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About The Book
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A Korean theologian approaches the issue of racial conflict-including discrimination between minority communities-and constructs a theology of seeing that aims to heal the ruptures of racism. As ethnic tensions continue to simmer and occasionally erupt immigration and affirmative action laws are hotly debated in every ethnic minority: African Americans Hispanic Americans Native Americans-even Asian Americans (the so-called model minority) struggle in the racially-charged atmosphere of contemporary America. In the aftermath of the Los Angeles riots of 1992 and the ensuing violence against Korean Americans Andrew Sung Park seeks a theological model that will help transform a society of oppression injustice and violence into a community of equity fairness and mutual consideration. Park emphasizes that such a transformation does not and cannot begin only with good intentions but must be grounded in an understanding of all the socio-economic and cultural issues that lead to oppression and tension. Using the Korean term han to describe the deep-seated suffering of racial oppression he then suggests resources for understanding and healing in both Christian and Asian traditions. Part I of Racial Conflict and Healing describes the status quo from a Korean American perspective including discrimination against ethnic minorities and the discrimination they inflict on one another. In Parts II and III Park suggests that American society as a whole needs a superordinate vision to form a unified community. Park argues that our profoundly individualistic society must learn to understand an idea of self that is formed through relationship with others. Finally in Part IV he presents a theological model a theology of seeing as a way to genuinely understand the other and to promote healing within our society.