-fishes and seafood, green vegetables, broccoli, buckwheat, barley, red bean, cucumber, egg white, peach, cherry, persimmon, grapes, cocoa/chocolate, wine/alcohol, aloe, vitamin E, dextrose injection, swimming.
Beneficial dietBeef, chicken, milk, sugar, wheat, radish and root vegetables, lotus-roots, potato, garlic, beans, nuts, walnut, squash, eel, pear, watermelon, orange/citrus, apple, honey, antler, sauna, vitamin A, D and C.
I was impressed by his way of handling me and the way he talked. So I decided to follow his suggestions. I talked to my daughter over telephone and narrated everything. It may be mentioned that my daughter, Kitty, is a medical doctor and is now doing her post-graduation in a medical university. Before coming to Seoul, I had developed erratic blood pressure and she had to take care of me, helped me to undergo a lot of tests. We had some conversation.
Kitty: What prompted you to try this?
Mohi: I am sick of all these medicines. Now I want to try something else.
Kitty: Have you have your health insurance?
Mohi: Not yet, but I’ll have it soon.
Kitty: For God’s sake, don’t stop medicines that you take for blood pressure.
Mohi: Let me try it for some days. If I feel bad, I’ll resume taking medicines.
Kitty: No, you shouldn’t. You are staying alone and it’s too risky for you. So I was very all at sea, what to do?
So far I avoided yellow of the egg and took only egg white. Now it’s not good for me. I like green vegetables and fish. But I have been advised to avoid green vegetables and saline-water fish. I used to avoid red meat, though beef was once my most favorite dish. Now I am allowed to eat beef.
I decided to follow my daughter’s advice. But I went to the supermarket, bought beef; cooked beef curry with tomato and started eating rice and beef. However, I have found that Korean beef is not so tasty, though it’s very costly. Bangladeshi beef is much more delicious and cheap too, about two dollars per kg. Indian cows smuggled to Bangladesh keep the price cheap, as most Indians don't eat beef. Even cow slaughtering is prohibited in North India. I talked to Jung-Ok and contemplating to consult at least another oriental doctor. If conclusions are similar, than I may think otherwise. MAINStreaming In my class on 10 April, I asked my students to characterize ‘globalization’ in one word or in one phrase. So each of them came to the white board and wrote one or few words. I told them that these together would define globalization. “Why don’t you elaborate it a bit”? So they explained their terms and phrases for one or two minutes each. Then I suggested them, “Well, we are now very close to have a general understanding about globalization. Let’s make a newsletter out of all these propositions. Each of you may write one paragraph, format it as a newsletter and disseminate it. It can be a regular project work of MAINS students.” I also suggested them to get it translated with the help of our Korean students, so that we have a wider readership. The student’s started working on it. They named the newsletter as “MAINStreaming Issues. The first issue has already been circulated. This is the first collaborative project work of MAINS students. New Year14 April is celebrated as new-year in Bangladesh. It has different names in different parts of South Asia, such as, Nababarsha in Bangladesh, Biju in Assam, Boishabi in Chittagong Hill Tracts, Naya Barash in Nepal and so forth. This is a public holiday in Bangladesh and a major festival with secular character. The Bangla calendar was introduced during the era of Mughal emperor Akbar who ruled India from 1556 to 1605. Earlier, Muslim rulers in India used to follow Hijri calendar that centered round the lunar system. Akbar wanted to streamline it for the convenience of rent collection, as cropping seasons rotate in line with the solar calendar. 
There is a Bangladeshi community living in Seoul, mostly engaged as workers. Among them are nineteen Jumma people who belong to ethnic minority communities in the southeastern part of Bangladesh and are victims of majority chauvinism. They have a 'refugee' status in Korea. They organized their traditional Boishabi festival on 14th afternoon at the downtown under the banner of the Jumma People's Network in Korea (JPNK). Earlier we met their leader Ronald Chakma in an anti-war rally in front of Seoul station on 17 March. He invited us to their program. Jim, the Friend of ARENA, guided us to the place. The program was supported by a group of Korean youth volunteers. They served us some traditional food that included cake made of indigenous Binni rice mixed with coconut and chotpoti, which is a favorite snack throughout Bangladesh. The introductory speeches of the leaders of the group were followed by chakma song and dance. Some of us also spoke and my student Mafuja volunteered to sing a few Bangla songs.
