<Anchor>

An unforgettable history, an event was held to not forget the people who were sacrificed. It was made of dolls of sweat, sweat, and marched through the streets.

This is Jung Joon-ho.

<Reporter>

A student in a school uniform, a man in a neat suit.

Large paper dolls in the shape of an ordinary neighbor filled the road with citizens.

On the 40th anniversary of the May 18th Democratization Movement, dolls imitating the faces of victims marched through downtown Gwangju.

It has been made by members of the bereaved families and civil society organizations from newspapers and paper boxes for the past two months.
Victims of the democratization movement, embodied in dolls, walked around Geumnam-ro here 40 years ago.

Lee Han-yeol and Park Jong-cheol, who inherited the spirit of democratization with victims, such as Kim Jae-pyeong, who was sacrificed by a martial law gun gun while running from Gwangju to Gwangju to see her daughter born on May 18, and Choi Mi-hye, who died while waiting for her husband with a dead body. It includes the faces of citizens living in Gwangju as well as the heat of death.

[Choo Hyun-Kyung / Ethnic Art Council Writer: (in puppet) to remember the person of the day 40 years ago, and walk along Geumnam-ro (currently with citizens) to walk that day together… ]

Yoon Sam-rye, who lost her husband in a military car, held her husband's doll's arms tightly throughout the march.

[Yun Sam-rye / Victim's Survivor: (Husband) I think I'm living with you ... (Husband) Have fun with several people and go to heaven and live a world that has never lived… .]

[Go Hyun-ju / Gwangju Buk-gu: (I see a march) I felt that there were a lot of people who wanted to remember the 5/18

democracy. In the cemetery, a memorial service is held for the victims.

(Video coverage: Park Hyun-cheol, video editing: Jeon Min-kyu)