What does it look like when an entire nation stands up at once?
In this episode, we go back to March 1, 1919—the day millions of Koreans, from students to shopkeepers, marched into the streets and shouted, “Long live Korean independence!”
This wasn’t a riot. It was a peaceful revolution.
You’ll learn:
📜 How the idea of national self-determination spread after WWI
🔥 Why grief over a king’s death became the spark for a mass uprising
🕊️ How a cross-religious alliance of 33 leaders launched the protest—then got arrested
👊 Why women, youth, and farmers played a leading role
🧵 How networks of Christian and Cheondogyo believers quietly printed and distributed thousands of independence declarations
👘 Why the white Korean dress became the visual symbol of a unified people
🕯️ And how the legacy of March 1 still drives Koreans to camp out for democracy today
From coordinated school walkouts to the courage of teenage heroine Yu Gwansun (유관순), the March 1st Movement was more than just a protest—it was Korea’s coming-of-age as a modern nation.
This is Part 5 of The People’s Mandate: Korea’s Democratic Edge, a special miniseries within Growing Up in Korea, exploring the civic courage and cultural memory that drive one of Asia’s most politically active societies.
🎙️ Audio generated using Google NotebookLM
📚 Part 15 of the Growing Up in Korea series
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