In the JPNK program, we met ABM Moniruzzaman, a Bangladeshi and also the General Secretary of Migrants Trade Unions. He informed us of another cultural program in the evening at Yonsei University that was being organized to celebrate the second anniversary of the Migrants Workers Television (MWTV) and requested us to attend. So we went there at around seven o' clock. When we entered he venue, two Nepali men were singing. Mr. Mahbub Alam of MWTV, a Bangladeshi married to a Korean, greeted us. We had a plan to stay for an hour. But we enjoyed it so much that we stayed till the end. MAINS students virtually took over the program with songs and dances. I was sitting at one corner leaning on the wall. But I was tempted by a Korean Lady to dance with her. I don't know the ABC of any dance. But she made me a co-dancer for a while. When we left the venue, it was already over 11 o' clock. It was raining. Somehow we managed the last train, but then failed get down at the right station. So we had to walk back from one station further. We were all wet and shivering in cold weather. Still we were very happy to spend a few hours in a very festive mood.
MAINS planning An extended faculty meeting for MAINS was held on 5 April. We discussed about students selection procedure and schedule. As it is a course targeted to an Asian group of students, MAINS has no other alternative at the moment but to accept English as a medium of education. So proficiency in English is critically important. Spoken English doesn’t matter much as it’s none of our first language. But students are to write term papers and a thesis and a reasonably good command over the language is important. Secondly, working experience in the non-government sector is not enough as there are different types of such organizations. To have an ideal mix of candidates, it is important to have a reasonably good selection procedure. Besides supporting documents, it is felt necessary to interview the candidates through designated referees. As ARENA has Fellows in many Asian countries, they or through their constituencies, candidates can be interviewed, verified and recommended. It may also be necessary to have some referees as resource persons to go around in respective sub-regions, talk to the candidates personally, or to call interviews at a convenient location in each sub-region on a particular date.
Time was a big constraint in the first year. There was public announcement about the MAINS course in December 2006, selection of students was done in January 2007 and the selected candidates were asked to arrive at Seoul in February. In the meeting the following were decided to have a better result in this respect.
ㆍPublic announcement through web: round the year ㆍDeadline for submission of application: September ㆍSelection of students: October ㆍStarting visa processing: November ㆍCourse begins: February
While selecting candidates for the course, the following, among others, will be considered.
- ㆍSocial movement background in the field of research and/or activism;
- ㆍSome proficiency in English.
While Francis and Jiyoung were away in Hanoi to attend a program meeting of the Marriage Migrants program and a workshop, I started drafting a proposal for planning and fund-raising for MAINS. I also prepared a draft course outline for the summer "regional school" for Democracy & Democratization in Asia. We intend to have the school somewhere outside Seoul under a team teaching formula involving several ARENA Fellows. ARENA program meeting
We had a program meeting at ACIS on 12 April. Three draft proposals / concept papers were shared, one by Heewon Chang on HRP project, one by Toshiko Tsujimoto on Asia-Latin America Dialogue and one by Jiyoung Lee on Marriage migrant Women. Francis and I also participated. We had some discussion on these. It has been observed that we are progressing quite well.
Cold warOn 20 April, I accompanied Cho Hee-Youn to a seminar on Dynamics of Cold War Culture in East Asia at Paichai University that was organized with support from IEAS & DSMI in Sungkonghoe University. As usual, Cho informed me with his midnight phone call on the previous day and asked me whether I would like to accompany him. I agreed.
Discussions mainly centered round culture in Northeast Asia during the cold war period. Cho was a discussant. After the presentations and speeches of designated discussants, I was asked to give some comment. So I spoke very briefly. I disagreed with the notion of the cold war. I said that the cold war is a manifestation of the superpower rivalry, which was not at direct war at that time. But we in Asia were at war and still at war in many countries where there is inner colonization. So I don't subscribe to the concept of the cold war from my own perspective.
MAINS course
In the current spring quarter, I have been teaching a cores course on Globalization and Social Movements. In April, I had classroom lectures covering three topics and a field visit. I covered lecture sessions on “political impact of globalization”, “environmental impact of globalization” and “globalization and gender”. Besides, a d ay-long trip to Hyundai Motor Company was arranged as part of the curriculum.
