William Word, a 91-year-old American, is among the tens of thousands of foreigners who answered South Korea’s call for help when the Korean War broke out in 1950.

Word, who grew up on a farm in Booneville, Ark., joined the military after he graduated from high school. And after receiving basic military training, he was given a choice to be deployed either in Europe or the Far East.

Although he didn’t even know where South Korea was, he volunteered to go there, a choice he does not regret seven decades later.

“If I had to do it again, I’ll do it all over again. I would come over here again. I really would. It’s so different here and the people are wonderful people,” he said during a joint interview with local media at a hotel in Seoul, Tuesday.

The American veteran’s most vivid memories in South Korea are the people he met in the villages. Of them, he is desperately looking for a man who he remembers as “Chang.” The 12-year-old boy often came to Word’s camp asking to do the soldiers’ laundry and shine their shoes to support his own family.

“He didn’t give in or give up. Up to this day, I’ve had thoughts and dreams and still think about him…By now, he should be in his 80s,” said Word.

Word is among the 64 foreign veterans who were invited by South Korea’s Ministry of Patriots and Veterans Affairs for a six-day visit from Monday to Saturday, in commemoration of the 70th anniversary of the 1953 Armistice Agreement that halted the Korean War.

During their visit, the veterans will attend various ceremonies and programs, including a visit to the inter-Korean truce village of Panmunjeom in Paju, Gyeonggi Province.


                                                                                                 Korean War veterans raise their arms together during a joint interview with local media at a hotel in Seoul, Tuesday. From left are William Word from the United States, Edward Buckner from Canada and Colin Thackery from the United Kingdom. Yonhap
Edward Buckner, a Korean War veteran from Canada, shows photos of a South Korean boy who he remembers as “Cho Chock Song,” during a joint interview in Seoul, Tuesday. Yonhap


Edward Buckner, a 91-year-old veteran from Canada, was also looking for a South Korean man who he remembers as “Cho Chock Song.” Although Buckner did not know his age, he assumed that the boy was younger than himself. Buckner was 19 at that time.

“He looked after our tent when we first moved into Busan while we were waiting to go up north to join the fighting. He looked after our tent and did a very good job,” he said, showing reporters photos of Cho Chock Song.

Buckner got emotional when asked about memories he has of the war.

“I was blessed because I was at brigade headquarters all the time. So I was in contact with everything, knowing what was going on,” he replied, shedding tears. “I’m so grateful that you took what you’ve got and made it what you have. It’s a beautiful country.”

Colin Thackery, a veteran from the United Kingdom, said he was amazed by how South Korea rose from the ashes of the war.

“When I got on the bus at the airport coming to Seoul for the first time, I was amazed because the last time we saw, it (the city) was flat. Now there’s just hundreds and hundreds of towers of apartment blocks,” Thackery told reporters. “Now I congratulate the (South) Korean people on the success and the prosperity that they show now.”

The 93-year-old British veteran, who rose to fame after winning “Britain’s Got Talent” in 2019, was invited to sing the Korean folk song “Arirang” during a banquet marking the 70th anniversary of the Armistice Agreement to be held in Busan on Thursday.

Thackery said he learned the song by heart preparing for Thursday’s performance, recalling the time he sang the tune with his comrades despite not knowing what the lyrics meant.

“Arirang brings a lot of memories…It’s such a pretty tune. When we were out there, we were first told that it was a lullaby. Another time, people thought it was the national anthem,” he said.

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