
Spring brings bright blooms, but for some the season is cruel — long-buried longing can erupt into wrenching sobs.
At the Seoul National Cemetery on April 24, the ceremony marking the 3rd annual Fallen Military Service Members Day was overcome by sorrow. Han Il-seok, the father of the late Private Han Seung-woo — who died in 2005 while serving in the military — read aloud a reply to a letter from his son that had been recovered after 20 years.

An Unsent Letter from His Son: 20 Years of Waiting
Private Han Seung-woo wrote a letter to his family, but it never reached its destination. The unfinished note sat among his belongings after his death and, two decades later, was finally handed to his father.
At the podium, Han called his son’s name in a trembling voice. \”Seung-woo, are you doing well in heaven?\” he asked, then poured out a confession that had lodged in his chest for years. He said memories of poverty — the times he couldn’t afford what his son wanted — remained a thorn that still choked him.

His Son’s Final Scent Wrapped in a Gold Cloth
He said he couldn’t bring himself to burn the uniform his son wore when he enlisted. Wrapped in a gold cloth and still carrying his son’s scent, it stayed by his side for 20 years. For parents who outlive a child, such belongings are more than objects; they are the only tangible traces left behind.
Han faltered several times as he read the letter, his shoulders shaking as he sobbed. When he reached the line, \”I spend April, when flower petals fall, turning my aching longing into a cry,\” held-back sobs rippled through the hall. After he finished, he could not stand for long; Prime Minister Kim, who stood beside him, steadied him under the weight of his grief.

Names the State Must Remember: ‘Forever Green’
The theme of this year’s ceremony was \”Beloved Names: We Remember You, Forever Green.\” The Ministry of Patriots and Veterans Affairs said on its official social channels that May’s Family Month is a time of acute longing for bereaved families who carry the absence of a child, and extended its condolences.
The loss of young people who died while serving the country, and the families who have spent more than two decades composing \”letters of lament,\” represent a debt our society must shoulder. Viewers of the ministry’s video responded with an outpouring of condolences, leaving comments such as, \”I feel a pain more agonizing than any sorrow,\” and, \”May the deceased rest in peace.\”
After the video of Han Il-seok’s voice was shared on the ministry’s Instagram and other platforms, tens of thousands of condolence messages poured in online. Many commenters reflected not just on one family’s tragedy but on the countless young lives lost answering the nation’s call. One post — \”I feel a pain more agonizing than any sorrow\” — both comforted parents who have lost children and prompted reflection on how indifferent society has been to their suffering.
For these families, grief deepens every May. What much of the world observes as Family Month — a time to celebrate relatives — can become the cruelest reminder of an empty chair. At the ceremony, the ministry emphasized that families of fallen service members still carry their children’s absence into the flowering spring and vowed that the state would keep their sacrifice in memory. Fallen Military Service Members Day has become more than a memorial; it is a moment to redefine how society honors those who died in service to the country.
The two decades Han Il-seok has endured underscore how much more careful and sustained effort the state needs to help bereaved families heal. Experts say the government must provide professional support systems for trauma recovery and implement concrete veterans’ policies that uphold the honor of the fallen.
Prime Minister Kim steadying the father after the reading became a symbolic gesture that the nation must help wipe its citizens’ tears. The Ministry of Patriots and Veterans Affairs reiterated in an official statement that it remembers the young people who died serving the country and offers deep condolences to their families — a pledge that society will not forget the fallen and will honor their families to the end.












Most Commented