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Locks of Love (National Geographic November 2007)
A mournful note and a pair of sandals(Áý½Å) from the 16th centrury have captivated South Korea: "You always said you wanted to live with me until our hair turns gray.
Could you pass away without me?" She left the letter in his tombs, along with shoes she'd made as a sign of love for her ailing spouse, woven from her hair and hemp bark.
There they lay until the city of Andong began moving graves to make way for houses.
Her message was that love transcends time and place. "Come to me secretly," she urged. "Although I have so much to say, I'll stop here. Korea has resurrected the dialogue with two novels and TV documentary. A statue of the widow stands at the grave site.
Korean and Japanese tourists have bought thousands of copies of the letter. "It is a timeless piece," says Park, Chang gun, a professor directing an opera about the couple,
"Still making people cry."
A young woman woved her hair into shoes for her mate, they are now in a Museum in Andong, South Korea.(Andong National University Museum)-Neil Shea
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