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There are discriminatory elements in our ceremonial culture, just as only men are at the funeral and only the bride comes out holding the father's hand at the wedding ceremony.



Correspondent Hogun Lee.



<Reporter> It



is a pity that the 33-year-old Yang Mo, who lost his grandmother two years ago, could not attend the funeral at that time.



Among the many grandchildren, he, who was closest to the grandmother, tried to see off the deceased with a portrait of himself, but he couldn't.



The opportunity went to his younger brother at the insistence of the elders of the family.



Amount parent's / Jongno-gu, Seoul: Let me give someone Yongding pictures leave the gender or the firstborn second something like this (I think) not it fit's the closest person to the deceased favorite -



also a similar discomfort bakeungyeong who took the end of last year, my brother wedding felt



I still don't understand why I had to have my uncle sit in the place of my father who didn't come to the wedding after cutting off traffic for 20 years after the divorce.



[Park Eun-kyung / Eunpyeong-gu, Seoul: It was a scene I never really thought of. There was social pressure and pressure, so that situation came about (I think.)] About



120 cases of ritual culture that did not reflect the changes of the times were received at the Seoul Gender Equality Activity Support Center.



At a funeral, the funeral service company was looking for a son as a permanent resident of a house with only four daughters, and they said they had only daughters, so they found a son-in-law and everyone said they were unmarried. There is also a story in which he confessed that he felt like losing.



It is pointed out that more efforts are needed to create a society where the scenery of the bride and groom entering the ceremonial hall at the same time after receiving guests together and the funeral culture in which women are resident as mourners can feel natural.



(Video editing: Soyoung Lee, VJ: Hyungjin Kim)