The Korean Confucian Academy is inscribed on the World Heritage List, and the dialectic of cultural inheritance is the same between China and Japan
On July 24, 2017, the Korea Cultural Heritage Administration announced the inclusion of nine Confucius Institute sites in the Republic of Korea on the UNESCO list.
In fact, as early as 2015, South Korea used Gyeongju Oksan College as an example to submit a World Heritage List to the World Heritage Committee, and the Confucius Institutes proposed by South Korea are not significantly different from Chinese and Japanese schools, and there are no cultural relics worthy of being listed as World Cultural Heritage.
It wasn't until April 2016 that South Korea announced its withdrawal, much to the surprise of the staff in charge of cultural relics conservation: South Korea has to submit 20 application forms a year, which contain all sorts of things, such as food, traditional folk customs, and centuries-old houses.
Everyone thinks that Koreans will throw in the towel because of their strength, which is a very naïve idea.
After some investigation, this editor found that South Korea has not given up on the idea of establishing a Confucius Institute, and the reason why it has been delayed until 2017** is because there is little hope, so it has been delayed.
According to statistics, five of the nine colleges have been restored and are open to visitors.
Koreans don't pay much attention to Confucius Institutes, so they often hold events organized by non-governmental organizations, and in addition to encouraging people to participate, they also provide financial support to those who are talented.
For more than 70 years, Yushan College has only held two festivals a year, spring and summer, but in March 2017, seven were held.
A large group of Confucian scholars frequently held academic exchanges in Yushan Academy, awakening the Confucian ideas of the Chinese people and attracting a large number of tourists to visit. Whether it is a citizen or a tourist, you can learn Xi, learn Xi and learn the essence of Xi Confucianism here.
He eats and sleeps at school every day in order to explain the culture of Confucius to all the people who come here, telling them that it is unique and unique to Korea.
A South Korean netizen said that a Chinese tourism company is in contact with the Confucius Institute Federation to prepare summer camps and winter camps so that Chinese students can study and live here, which shows that Chinese students also believe that Confucius was first proposed by South Korea.
This argument has not only been spurned by Chinese and Japanese netizens, but even experts from national universities in South Korea have pointed out that the World Heritage Site is for the protection of Confucianism, not Korean Confucianism. (But don't you know that Confucius came from China?))
So, Yushan College in Putian, Fujian, Yushan College in Lantian, Shaanxi, and Yushan in Ningxiang, Hunan, are all based on Koreans?
And the Confucius Institute in Korea, I would like to say that it is normal to travel as a Korean and feel the culture of Confucius, but if it is a Confucian Institute in Korea, it is different.