History lesson: S. Korea’s Moon scraps state textbooks

South Korea’s new President Moon Jae-In puts his electronic signature in an order to scrap state-issued school history textbooks in his office at the presidential Blue House in Seoul on May 12, 2017./ AFP /

SEOUL, South Korea (AFP) – South Korea’s new President Moon Jae-In on Friday scrapped state-issued school history textbooks introduced by his ousted predecessor, saying they represented an “outdated and one-sided” view of the past, his office said.

The previous Park Geun-Hye administration had introduced state-authored history textbooks at middle and high schools, arguing that some existing tomes reflected left-leaning and pro-North Korea ideologies.

Park’s conservative government began publishing the new textbooks this year despite opposition from liberal critics, who saw them as an attempt to glorify the dictatorship of Park Chung-Hee, late father of the impeached president.

“As efforts to normalize history education, the president has ordered the abolition of state-authored textbooks,” said top presidential spokesperson Yoon Young-Chan, adding they “symbolize outdated and one-sided history education and attempts to divide the people.”

Moon believed “history education must no longer be used for political purposes,” Yoon said.

The previous government initially planned to make the state-authored textbooks as the only option available to educators but later said that schools would be able to choose between them and approved texts from commercial publishers.

Some 80 middle and high schools in South Korea, just 1.5 percent of the total, have said they would adopt the state-issued books.

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