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Encyclopedia > Korea Town

Koreatown is a term to describe the Korean ethnic enclave within a city or metropolitan area.

Contents

Canada

Toronto, Ontario

Main article: Koreatown, Toronto


Toronto's primary Korea Town is located on Bloor Street, roughly between Bathurst and Christie Streets.


Vancouver, British Columbia

The major Korean shopping enclave is located along North Road, on the border between Burnaby and Coquitlam. Other important Korean commercial areas include Kingsway in Vancouver and Robson Street in the West End.


Japan

During the 1910 to 1945 colonial period, particularly during World War II, Japan forcibly imported approximately 2.4 million Koreans to work as laborers. While most departed after the war, many chose to remain in hopes of better economic prospects. Today, Koreans, or the zainichi chosenjin, are the largest ethnic minority in Japan, amounting to 620 thousand in 2002. They are a key source of remittances to North Korea.


Osaka, Osaka

Main article: Koreatown, Osaka


The Korean enclave in the city of Osaka, numbering over 90,000, is by far the largest in Japan, concentrated in the Ikuno Ward, where 25% of the inhabitans are of Korean origin. Tsuruhasi in the Ward is the most famous Koreatown in Japan. The total Korean population in Osaka prefecture amounted to 150 thousand in 2002.


Shinjuku, Tokyo

According to official statistics in 2002, the Korean population in Tokyo amounted to 80 thousand, which was the second largest following that of Osaka. Unlike other Japanese Koreatowns, the small Korean-oriented commercial district in Shijuku Ward developed after World War II, and is dominated by immigrants who have retained their ethnic identity. Shin-Okubo Station is a famous area for these immigrants.


Kawasaki, Kanagawa

Approximately 3000 ethnic Koreans live in Kawasaki. Although most have assimilated, it remains one of the largest concentrations of Korean-Japanese in Eastern Japan.


Kyoto, Kyoto

A small Koreatown has developed in the Gion neighborhood (the Geisha district) of Kyoto. Kyoto prefecture is home to approximately 38 thousand ethnic Koreans in 2002.


United States

Category:Ethnic communities in the United States


Atlanta, Georgia

A small Korean commercial district has developed around Buford Highway in suburban Doraville. However, the area is not exclusively Korean; the area also includes many Chinese and Vietnamese businesses. A second center for ethnic Koreans has recently arisen in the Duluth district. Even here, there are over 45 dialects spoken. Other areas are developing rapidly along South Cobb Drive in Smyrna, the suburb of Norcross, and Memorial Drive in Stone Mountain. Atlanta is home to an estimated 100,000 Asians of all ethnicities, with Koreans being the most widely represented.


Chicago, Illinois

Chicago's Koreatown is located along Lawrence Avenue in the Albany Park neighborhood on the city's Northwest Side.


Houston, Texas

A Koreatown can be found in Houston along Gessner north of Interstate 10.


Los Angeles, California

Main article: Koreatown, Los Angeles, California


Founded in the 1970s, the area known as Koreatown in the city of Los Angeles acquired its name from the prevalence of Korean-owned businesses that form the landscape. Much of its resident population is comprised of Asian, Latino, Anglo, African-American and other ethnic groups. Currently, as part of the broader gentrification movment in the Los Angeles inner city, there has been some movement of wealthy Korean Americans from the suburbs and back to the Koreatown. Interestingly, there are also some Russian-speaking ethnic Korean refugees from the former Soviet Union (mainly from Uzbekistan) that congregate in the Koreatown, although adapting to the broader Korean-speaking Korean American community has been challenging.


During the civil unrest in 1992, residents burned and looted many businesses in Koreatown, including those owned by white and blacks.


Several strip mall-based satellite "Koreatowns" have been formed over the years in the Los Angeles suburbs of Buena Park, Cerritos, Garden Grove and Rowland Heights, where middle-class Korean immigrants have settled and where Korean American business owners have relocated.


New York City

Main article: Koreatown, Manhattan


The area around Sixth Avenue (Avenue of the Americas) and 32nd Street in Manhattan has emerged as an enclave of Korean restaurants and businesses. It is this neighborhood, near Herald Square, which is usually named as New York's Koreatown; however, a significant Korean population and commercial center can be found in Queens, especially in neighborhoods such as Elmhurst and Flushing.


Oakland, California

A strip of Korean businesses along Telegraph Avenue near the MacArthur BART station has developed into a genuine cultural center for the 60,000-odd ethnic Koreans in the San Francisco Bay Area. The emergence of this area has coincided with urban renewal and gentrification in downtown Oakland, provoking some conflict with the more established African-American population.


Bergen County, New Jersey

A significant number of Korean immigrants and their descendants now live in Bergen County. They are most prevalent in communities such as Fort Lee, Englewood Cliffs, Palisade Park, Cliffside Park, and Edgewater, communities near the NJ side of the George Washington Bridge.


See also


  Results from FactBites:
 
Toronto, Ontario (3428 words)
Specifically the town, then known as York, was built inland from the Toronto Islands, a chain of small islands leading into a marsh at their eastern end, with an opening at the western end.
Dundas Street was the western route, leading to the town of the same name near Hamilton, but then continued west instead of southeast towards Niagara, and today it ends near the US border at Windsor.
In 1834 the town reverted to the name Toronto and this was the name the city was incorporated under on March 6 of that year, with William Lyon Mackenzie as its first mayor.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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