Visit to HyundaiAs part of my course on Globalization & Social Movements, I planned two field programs: a visit to a globalized corporation and interaction with some social movement groups. As part of the program, a visit to Hyundai Motor Company was arranged. Prof. Jin Young-Jong helped in this respect. On 24th morning, we went to its Asan plant with a Hyundai bus. Mr. Jin Won Seo, Manager of Hyundai’s Corporate Responsibility Team was our guide from the beginning to the end. I met him before in a MoU signing ceremony at SKHU where Hyundai agreed to support some MAINS students from the coming year. He is a former student of the Graduate School of NGO studies in SKHU and has been virtually an interface between MAINS and Hyundai. 
After about one hour’s drive, we reached the office of the Asan plant. We watched a video of the production process and then toured around the factory, watching almost all stages of production. It was interesting to see how robots were working. It was my first experience of visiting such a plant, and so also for my students. After lunch, we visited KIA motor factory, where we watched another video. The Hyundai also owns KIA, where we saw test-driving along a track specially made for such tests. The track is similar to that used in car races.
Hyundai’s annual production capacity is three million units; seventy percent of its produce is exported. Students had a test of some ride in brand new cars and had photographs. It was a fun too. They asked many questions to the staff who guided us in these two plants. Questions were mainly in line with what they had been studying, such as, wages, labor conditions, trade union rights, women’s employment, maternity and paternity leave provisions, etc.
We were told that Hyundai has been trying to be environment-friendly and its efficiency record is quite high.
EngenderingKorean Women's Development Institute (KWDI) with support from Asia Foundation organized an Expert Group Meeting on Gender and Development on 26-27 April. The theme of the meeting was "A Paradigm Shift in International Cooperation and Development Assistance for Gender Mainstreaming in Asia". Francis requested me to participate in the meeting. I agreed and accordingly I was invited as a discussant. Though I registered myself as SKHU, I actually represented SKHU, ARENA and Bangladesh as well. The discussions were mainly on ODA in the context of gender equality. On the first day, there were three sessions with designated speakers. Among them were presentations from Afghanistan, Cambodia and India. As I had a class in the afternoon, I had to leave after the first session. However, I was there on the second day that continued until lunchtime.
Kwak Sukhee was a key organizer of the meeting. While discussing with her, we found that we met before at the Seoul Congress of ARENA at Sung-Sil University in 1996 where she was a key organizer. She was very cordial and was keen to know whether I had difficulty in reaching the venue. Probably she got an impression from Francis that I might get lost on the way. But it was very easy to reach there as Francis gave me a map with clear directions in print.
In her introductory remarks, Sukhee showed a cartoon captioned "development, if not engendered, is endangered". She also mentioned that in many cases, donors gave what they wanted, rather what the recipients needed. "What we as donors are giving may be something that the people do not want to receive". This was a clear confession and I liked it. One of the speakers on the first day was Prof. Kim Eun Mee of Ewha Women's University. She presented a paper on Development, Gender-Equality and OECD. She made a review of DAC member countries' ODA in gender related activities. It was a good analysis though a question may be raised actually to what extent ODA trickles down to women at the bottom. Because much of the ODA goes back to the country of origin in the form of consultancy, equipment and interest.
Sukhee moderated the session on the second day. It was very participatory and lively. I came to know that Korean ODA is largely gender-insensitive. In the paper on KOICA's Gender and Development Policy, KOICA's managing director Chang Hyun-sik mentioned that less than 1% of its budget was allocated to projects on gender equality before 1999 and the rate remained the same after 2000. According to KWDI statistics (Women in Korea, 2007)), Korea ranks 53rd in terms of GEM (Gender Empowerment Measure) among 75 countries listed. Seats in the parliament held by women in Korea are 13.4 percent, while the average estimated earned income of women is 46 percent of that of men.
The discussion session ended with at least two recommendations on future action. It was agreed that the KWDI, in consultation with the Korean civil society groups, will draft a position paper and would lobby to KOICA and, secondly, to consolidate and strengthen an Asian network of experts on gender and development. It was both an informative and educative exposure for me and I learned a lot by attending this meeting. I hope I can share this experience to my students, to the larger ARENA constituency, as well as in my country.
