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Latest comment: 6 years ago2 comments2 people in discussion
Is there a difference here between being divided and being separated? For example many refugees flee their countries and leave family members behind - and then the family is divided.
I think there is lots of potential for this topic and this page - but maybe not as the page is now, with this confusing table on Korean history. I think the table may even stop editors from further developing the page as it is so much skewed towards Korea that you could almost think 'divided family' is a specific term only for Korean families. Thanks Michtrich (talk) 23:01, 6 June 2017 (UTC)Reply
The reason it is so Korean focused is because it is a modern, ongoing example of divided families that has a lot of information. There aren't really any other examples quite as prominent and obvious as this. I agree with you though about refugees. Perhaps a section about people separated during wars too, such as during World War II when many Jewish families were separated. I definitely encourage anyone to add info related to that, because it seems very relavent.