8. Korean Muslim History
● Muslim merchants in Korea during the Goryeo period
● Muslims in the Joseon Dynasty in science and technology
● Turkish troops during the 1950-1953 Korean War.
● Conversion of three Koreans
● Chung Jin Madrasah in 1956
● Korea Muslim Federation in 1965
● Seoul Central Masjid opened on May 21st, 1976
8
9. Korean Muslim History
● Imam A. Rahman lee ju-hwa-1984
● Three-storey building in December 1991
● 40 Korean Muslims who were invited to the 2000 Hajj pilgrimage
● Choongju province and created a cemetery in 2006
● Christian population, which had made up 2% of the overall population before 1945
● A butcher was established to sell halal meat in Seoul in 1983
● Around 250,000 and a large portion of foreign Muslims reside in Itaewon/Busan, from countries including Arab,
Malaysia, Indonesia, Pakistan, Uzbekistan, Turkey, Bangladesh, India, Africa, and others.
● 250,000, a mere 0.5 percent of the country's population of 52 million. Among them, 150,000 are workers and students
● 70% to 80% of that figure is immigrants and it is estimated that there are roughly 35,000 native Korean Muslims
9
10. Living as a Muslim student in Korea
● Dwaeji gogi isseoyo?
● Where to buy halal products?
● if you eat strictly halal food, you cannot eat most of the menu options in school cafeterias because they
are not halal-certified except sea foods and a few other items.
● https://kmfhalal.org/en/certificate
10
Food!
Tips: I cannot eat here because they do not have
Muslim-friendly options
11. Living as a Muslim student in Korea
● Some products that may appear like nonmeat products may contain other
ingredients. Example: Marshmallows (pork gelatin) or biscuits (containing non-
halal meat)
● Most Ramyun (contains pork or non-halal meat ingredients).
● Avoid biscuits, Ramyun, and snacks that contain non-halal ingredients.
● Cook at home: fish, halal meat (chicken, beef, mutton), egg, vegetables, tofu
etc.
● There are some online shops and apps that deliver halal products and food.
11
Food!
12. Living as a Muslim student in Korea
12
Food!
South Asian Muslim Friendly Restaurants
o https://goo.gl/maps/SMXo7QWq7EccNi7v6
Korean Muslim Friendly Restaurants
o https://goo.gl/maps/AAmwxSeCCtB5eRxP7
Central Asian Muslim Friendly Restaurants
o https://goo.gl/maps/59264fZwhrb7ider7
Turkish Muslim Friendly Restaurants
o https://goo.gl/maps/4hAX7GHD8DkWigd67
13. Living as a Muslim student in Korea
13
Food!
Arab Muslim Friendly Restaurants
o https://goo.gl/maps/k6q7RDXGbhEDe8An8
Indo/Malay Muslim Friendly Restaurants
o https://goo.gl/maps/8BjB7Cme2ABsVgmMA
Misc. Muslim Friendly Restaurants
o https://goo.gl/maps/yahpZEoqZm2jwm6A9
Vegan Muslim Friendly Restaurants
o https://goo.gl/maps/nhNAC2i47scZW7oB9
14. Living as a Muslim student in Korea
● Masjid & Praying rooms
● Masjids: (Seoul Central Mosque, Bupyeong Masjid, Ansan Masjid and Islamic Centre,
Daejeon Islamic Centre and Masjid, Daegu Masjid, Busan Masjid, Gwangju, Masjdi, Jeonju
Masjid, Anyang Masjid, Paju Masjid…..
● Mussala or smaller Masjid organized by Muslim communities (KMI, KMC, Pakistan,
Kirgizstan,
● Prayer rooms in some universities (Hanyang University)
● Spaces organized by KTO/cities or shopping centers: COEX Mall, Lotte World etc.
14
15. Korean Muslim History
15 officially registered mosques across the country, along with 150 to 250 musalla, or houses
of worship that are smaller in size than a mosque
15
17. Living as a Muslim student in Korea
● Student visa (D-2)
● General Trainee (D-4)
● Arrival in Korea (To & From the Airport)
● Korean Language Education
● University Language Institutes
17
Get Ready for Studying in Korea
Free online Korean programs
Korea Immigration and Integration Program (KIIP), socinet.go.kr/kiiptest.org
18. Living as a Muslim student in Korea
● Confirmation of Passport and Visa Expiry Date
● Registration of Foreign Residents
● Losing the ARC
18
Immigration and Stay for Foreigners
19. Living as a Muslim student in Korea
● Hikorea
19
Immigration and Stay for Foreigners
20. Living as a Muslim student in Korea
20
Immigration and Stay for Foreigners
The local government and some private organizations for foreigners offer Korean language classes.
