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EVENTS

Discover Doljabi: Celebrating the Korean First Birthday Tradition with Authors Ginger Park and Frances Park

  • Post DateOct 20, 2025
  • Hits137 Hit

Discover Doljabi: Celebrating the Korean First Birthday Tradition with Authors Ginger Park and Frances Park

 

Join Ginger Park and Frances Park, authors of the children’s book My Sister’s Doljabi, for a special K-Culture Talk exploring and celebrating Korea’s first birthday tradition. Discover the cultural significance of the one-year birthday milestone, dol (), and the meaning of objects babies choose during doljabi (돌잡이), through personal stories from the authors.

 

The Park sisters will also introduce their enchanting new book, My Sister’s Doljabi, and explain how Korean culture inspired their storytelling. Participants will also have a chance to enjoy hands-on activities, including a doljabi experience, tasting traditional Korean rice cakes (tteok) served at a first birthday, and trying on traditional Korean hanbok attire.

 

Families attending with children will also receive a complimentary copy of My Sister’s Doljabi (while supplies last). The program will conclude with a book signing and the opportunity for guests to meet the authors. 


Discover Doljabi: Celebrating the Korean First Birthday Tradition with Authors Ginger Park and Frances Park

Date & Time: Saturday, Nov. 1, 2025 | 1:00 – 3:00 PM
Location: Korean Cultural Center Washington, D.C. (2370 Massachusetts Ave NW, Washington, DC 20008)


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About the Authors

 

Ginger Park is a Korean American author of many children's books. She has received multiple awards for her work, including the International Reading Association’s Children’s Book Award, the IRA-CBC Teachers’ Choice Award, the Notable Books for a Global Society Award, the Paterson Prize Book Award for Young Readers, and the Bank Street Book Award, among others. She lives in the suburbs of Washington, D.C.

 

Frances Park is a Korean American author of books for children and adults. She has received multiple awards for her work, including the International Reading Association’s Children’s Book Award, the IRA-CBC Teachers’ Choice Award, the Notable Books for a Global Society Award, the Paterson Prize Book Award for Young Readers, and the Bank Street Book Award, among others. She lives in the suburbs of Washington, D.C.


For more, visit the authors' website at www.parksisters.com.

 

Ginger Park and Frances Park




Excerpt from My Sister’s Doljabi by Ginger Park and Frances Park

 

The history of dol—the first-birthday celebration in Korea—goes back centuries. Like the great-grandmother in Binna’s Birthday, our mother, who was born in 1930, lost four of her nine brothers and sisters—all before their first birthdays. Our mother was the only sibling who would go on to celebrate her palsun (80th birthday), and many more birthdays.

 

Nowadays, with infant mortality very low, the objects in doljabi sets often represent careers, such as a gavel for judge, stethoscope for doctor, cellphone for engineer, and golf club or baseball bat for athlete. Still, dol remains the most important birthday for Koreans all around the world.



My Sister’s Doljabi