Date : NOVEMBER 13, 2014
Screening of Documentary Film “Divided Families”
Followed by a discussion with
Jason Ahn, Director, Executive Producer
Ji Eun Baek, Producer
Faculty host: Carter J. Eckert
About the Film:
When the border was drawn between North and
?South Korea, hundreds of thousands of family members were
left divided. During the Korean War (1950-1953) even more
families were dislocated in the chaos of war. Over 60 years have
passed since then and many Koreans immigrated to the United States in search of peace and hope. There are an estimated
100,000 first generation Korean Americans with immediate family members in the North Korea. Many of the family
members have already passed away, or are in their 70s-90s.
Some have tried to contact their families through informal brokers, but this uncertain avenue has led many divided family
members to become disillusioned. Though US Citizens, there are no formal mechanisms for family members in the United
States to identify or even dream of reuniting with their families in North Korea. We hope that the film will raise awareness in the global community of this issue by documenting the stories of first generation Korean divided family members currently residing in the United States.
About the Directors & Producer:
Jason Ahn, Director, Executive Producer
While a Fulbright scholar to Korea, Jason Ahn became interested in divided families through
Saemsori, an organization working towards formal family reunions between Korean Americans and
Koreans living in North Korea. The necessity for a historical record of divided families and the power in
showing stories through film inspired him to embark upon the Divided Families film.
Jason is interested in the intersection of film and social change. In the future, he hopes to make
a difference as a practitioner of global health and social medicine. He is a graduate of Harvard Medical
School and Harvard Kennedy School of Government. He is currently an emergency medicine resident
at Brigham and Women’s Hospital and Massachusetts General Hospital. He earned his BA from the
University of California, Berkeley.
Eugene Chung, Director, Executive Producer
Eugene Chung is a director and executive producer of Divided Families. He is an investor and
filmmaker based in Los Angeles. Previously, Eugene worked in film production at Pixar Animation
Studios, private equity at Warburg Pincus, and investment banking at Morgan Stanley.
Eugene has written for The Wall Street Journal and Harvard Business Review, and he has been
involved with a number of social enterprises and non-profits. He worked in the rural Philippines with
Unitus, a global microfinance accelerator, and has been involved with humanitarian work in North
Korea. He earned his BS degree from the University of California, Berkeley, and holds an MBA from
Harvard Business School where he was a Baker Scholar.
Jieun Baek, Producer
Jieun Baek is currently a Belfer Center fellow at the Harvard Kennedy School of Government
where she is writing about information access in North Korea and wider regional security issues. She
graduated from the Master in Public Policy program in May, 2014 from the Kennedy School, where
she concentrated in International and Global Affairs, and wrote her thesis on the regional impacts of
the Syrian refugee crisis in Lebanon. Before graduate school, she worked at Google Headquarters in
sales, and on information access projects for North Korean defectors. Jieun studied Government at
Harvard University for her Bachelors degree, where she founded a student organization called Harvard
Undergraduates for Human Rights in North Korea (H-RiNK). Jieun hopes to work on US policy in
North Korea and the greater East Asian region. Jieun was born and raised in Los Angeles, California. As
a hobby, Jieun keeps a blog called “Inalienable”(www.jieunbaek.com).