
Originally published bySouth China Morning Post
Every year for the past three years, Edward Sugiana has made the same pilgrimage from Vancouver to a memorial hall on the southern fringes of Seoul that has become one of K-pop’s most sacred and sorrowful sites.
Inside a small private room, Post-it notes from fans cover the walls alongside flowers and photographs of the girl group Kara. Nearly seven years after her death, visitors continue to arrive to pay tribute to Goo Hara – a woman many never met, but whom thousands feel they lost.
“At the...
🇨🇳
More news from ChinaChina
ASIA
Related News

China deepens footprint at AI conference despite NeurIPS dispute, US tensions
10h ago

Taiwan’s opposition KMT leader on restoring stable peace with Beijing
1d ago

House impeaching VP seen ‘all but certain’
1d ago

DBM opens budget prep stage to observers for first time
1d ago
AI時代に文学の学びを 高校国語の科目構成を見直す案 文科省
2h ago