21. Living as a Muslim student in Korea
21
Get Ready for Studying in Korea
Scholarship
22. Living as a Muslim student in Korea
22
Immigration Guide
23. Living as a Muslim student in Korea
23
Immigration Guide
• Reporting a change of Foreign Resident Registration
· Name, gender, birth date, or nationality
· Passport number, passport issuance date, period of validity
· Change of school (including school name changes)
- In principle, changing (transferring) schools to an improperly run school is prohibited
- After completing a masters or doctorate degree, it is prohibited to change schools in
order to study for an identical degree (master’s degree → master’s degree, doctorate
degree → doctorate degree).
These individuals should instead leave the country and apply for a new visa.
Period for reporting: any change must be reported within 15 days of the change
Occurring Where to report: the local office within your jurisdiction, online reporting
24. Living as a Muslim student in Korea
24
Immigration Guide
Change the status of the stay
For detailed information, please visit the Hi Korea(e-Government for Foreigners) website
(http://www.hikorea.go.kr) or call 1345 without area code.
25. Living as a Muslim student in Korea
25
Housing
• Dormitory
• Boarding House
• Goshiwon
• Renting a room
What is furnished: air-conditioner, desk, bed?
* Is the place furnished with a washing machine?
* What are the conditions of the lease?
* Are utilities included?
* How much is the monthly maintenance fee?
* Is Internet connection free?
* How should I dispose of the garbage?
Tip :Things to consider when renting a room
Korean Legal Aid Cooperation: 132
26. Living as a Muslim student in Korea
26
Waste Management
• Separate and package waste materials into different types of special plastic bags
(general waste, food waste, recyclable waste- cans and bottles, papers)
• Different bags for food and other waste can be bought from any convenience stores
(GS25, 7 eleven, Emart24)
• Big items, visit your community service, pay for service fees, issue/print a sticker, attach
it to the garbage item,
27. Living as a Muslim student in Korea
27
Waste Management
28. Living as a Muslim student in Korea
28
A. Taking the Bus
(1) City Bus
Tip: Things to consider when renting a room
• You can easily and conveniently check bus routes and schedules by downloading
transportation-related applications on your phone
* Seoul Transport Operation & Information Service: http://topis.seoul.go.kr
* Incheon Transit Corporation: https://www.ictr.or.kr
* Busan Information Management System: http://bus.busan.go.kr
* Daegu Metropolitan city BUS LINE GUIDE: http://businfo.daegu.go.kr
* Gwangju City Bus Infomation System: http://bus.gwangju.go.kr
* It's Daejeon ITS: http://traffic.daejeon.go.kr
* Sejong Metropolitan Autonomous City Traffic Information System:
https://bis.sejong.go.kr
* Jeju Bus Information System: http://bus.jeju.go.kr
Transportation
29. Living as a Muslim student in Korea
29
Transportation
A. Taking the Bus
(1) Intercity Bus
Bus terminals in capital cities
※ Ticket Reservation for the intercity bus (also available in mobile application) https://txbuse.t-money.co.kr
※ Bus tago service website for intercity buses (also available in mobile application) https://www.bustago.or.kr
30. Living as a Muslim student in Korea
30
Transportation
B. Subway
Seoul Metro
Example- Myeong-dong station is 424,
meaning stop number 24 on line 4
31. Living as a Muslim student in Korea
31
Transportation
C. Taxi
National taxi call service: 1333 without area code
The basic fare for these taxis is about 3,300~3,900 won. Keep in mind that there is a
20% fare hike from 12 am to 4 am.
MobeomTax
※ Reservations by phone (1644-2255) or email (reserve@intltaxi.co.kr)
32. Living as a Muslim student in Korea
32
Transportation
D. Train
• Six types of trains exist in Korea: KTX, Saemaeul, Mugunhwa, Nuriro, ITX and SRT
※ Reservations by apps-
33. Living as a Muslim student in Korea
33
Transportation
E. Flights
34. Living as a Muslim student in Korea
34
Transportation
F. Driver License
35. Living as a Muslim student in Korea
35
Insurance
A. National Health Insurance Program
http://www.nhis.or.kr
English call centre service is available for foreign students at 82-33-811-2000.
