A South Korean actorâs revelation that he fathered a child with a woman to whom he is not married has triggered a national debate over celebrity conduct and non-traditional family structures.
Jung Woo-sung, a 51-year-old A-lister in South Koreaâs film industry, confirmed via his agency on Sunday that he is the father of 35-year-old model Moon Ga-biâs newborn son.
While Jung pledged to âfulfil his responsibilitiesâ as the father, his silence on whether he plans to marry Moon drew fierce backlash in the conservative country where births outside marriage are seen as taboo.
But some progressive voices have defended Jung, noting a shift in South Koreaâs attitudes towards diverse family structures.
Moon announced her childâs birth via Instagram on Friday, without mentioning the father, describing the pregnancy as âunexpectedâ and saying she had been âcompletely unprepared for the sudden newsâ.
Two days later, Jungâs agency Artist Company released a statement confirming that âthe baby Moon revealed on her social media is Jung Woo-sungâs sonâ.
The statement further noted that Jung and Moon were âdiscussing the best way to raise the childâ.
It triggered outrage that quickly spread across the country, triggering a slate of opinion pieces in tabloids, spurring online debate and eliciting comments from national politicians.
Online, the response was largely critical towards Jung, whose prolific film career has made him a household name in South Korea.
Many commentators seemed to believe the actor had tarnished an otherwise upstanding and squeaky clean image, with some expressing disappointment that the former United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees ambassador âcanât accept his own childâ.
âJung Woo-sung is pretending to be a good guy saying he will fulfil all his dutyâĻ A child does not grow on money alone,â wrote one commenter on Naver News, South Koreaâs largest news aggregate website.
âItâs not a problem not marrying after having a child. Itâs that he pretended to be such an ethical person so far,â wrote another.
Speaking to conservative news outlet JoongAng, an unnamed lawmaker from the right-wing People Power Party described Jungâs decision to have a child outside marriage as âsomething unthinkable in this country of social mores”.
âNo matter how much the times are changing, Koreaâs tradition and public sentiment must be kept (righteous),â the lawmaker said.
A recent social survey by South Koreaâs statistics agency found that 37% of people believed it was acceptable to have a child outside marriage – an almost 15% increase since 2012.
Of those who said marriage was necessary, more than 72% were above the age of 60 – with younger respondents increasingly less likely to take that view.
Other lawmakers have defended Jung, with Lee So-young, a member of the Democratic Party of Korea, saying that âdeciding to live with someone is a deeply personal and existential choiceâ.
âTo assume that simply having a child obligates people to marry and take on the duties of cohabitation and mutual support feels suffocating,â Lee wrote on Facebook on Tuesday.
âOf course, thereâs nothing wrong with being ânormalââĻ [But] even if society appears to have a standard of ânormalâ, every life is unique in its own way.
âPerhaps a better society is one that accepts and respects such differences without judgment,â she added. âThatâs what I believe.â
Kyunghyang, a progressive major newspaper, put out an editorial piece noting that while some voices have pushed for traditional values, “also rising is the voice that our society must think of the diverse shapes families take”.
“It makes one hope that celebrities having babies outside of marriage, like Jung and Moon, will help change the public view which today is against [such] births.”
South Korea has a notoriously high-pressure entertainment industry, with celebrities often held to inordinately high social standards and placed under extreme scrutiny.
(BBC News)