Beyond the Battle Line:
The Korean War and My Life
by
Book Details
About the Book
The autobiographical work by Dr. Luke Kim describes his life throughout the turbulent 20th and into 21st century in Korea, Japan and the United states. The book is modest in size, but rich in content. It can be divided into three periods: early life in Northernmost Korea until age 15; the second period in Seoul where he experienced the very destructive Korean War, during which he lost his mother who was kidnapped by North Korean security agents, and we never heard from her, nor any news about her ever since 1950; Then his coming to America at age 26 in 1956.
About the Author
Dr. Luke L C. Kim was born in North Korea in 1930. Kim-IL-Sung established his
dictatorship Communist government in North Korea in1946, from which Dr. Kim
and his family escaped to South Korea. On June 25 1950, North Korean People’s
Army launched all-out invasion into South Korea, the beginning of the horrible
Korean War. North Korean Army occupied Seoul in just three days and advanced to
South Korea so fast that just in three months they occupied almost the entire South
Korean territory except the tiny area south of Nakdong River near Busan. And then
under the command of Gen, MacArthur, UN forces launched a highly successful
Inchon landing, and they retook Seoul and then advanced north reaching the Yalu
River, a border between North Korea and China. At this point, the 300,000 so
called “Chinese Volunteer Army” unexpectedly entered into the Korean War, and
began fi erce attacks on the UN forces, necessitating their complete and immediate
withdrawal from North Korea. Dr. Kim participated as an interpreter of a Republic
of Korea Army intelligence unit in the historical Hungnam Evacuation. During
the evacuation, 100,000 UN troops, 18,000 tanks/vehicles, and 350,000 tons of
military supplies, plus another 100,000 North Korean refugees seeking freedom
were loaded on 200 US Navy and Merchant Marine ships, which ended sailing all
of them to complete safety and especially freedom for North Korean refugees.
Later, he served the Korean Navy and following discharge from his military
service, he enrolled at Seoul National University Medical School and received
an MD degree in 1956. He came to the U.S. in 1956 and studied psychology at
the University of Arizona receiving a PhD degree in clinical psychology in 1960.
And then he began his psychiatric residency training program in Buffalo, NY
and completed the 3-year psychiaric residency program in Northern California.
Dr. Kim served on the Asian American Psychiatrists Committee of the American
Psychiatric Association as a member and Editor-In-Chief of its newsletter for
six years. He was the founder and fi rst president of the Association of Korean
American Psychiatrists (AKAP). He was a clinical faculty member at the
University of California Davis School of Medicine (UCD) for 35 years. As clinical
professor of psychiatry, he initiated and developed the UCD Medical School’s
cultural psychiatry program to national prominence. In 2006, he and his wife
Grace established the Luke and Grace Kim Endowed Professorship in Cultural
Psychiatry at the Medical School. The Search Committee appointed Francis G.
Lu, MD of UCSF, as the Luke and Grace Kim Endowed Professor in Cultural
Psychiatry, a decision which made them very happy. Now he and Grace have
retired to Seal Beach in Southern California.