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www.groovekorea.com / June 2014 38 Edited by Matthew Lamers (mattlamers@groovekorea.com) COvER STORy cent individuals, I don’t know,” he says.  “I am just saying,  I have had a good experience here. Most of the people I  know who are socially well adjusted here made an effort  to, if not fully assimilate, then certainly find a niche and  kind of go with the flow.” In over a decade at the coalface of expatriate chatter  online, Koehler’s views about Korean society, and the  place of foreigners in it, have evolved considerably. A  look back at the Marmot’s Hole circa 2003 gives the  impression of an entirely different author at the keyboard.  Posts from the era — many of them attacking the newly  inaugurated Roh Moo-hyun administration from a con- servative slant — were angrier, cutting and more opin- ionated.  “When I started the blog, I thought I knew everything.  Everybody’s like that, right? I was younger, you know. I  knew enough about Korean politics to be dangerous, but  not enough. So I thought I knew everything, and I would  just be posting and posting and ranting and ranting,” he  says. But his interactions in those early years with a fellow  blogger, Peter Schroepfer (a.k.a. Orankay), pushed him  to change his mindset. Schroepfer, a Korean literature  major who now works as a journalist for a Korean-lan- guage newspaper in the U.S., was fluent in Korean. “Not  in an arrogant way, or saying, ‘you’ve got you believe this,  you’ve got to believe this,’ but he’d help me out and point  out that things may not necessarily be what I thought  they were. Between that, and just doing it over a long  time, and learning and learning and learning — and, you  know how it is: The more you learn, the more you realize  you don’t know shit. I am actually kind of embarrassed  about some of the stuff I wrote earlier, these long right- wing screeds.” Now, Koehler is a lot more sympathetic toward Korean  attitudes that he might have previously lambasted. “I have  become a lot more understanding, if you will, or sympa- thetic, to what some people would consider nationalist  Korean ideology. Partly because I sympathize with those  line(s) of thinking back at home. Some of the stuff I pre- viously thought was kind of stupid or irrational, I am now  … (of the opinion that) maybe it is not so irrational.” Despite being an immigrant himself, Koehler is skep- tical about Korea’s move toward multiculturalism, which  has been embraced enthusiastically by officialdom if not  necessarily the overall public. He points to recent ethnic  tensions in Singapore and periodic race riots in France  as examples of what can go wrong when experimenting  with mass immigration.  “The multiculturalism (in Korea), for instance, is very re- gional. The big cities, ironically enough, are largely Kore- an. The countryside is where you see a lot of the mixed  marriages. That concerns me because the gulf between  the urban and the rural in Korea is already large enough;  now you are adding a friggin’ ethnic component to it,”  he says.  “The nature of the multiculturalism worries me. It is a lot  of imported brides. I don’t want to say it is all mail order  brides, I don’t want to perpetuate stereotypes, but at the  same time, I don’t see that as a healthy phenomenon. I  don’t see the phenomenon that made that necessary as  healthy, and I don’t see the phenomenon as healthy.” But Koehler believes that, if approached carefully, im- migration could bring about great changes to Korea. “I  am a foreigner living here. My wife is a foreigner living  here. I just think countries need to be careful about how  they do these things,” he says. “I think immigration can  help countries. It has helped the United States, for the  most part. It brings in talent and whatnot, it brings in  fresh blood and it can be an invigorating and productive  phenomenon.”  Koehler himself seems to come closer to being assim- ilated than most Westerners here. As well as speaking  Korean, he wears the traditional hanbok daily, both be- cause he likes the way it looks and feels, and because he  wants to support local traditional industries. While writing  about travel and culture for Seoul Selection, he often  seeks out less-traveled parts of the country and more  traditional ways of living.  Despite more than 17 years of continuously living in  the country, Koehler, whose wife is from Mongolia, still  doesn’t have permanent residency, instead having to re- new his visa every two years. To rectify this, he is current- ly undertaking the government-run Korean Immigration  and Integration Program, which significantly eases the  process of getting a permanent residency visa. It’s an  arduous process that’s taken years for him to finally get  around to, but he appreciates the premium that Korea  places on citizenship. “Korea is not like Canada. Canada gives out citizenship  like it is fucking candy because, for them, it doesn’t really  mean anything,” he says. “But Korea is different: Not  only does citizenship mean something, (but) the culture,  the society means something. So if you want to be ac- cepted, you’ve got to work for it. They are not going to  just give it out like candy — you’ve got to work.” But can a non-Korean ever truly integrate into such a  historically homogenous country? Can a foreigner ever  really be Korean? “Is it possible? I don’t really know. I know people (who)  if they haven’t done it completely, they’ve definitely come  close,” he says.  Whatever the answer, one thing is certain: the penin- sula is changing. “Korean society is changing. They are becoming more  open to that sort of thing. Now you actually have a lot of  people in the Korean press debating, ‘What does that  mean to be Korean?’” ‘ I   h a v e   b e e n   h e r e   1 7   y e a r s .  T h i s   i s   m y   n e w   n o r m a l   n o w . ’ R o b e r t   K o e h l e r