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mothe34231 (aggh2cg2r8@naver.com )   (¿¬¶ôó : ag2jz1172c7.com )      12¿ù 27ÀÏ 13½Ã 55ºÐ  Á¶È¸¼ö: 133
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"Somehow it just happened," he explains. "These guys there at Hungnam listened to their better angels and did what I like to say was the right thing, for the right reasons, in a very difficult situation."

















It took several days to get everyone aboard the ships. The refugees huddled together on the shoreline, waiting ³²ÀÚ·¹Çø®Ä«»çÀÌÆ®=³²ÀÚ·¹Çø®Ä«»çÀÌÆ®
and hoping for their turn.

Among them was a then 17-year-old Han Bo-bae with her mother.

"It was a live or die situation," she says. "We ¸íǰ·¹Çø®Ä«=¸íǰ·¹Çø®Ä«
didn't think of anything else other than we need to get on this ship or we will die.

"We didn't know where it was heading, but it didn't matter. We only knew that we might live if we get on the ship."

But leaving her hometown was difficult.

"Looking at the beach moving away from me, º¸Å×°¡º£³×Ÿ=º¸Å×°¡º£³×Ÿ¿©¼ºÀÇ·ù
my young heart was saddened. I am leaving now, I thought."

Conditions on board each of the ships were, to say the least, difficult. Refugees were crammed between vehicles, boxes ÀÌÅ¿øºÎµ¿»ê
of ammunition and supplies.

There was no food or water. The biggest ship, the SS Meredith Victory, was designed to carry 60 crew at the most. Now it had 14,000 refugees - as well as the cargo.

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