Oeam-ri folk villageProf. Lee Seejae of the Catholic University of Korea is my friend, philosopher and guide for the time being. I accompanied him to a meeting of the environmental sociologists association of Korea. The meeting was organized on 27 April at Oeam-ri village outside Seoul. This village has kept its tradition for over 400 years. We took a KTX train from Seoul station that runs at a speed about 300 km per hour. At Seoul station, Seejae introduced me to ARENA Fellow Kim Young Book who is now Chancellor of the Asia Pacific Graduate School of Integral Study of Life. With this, I have completed at least one cycle of meeting with all Korean ARENA Fellows. It took less than forty minutes to reach Chenon-Asan from where we took a taxi and reached the village in about twenty minutes. The venue was a traditional Choga jib (straw roof) house named Yojinne. Prof. Jae-Muk Park of Chungnam National University was the organizer of the meeting where several sociologists assembled to make presentations. Among them were Doo-Sik Kim, Jin-Chul Rho, Do-Wan Ku, Sun-Jin Yoon and Byung-Hyuk Lee. They were all speaking Korean and a few times Seejae interpreted the titles and some key words and statistics. 
After the presentations, we walked around the village. I learned that this village has remained traditional, not as a piece of tourist attraction only, but also people live there. There are two categories of house. The relatively better off has Giwa jib (brick/tiled roof) house. Some houses are empty, as nobody lives there for years. They are in dilapidated condition. I saw a tree, which was 600 years old. Houses have boundary walls made of numerous pieces of stone that flew through the river originating from the surrounding mountain. Small and narrow canals are connected with the river and are used for irrigation. A bar-b-q dinner was arranged in the courtyard. There were sam-gyup sal (three-layer pork) and sut-bul gu-i (chicken). Chicken was especially arranged for me as I don’t eat pork. However, pork and chicken were cooked on the same pan, using the same spoon, knife, etc. This is what I call “peaceful co-existence” or “unity in diversity”. After dinner, I made a power point presentation on Living with Water. I described the life and ecology in Bangladesh and South Asia that rotate round water. 
When the ‘academic’ part was over, the life began to start. All the participants in there fifties and sixties suddenly stood up and decided to go for a Karaoke. So we drove to the town to a Junkuk norebang. We spent there almost two hours. It was unbelievable how these sociologists were singing from the bottom of the heart and dancing with passion and emotion filled with youthful romanticism.
We spent the night on the floor, my first night in a Korean village. Seejae and Jae-Mook were exiled to another room as they were ‘accused of snoring’. In the following morning we had a traditional Korean breakfast. I saw the owner of the house grinding fermented beans in a Jul-gu tong (stone pot) with a Jul-gu gong (wooded stick). Then she put the paste in bottles. Maybe she would use it throughout the year. This is very similar to what we traditionally use in Bangladesh villages. But we use gile (wooden pot) and chhia (wooden stick) for grinding and husking.
We took another round of walk. I saw a wheel driven by waterpower coming through a canal and used for grinding grains. This is exactly the same as our dheki (pedal tool for rice husking). Jae-Mook brought a glass of Kam ju (fermented rice juice). It tasted sweat but very soothing. We proceeded to the station and took a train to Dang Daegu. In the afternoon, we spent a few hours in Daegu University with Prof. Kim Doo-Sik. They were having a workshop on industrial sociology. I found Prof. Cho Hee-Youn there, who was one of the organizers. I took a walk around the campus, which is too big compared to SKHU. Seejae and I took an evening train to return to Seoul.
Sunset at Weol MidoIt was a coincidence. On 29 April, I was returning from my office to the apartment and met Kim Ae Hwa outside the office building. Ae Hwa is a researcher at SKHU and my audit student too. She was accompanied by another student, Kim Kyung Min. Ae Hwa informed me that they would go to Weil Mido, near Incheon, In the afternoon and I could accompany them if I want to. I happily said ‘yes’.
We met at Onsu station in the afternoon at quarter past five. We took an Incheon-bound train and got down at the last station. Outside the station, we took a bus and got down again at the last stoppage. Then we were at the Weol Mido seashore. There is a wide paved walkway along the shore. On the other side of the walkway is a long line of restaurants. We went to the end and entered a restaurant in the upstairs. Ae Hwa asked for Maeun-tang (spicy fish soup). I requested for Bek Se Ju, my favorite wine in Korea. While eating, we were keeping eyes on the west. I saw the sun slipping slowly over the mountain. This reminded me of a poem titled Sundown that I composed last year.
I am fond of sundown How the white clouds Turn into blue and then red Swiftly go into night’s coffin Each day we walk bit by bit Along the road to dusk The daylight will be gone
And all the wishes will die
On way back to the station, I saw one inscription on a piece of stone on the seashore: “This point is one of the 3 places (Red Beach, Blue Beach, Green Beach) where US 1st Marine Division and ROK 1st Marine Regiment landed with 261 warships led by Commanding General Douglas McArthur at dawn on 15 September 1950 for the successive Incheon Landing Operation”. This gives an impression that Korea was ‘liberated’ by the US.