36. Living as a Muslim student in Korea
36
Insurance
B. International Student Insurance
C. The Medical System in Korea
37. Living as a Muslim student in Korea
37
Insurance
• Make appointments in advance by visiting or calling the hospital or online
• When needing medicine for the flu or headache, use university health centres on campus. University
Health centers have flu medicine, painkillers, digestive medicine, and first-aid medicine, and staff for
assistance. For university students, all the medicine is free of charge
Hospital and clinics
38. Living as a Muslim student in Korea
38
Banking
A. Opening a bank account
39. Living as a Muslim student in Korea
39
Banking
B. Making bank transfers
40. Living as a Muslim student in Korea
40
Banking
C. Foreign Exchange
41. Living as a Muslim student in Korea
41
Banking
List of banks in Korea
- Bank of Korea: http://www.bok.or.kr
- Citibank Korea: https://www.citibank.co.kr
- Industrial Bank of Korea(IBK): https://www.ibk.co.kr
- KB Kookmin Bank: https://www.kbstar.com
- KEB Hana Bank: https://www.kebhana.com
- Korea Development Bank(KDB): https://www.kdb.co.kr
- Korea Eximbank: https://www.koreaexim.go.kr
- National Federation of Fisheries Cooperatives: https://www.suhyup-bank.com
- NH Bank: https://banking.nonghyup.com
- Shinhan Bank: https://www.shinhan.com
- Standard Chartered Bank Korea: https://www.standardchartered.co.kr
- Woori Bank: https://www.wooribank.co
42. Living as a Muslim student in Korea
42
Communication & Internet Services
A. High-Speed Internet
B. Internet Cafe (PC bang)
43. Living as a Muslim student in Korea
43
Communication & Internet Services
C. Mobile phone
• KT Olleh, SK Broadband and LGU+, prepaid cell phone service
• passport or ARC
• Public and free Wi-Fi on campus, city buses, coffee
shops and restaurant
44. Living as a Muslim student in Korea
44
Leisure Activities
Sports
• Soccer
• Cricket
• Volleyball
Amusement Parks
• Lotteworld: https://adventure.lotteworld.com
• Everland: https://www.everland.com
• Seoul Land: https://www.seoulland.co.kr
• My Land: http://www.my-land.kr
• Eworld: http://www.eworld.kr
• Gyeongju World: https://www.gjw.co.kr
Halal Entertainment
45. Living as a Muslim student in Korea
45
Shopping
• Traditional Markets
• Street shopping
• Online shopping
Daiso, Emart, Yongsan Electronic mart, Techno mart, Dongmyo Flea Market
Online shopping (Gmarket, Coupang …)
46. Living as a Muslim student in Korea
46
Festivals in Korea
47. Living as a Muslim student in Korea
47
Job opportunities
A. Part-time Work for Foreign Students
• General regulations: In general, students are limited to part-time, hourly
jobs that are commonly done by students (such as low-skilled labor).
※ When a student plans to work a job approved as per the Immigration Control Act Enforcement
Ordinance (See chart 1-2 attached), specific guidelines are applied according to qualifications (For
example, scholarship students of the Teach and Learn in Korea program, English conversation
instructors, professional interpretation and translation)
※ Private tutoring is heavily restricted according to the location, tutoring recipient, and other
factors.
48. Living as a Muslim student in Korea
48
Job opportunities
A. Part-time Work for Foreign Students
49. Living as a Muslim student in Korea
49
Job opportunities
A. Part-time Work for Foreign Students
Those with student visas (D-2) or language trainee visas (D-4-1, D-4-7) who possess a
certain level of Korean ability and have received confirmation from the person in charge
of international students at their university
B. Job Seeker visa (D-10)
• Eligible individuals
• Ineligible individuals
50. Living as a Muslim student in Korea
50
Employment information
Job Fair for International Students
51. Living as a Muslim student in Korea
51
Tips on Safety
• Sharing your contact information
• Complying with the law
• Familiarizing yourself with emergency numbers
Exemption from Obligation to Notify: If you are a victim of a crime, report it to the police even
though you are undocumented. The police shall not report you to the immigration office.
52. Living as a Muslim student in Korea
52
Practical Korean phrases
53. Living as a Muslim student in Korea
53
Holidays in Korea
54. Living as a Muslim student in Korea
54
Types of Misdemeanors & Penalties
55. Living as a Muslim student in Korea
55
Crime Report& Emergency Calls For Other Civil Complaints
Reporting crime 112 Immigration Contact Center 1345
School Violence Reporting
Center
117
National Governmental Call
Center
110
Fire/ Emergency 119 Korea Travel Helpline 1330
Hacking/ Spam 118
Human Rights Violation
Complaints& Counseling
1331
Women’s emergency/
counseling
1366 Legal Advice& Counseling 132
Danuri (Gender Equality&
Family)
1577-1366
Child Protection Agencies 129
Youth Cyber Counseling 1388
Need Help? Remember these numbers!
