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67 T hirty-five years ago, my family moved from the U.S. to Jeju Island. We lived there for just over a year — I was 6 then — and while we were there, my father took a bunch of photographs. But they got buried away in a pile of boxes, stored along with all the other stuff families collect. I remember seeing the Jeju photos as a child when we came back from Korea. Whenever friends would come over, my dad would pull open the big white viewing screen, turn on the slide machine — I can still hear the whizzing of the fan cooling down the bright viewing light — and then dim the lights. The carousel made a clicking sound as the slides dropped in and out: a Korean grandfather in traditional clothing, Hallasan, the ubiquitous haenyeo divers. Between the exotic images and my own experience living in Korea as a child, I was convinced that I needed to travel around the world as much as possible — and someday go back to Jeju. Time moved on and with it went the pho- tos and slideshows. Ever since I came back to Korea in 2007, my father and I have talk- ed about digging up those old photographs and converting them to digital files. Wheth- er it was for educational purposes or purely for entertainment value, we both felt a need to share them.