The Crows of Korea
Mornings in Korea often begin with the sound of crows. Not a single call, but a chorus—harsh, echoing cries that bounce between apartment towers and telephone wires before the city has fully woken. They gather on rooftops and power lines, black silhouettes against a pale sky, watching the streets below with the patience of creatures that have lived alongside people for a very long time. In winter they seem everywhere. When the trees stand bare and the hills are the color of dust and cold earth, the crows appear in small black assemblies—like punctuation marks scattered across the landscape. They move through the city with quiet authority: hopping along sidewalks, lifting suddenly into the air, settling again on a railing or a streetlight. In Korean folklore, crows were never just birds. Long ago there was the three-legged crow, the samjok-o , said to live in the sun itself—a symbol of power, watchfulness, and the mysterious forces that move through the world unseen. Even no...