We stopped at the China Town, a makeshift tourist spot. It has been nicely built and decorated on the hills. I had to stop after climbing stairs at a certain point, as it was too much for me. Kyung Min and Ae Hwa climbed further. After sometime, we met in front of a statue of Confucius. Ae Hwa told me that they say the statue of Douglas McArthur on the other side. I told her, “What did you say to him”? She replied, “I forgot. Maybe I’ll ask him when we meet again in the hell”. I said, “You don’t need to go to the hell to meet him. Let him go to the hell”. Guriltai Shul I have a Mongolian student. Her name is Manda. She is the first Mongolian I have ever met. Once I asked her whether they eat horsemeat. She said that horsemeat and horse milk are both delicious. I told her about my wish to taste hors meat, if possible.
It was made possible. She got some dried meat from a Mongolian shop in Seoul. One day she whispered to me, "Yes, I got it, I'll bring it to you". Next day, she bought some meat wrapped in a polythene bag and told me that I could make a soup out of it. I could not take the risk of preparing the soup myself. So I requested her to prepare it. She gladly agreed. On the last day of April, I visited their apartment in the evening. She was preparing the soup. This had some demonstration effect. So Mafuza declared that she would cook rice, chicken and shrimp for all of us. At the end, we had a good dinner.
Manda prepared a sort of noodle soup with horsemeat. They call it Guriltai Shul (floor soup) with atonimah (horsemeat). She told that fresh atonimah is tastier than the dried one. Though I didn't take much, I felt like as if I went back to the early 13th century and I was riding a fairytale horse along with Chinggis Khan to conquer Khanbalik (Beijing). Cuisine On 2 April, Prof. Jin took me to the other side of the hill at the backyard of the university. We crossed the hill, passed through a stream, crossed the abandoned railway track and reached a tent-type restaurant that looked like a greenhouse shed for vegetables, but not transparent. It was a tofu restaurant.
On 3 April, Hur Song-woo and Cho Hee-Youn took me to a restaurant outside the neighborhood for lunch. It was too crowded. We could not find a seat in the restaurant of their first choice. We went to another one and had Awanju chu-o thang (mudfish soup of Wanju).
Earlier Samuel lee invited me to his office and to have dinner with him. I went to his office in the afternoon at around six. He is the Secretary General of the national UNESCO Commission for Korea. He was waiting for me since five o' clock. He gave me nice UNESCO souvenir, which I use in my office to keep pens, scissors, etc. He took me to a Japanese restaurant. We had Sukiaki (beef soup with vegetables). As usual, I wanted to have Bek Se Ju. The waiter brought several small glasses made of different materials to serve the wine. I chose a stone glass.
Seejae wanted to help me with a gadget so that I can access wireless Internet at my apartment. This would work provided someone else uses it in close proximity. Seejae came to my apartment, tried with the small tool and it didn't work. Then we went to a restaurant for lunch. We had Pulgogy (beef soup).
On 19 April, we skipped the faculty meeting. Hur Song-woo and I went for lunch in a nearby restaurant. I had been there before with Francis. Song-woo ordered food that included Nock du cheon (a sort of pancake), which is very tasty. We have similar dish in Bangladesh made of flour with spices and vegetables and the name in colloquial is chapti. I like chapti very much and I enjoyed this too.
Jiyong, Hong Kyu-Ho of Korean Democracy Foundation and I wet to the same restaurant again in the following week. Kyu-Ho got his pay on the previous day. So he was generous. We had dinner together that included Nock du cheon. I also had Bibim neng meon (spicy cold noodle with vegetables).
Inner soulMy daughter underwent a surgery in the first week of April. There was a cyst on her back. She had to remove it. My wife had a similar surgery in the last week. I never thought that the mother and the daughter are so prototype of each other. I keep myself busy in work. That's the way I can absorb pains by remaining active.
One evening, I was listening to a Tagore song with the help of my laptop. It says: Shukhheen nishidin poradhin hoye Bhromichho deeno praney
With a broken heart, unhappy and no freedom, you have been roaming around day and night.
It was a quiet midnight. Suddenly I realized that my eyes were full of tears. I felt very lonely. I started weeping like a child.
TailpieceI got a cell phone. It belongs to ARENA and Francis helped to get it registered in my name. The number is 010-2301 1971.
Photo: Courtesy: Seejae Lee, Pinpaka Ngamsom
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