56. Living as a Muslim student in Korea
56
Crime Prevention
57. Living as a Muslim student in Korea
57
Community Base Activities
58. Living as a Muslim student in Korea
● Graduation requirements (number of credits, prerequisite courses, language test, compressive exam, thesis, publis
hing article …)
● Make you a role model, Keep FOOTPRINT
● Time management
● Party
● Stress
● Workaholic
● Mentorship
● Strategic
58
Lab and Research
Perfection/Balance
59. Living as a Muslim student in Korea
● Korean Muslim Federation (http://www.koreaislam.org/)
● Seoul Central Mosque (http://www.koreaislam.org/en/mainpage/)
● Muslim Student Association-Korea Facebook Page (https://www.facebook.com/muslimstudentskorea/)
59
Useful Site/Links and Apps
60. Living as a Muslim student in Korea
● Restaurants
○ https://english.visitseoul.net/tours/Seoul-Recommended-Halal-Restaurants_/23599
○ https://www.havehalalwilltravel.com/halal-korean-restaurants-in-seoul
○ https://hrwkorea.or.kr/restaurants/rest_list.php
● Halal stores
○ https://www.havehalalwilltravel.com/9-halal-food-marts-in-korea-you-never-knew-about
○ https://www.yeshalal.co.kr/
60
Useful Site/Links and Apps
61. Living as a Muslim student in Korea
● Masjid and prayer rooms
● https://hrwkorea.or.kr/tips/mos.php
● (Halal food) delivery service
● https://www.shuttledelivery.co.kr/en/restaurant?tags=halal
● Must have Apps in Korea
61
Useful Site/Links and Apps
62. Living as a Muslim student in Korea
● Kakao Talk (also KakaoMetro, KakaoBus, KakaoTaxi)
● (Naver) Papago (a multilingual machine translation cloud service)
● Naver Map
● Naver Dictionary
● Waygo (offline translator)
● Zigbang, Dabang (for searching room and apartments)
● Gmarket (global), Coupang (online shopping)
● Karrot (for selling and buying items)
62
Useful Site/Links and Apps
63. Islam in ROK
• KMF
• MSAK
• KMC
• KMI
• Salam Nuri
• Busan Muslim Students Association (BMSA)
• Indonesian Muslim Students Association (IMUSKA)
• MSA-KAIST
• MSA-KHU
• Young Researchers Society (YouRS)
• Islamic Education and Research Academy (iERA)
• Hidayah Foundation Malaysia
• International Institute of Islamic Thought Malaysia (IIIT)
• Interactive Dakwah Training Malaysia (IDT)
63
64. Korean Muslim History
● Islamic holidays are not national holidays
● Islamic clothing, like Hijab (Koreans might give us a curious look as they walk by),
and Man.
● Isolation- to have friends who can make you feel at home
● The Korean constitution states that everybody has freedom of religion
● As they respect your religion, but you may feel left out or overwhelmed when
everybody else in your friend group drinks
● Conflict between Islam and Korean culture
● Islamophobia
64
65. Living as a Muslim student in Korea
● People’s concern about Islam due to the Western media’s propaganda
● Islam mat and dress used for praying
● never been discriminated against for being a Muslim
● Compassionate towards us, particularly during Ramadan and Eid
● At least one Muslim friend or a Muslim friend group
65
66. Living as a Muslim student in Korea
● Bibimpap, kimpap, bogeum pab, fish, porridge,
● Please remove ham and bacon햄, 베이컨 빼고 주세요.
● Please do not include alcohol in the food 음식에 술 넣지 마세요.
● Where is the prayer room? 기도실 어디 에요?
● Please remove all meat from the food. 고기 빼고 주세요.
● Is the meat halal? 할랄 고기 에요?
● Do you have an English menu? 영어 메뉴판 있나요?
● Where is the restroom? 화장실 어디 에요?
● I want to go to… . Which way should I go? 에 가고 싶어요. 어디로 가야 하나요?
66
Food!
67. Qualities of the believers
• Who are humble in their prayers
• who avoid whatever is vain and frivolous
• who observe Zakah
• who strictly guard their private parts
• who are true to their trusts and their covenants
• who guard their Prayers
67
Surah Al-Mu'minun 23:1-11
68. Day of Judgment
• Events that have already taken place
• Events that are happening at present
• Events that are yet to happen
68
https://www.islamicfinder.org/news/48-signs-of-qiyamah/
Quran, hadiths, and biography/ Seerah of Muhammad (PBUH)
69. Some Shortcomings of Muslims in Korea
69
https://www.islamicfinder.org/news/48-signs-of-qiyamah/
• Manage the lab time and pressure
• Lack of organized/Masjid community and sound activities for Muslims
• Excuse!
71. Jajakallah!
71
Anas bin Malik narrated that the Messenger of Allah(s.a.w) said:
"There shall come upon the people a time in which the one who is patient upon his
religion will be like the one holding onto a burning ember.
“Jami` at-Tirmidhi 2260