At First She Didn’t Succeed, but She
Tried and Tried Again (960 Times)
A PERSON could know South Korea for
a long time without knowing Wanju, an obscure county 112 miles south of Seoul.
And, at least until recently, a person could know a lot about Wanju without
ever hearing of Cha Sa-soon, a 69-year-old woman who lives alone in the
mountain-ringed village of Sinchon.
Now, however, Ms. Cha is an
unlikely national celebrity.
This diminutive woman, now known
nationwide as “Grandma Cha Sa-soon,” has achieved a record that causes people
here to first shake their heads with astonishment and then smile: She failed
her driver’s test hundreds of times but never gave up. Finally, she got her
license on her 960th try.
For three years starting in
April 2005, she took the test once a day five days a week. After that, her pace
slowed, to about twice a week. But she never quit. Hers is a fame based not
only on sheer doggedness, a quality held in high esteem by Koreans, but also on
the universal human sympathy for a monumental and in her case, cheerful loser.
“When she finally got her
license, we all went out in cheers and hugged her, giving her flowers,” said
Park Su-yeon, an instructor at Jeonbuk Driving School, which Ms. Cha once
attended. “It felt like a huge burden falling off our back. We didn’t have the
guts to tell her to quit because she kept showing up.”
Of course, Ms. Park and another
driving teacher noted, perhaps Ms. Cha should content herself with simply
getting the license and not endangering others on the road by actually driving.
But they were not too worried about the risk, they said, because it was the
written test, not the driving skill and road tests, that she failed so many
times.
WHEN word began spreading last
year of the woman who was still taking the test after failing it more than 700
times, reporters traced her to Sinchon, where the bus, the only means of public
transportation, comes by once every two hours on a street so narrow it has to
pull over to let other vehicles pass.
They fallowed her to the test
site in the city of Jeonju, an hour away. There, they also videotaped her in
the market, where she sells her home-grown vegetables at an open-air stall.
Once she finally got her
license, in May, Hyundai-Kia Automotive Group, South Korea’s leading carmaker,
started an online campaign asking people to post messages of congratulations.
Thousands poured in. In early August, Hyundai presented Ms. Cha with a $16,800
car.
Ms. Cha, whose name,
coincidentally enough, is Korean for “vehicle,” now also appears on a prime-time television commercial
for Hyundai.
It is a big change from her
non-celebrity life, spent simply in a one-room hut with a slate roof, where the
only sounds on a recent summer day were from a rain-swollen brook, occasional
military jets flying overhead and cicadas rioting in the nearby persimmon
trees. A lone old man dozed, occasionally swatting at flies, in a small shop next
to the bus stop.
Born to a peasant family with
seven children but no land, Ms. Cha spent her childhood working in the fields
and studying at an informal night school. It was not until she turned 15 that
she joined a formal school as a fourth grader. But her schooling ended there a
few years later.
“Father had no land, and middle
school was just a dream for me,” she said. Ms. Cha said she had always envied
people who could drive, but it was not until she was in her 60s that she got
around to trying for a license.
“Here, if you miss the bus, you
have to wait another two hours. Talk about frustration!” said Ms. Cha, who had
to transfer to a second bus to get to her driving test site and to yet another
to reach her market stall.
“But I was too busy raising my
four children,” she continued. “Eventually they all grew up and went away and
my husband died several years ago, and I had more time for myself. I wanted to
get a driver’s license so I could take my grandchildren to the zoo.”
Ms. Cha tackled the first
obstacle, which for years proved insurmountable: the 50-minute written test
consisting of 40 multiple-choice questions on road regulations and car
maintenance.
Early in the morning (she wakes
up 4 a.m.) and before going to bed, she put on her reading glasses and pored
over her well-worn test-preparation books. She first tried, unsuccessfully, an
audio test for illiterate people where questions were read to test-takers.
Later, she switched to the normal test.
“She could read and write words
phonetically but she could not understand most of the terminology, such as
‘regulations’ and ‘emergency light,’ ” said Ms. Park, the teacher.
Choi Young-chul, an official at
the regional driving license agency, said: “What she was essentially doing
while studying alone was memorizing as many questions — with their answers as
possible without always knowing what they were all about. It’s not easy to pass
the test that way.”
PRACTICE made perfect, but
slowly. She failed the written test 949 times, but her scores steadily crept
up. When she came to them early last year, teachers at Jeonbuk Driving School
pitched in, giving her extra lessons, painstakingly explaining the terminology.
“It drove you crazy to teach
her, but we could not get mad at her,” said Lee Chang-su, another teacher. “She
was always cheerful. She still had the little girl in her.”
It was only last November, on
her 950th try, that she achieved a passing grade of 60 out of 100. She then
passed two driving skill and road tests, but only after failing each four
times. For each of her 960 tests, she had to pay $5 in application fees.
“I didn’t mind,” said Ms. Cha.
“To me, commuting every day to take the test was like going to school. I always
missed school.”
Her son, Park Seong-ju, 36, who
lives in Jeonju and makes signboards and placards, said: “Mother has lived a
hard life, selling vegetables door to door and working other people’s farms.
Maybe that made her stubborn. If she puts her mind to something, no one can
argue her out of it.”
About a decade ago, before
embarking on her quest for a driver’s license, Ms. Cha spent three years
studying for a hairdresser’s license. For six months, she caught a 6 a.m. bus
every weekday, switched to a train and then to another bus to attend a
government-financed training program for hairdressers. But no beauty salon
would hire her. She was considered too old.
No matter, she said. “It was
like getting a school diploma.”
Her tenacity has struck a chord
with South Koreans, who are often exhorted to recall the hardship years after
the 1950-53 Korean War and celebrate perseverance as a national trait.
The country’s most popular
boxing champion was Hong Su-hwan, who was floored four times before knocking
out Hector Carrasquilla to win the World Boxing Association’s super bantamweight
championship in 1977. His feat gave rise to a popular phrase about resolve:
“Sajeonogi,” or “Knocked down four times, rising up five.”
Ms. Cha seems to have given new
meaning to this favorite Korean saying.
On her wall where she hung
black-and-white photographs of her and her late husband as a young couple and a
watch that had stopped ticking, she also had posted a handwritten and misspelled
sign that read, “Never give up!”
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