Exploration of ethos in Seoul
February 3, 2015, Tuesday morning. I was all hyped up about my first visit to Bukchon Hanok Village. Less than a month in the new city and Bukchon, one of the few places I wanted to visit, awaited me. No excuses, no sleep, I rode toward Bukchon with all my excitement… and of course, my 70D Canon.
What was interesting about that Tuesday was that I visited two places: Bukchon Hanok Village in Jongno-gu and Seoul Central Mosque in Itaewon, which is the only mosque in Seoul. Both places overflowed with serenity and beautiful architecture. Bukchon and the mosque in Itaewon showed the balance of different cultures in the same city. I found the tourists and natives basking in the tranquility of the scenery in both places. I found the juxtaposition of similar postures and documentation of experiences quite interesting: cameras hovering over faces, smiles in the shadows and the magnificent structures towering over the tiny mortals.
Queues of tourists exploring Bukchon to relive the 600-year-old Joseon Dynasty atmosphere and rows of foreigners and native Korean Muslims praying in the mosque; the door signs welcoming seasons in Bukchon and the large sign stating “God is great” at the mosque left me with an interesting day with exposure to the multiple cultures co-existing peacefully in Seoul.