오늘 아침 The Korea Times에서 참 감동적이고도 부끄러운 기사 하나를 보았습니다. 청각을 잃고도 우리나라에서 제일 좋은 북을 만드는 무형문화재 임선빈 씨에 대한 기사였습니다. 임 선생은 1949년 충북 청주에서 태어나 열한 살 때부터 북을 만들었다고 합니다. 그때 이미 오른쪽 귀는 들리지 않았고 스물다섯 살 때 왼쪽 귀의 청각도 거의 상실했다고 합니다. 그의 생애와 헌신은 한마디로 감동입니다.
감동만큼 부끄러움도 큰 이유는 무엇보다 그분이 북을 만들어 전시한 후 찢어버려야 하기 때문입니다. 둘 곳이 없어 그 귀한 작품들을 없애야 한다니 이런 수치스러운 낭비가 어디 있겠습니까? 돈 좀 가진 분들, 임 선생의 북을 사들여 북 박물관을 만드실 의향이 없으신지요? 그러신다면 평생 존경하겠습니다. 아래에 기사 일부를 옮겨둡니다. 말없음표(...)는 기사가 잘렸음을 뜻합니다.
전문은 http://www.koreatimes.co.kr/www/news/culture/2015/01/135_171744.html 에서 볼 수 있습니다.
The Sound of Silence
He was only 11 years old when he lost his hearing in his right ear after being seriously beaten by his peers, who bullied him for having a limp leg. Then, at 25, he lost most of his hearing in his left ear after using it
excessively to
tune drums.
Im Seon-bin, a traditional drum or "buk" maker
recognized by the government as an intangible cultural treasure, cannot
communicate with others without a hearing aid. Yet, unbelievably, he continues
to make drums
in the traditional way, without hearing sound. Instead, he makes sure that his drums produce the right
sounds using his sense of
touch.
"I cannot make the right sound while wearing the
hearing aid because it distorts the sound. When I make a
drum, I take off the
hearing aid," Im told The Korea Times.
"When I beat the
drum, I can feel the vibration travel from my fingertips to my heart. Even
though I cannot
hear the sound through my ear, I can hear it through my heart," he said.
When he was 11, he and his six sisters and two brothers were separated after his
father's business failed.
Born in Cheongju, North Chungcheong Province, he lived
in a slum where dwellers picked rags in Seoul for a
living. He was beaten by others, who mocked his limp leg,
which he got from polio after he was born.
One day, he
escaped from the slum and met his mentor, Hwang Yong-ok, a drum making master,
in Yeosu, South Jeolla Province.
"I just followed him
because I was hungry. He offered me meals and shelter. one night, as I was lying
under the moonlight, thinking of how much I missed my family, I began to beat my
drum, and at that moment, I
was seized by the sound of the drum. The sound pulled my heartstrings. Since then, I decided to make
drums that can move the soul," he said.
Making musical masterpieces
Im's
name is widely known for making the nation's largest traditional drum, installed
in the lobby of Anyang City Hall in Gyeonggi Province. Currently living in
Anyang, he spent two years and six months to make the
drum, which he hoped would
promote harmony and development in the region.
The drum
measures 220 centimeters high, 820 centimeters wide in the rim and 650 kilograms
in weight. It is adorned with "dancheong," traditional paintwork on wooden
structures, in the shape of clouds, dragons,
flowers and waves. It symbolizes
the importance of the integrity of the city's governmental officials and the
harmony among the city's residents.
He made various
masterpieces that are installed in the presidential office, Cheong Wa Dae, and
the
Baekdam Temple, and the large dragon-patterned drum that was used at the opening ceremony of the
1988 Seoul Olympics.
He said he
loves making "beopgo" (temple drums), among others. "When a Buddhist monk beats
a drum,
it gives great comforts to the listeners," he said.
Still struggling
After years of
manufacturing drums, he was given the honorable title of Intangible Cultural
Property in 1999 by the government. He felt this achievement could wash away his
lifetime of woes. But it didn't...
"In the past, this kind of job was regarded as
vulgar and lowly because the artisans picked and butchered
the cows themselves
to get their skin. So people looked down on our job," he
said.
"I don't think this perception has changed. Nobody
wants to learn how to make traditional drums because
it's a hard, manual job and
it's hard to make money from it," he said...
Three years ago, he was forced to close his
workshop located at a special venue for intangible cultural heritage in Bucheon,
Gyeonggi Province, because he is not a Bucheon citizen. Today, he makes his
drums at a
former plant in the industrial area that will be redeveloped in
Siheung, Gyeonggi Province...
The
artisan said many people who have been recognized for their contribution to
Korea's cultural heritage live and work in poor conditions and receive little
support from the government. He is required to hold two regular exhibitions a
year from the government, but after the exhibitions, he has to tear his drums
apart, as he cannot afford to keep all of them in his small
workshop.
"My drums are like my children. But I have to
destroy them because no person or institution wants to buy or keep them. I can
donate my drums to any museum, which can keep them without any conditions," he
said..
"People
say keeping the tradition is great. But no one wants to pay for it. The demand
for traditional drums
is on the decline," he
said...
Worse, it is
becoming more difficult to obtain good quality materials such as high-quality
cowhide and wood, which are essential for drum making. The drums make different
sounds according to the type of animal skin or wood used, such as pine or
Paulownia wood.
"The skin is like the father, while the wood
is like the mother. The sound produced between the skin and the wood is like the
child," he said...
Even though his life is still tough
for him, Im hopes to restore the ancient drums from the Three Kingdoms to the
Joseon Kingdoms. "I have the resources that document the ancient drums. I can
restore those
traditional instruments. Until the day I die, I want to restore the exceptional drums that show the historical
changes in the instruments," he
said...
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