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  "createdAt": "2023-12-15T00:07:02.658Z",
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          "alt": "Screenshot of article titled \"Korean Rage\"\nIt said han is a potent form of Korean rage — a type of anger so severe and all-consuming that some believe you can die from it.\n\nWhen I dug a little deeper, I was surprised to discover that han is not just a word, but an inherent part of being Korean. Some say it runs in our blood and is embedded in our DNA.\n\n[Han] is often described as an internalized feeling of deep sorrow, resentment, grief, regret and anger.\nIn fact, it's so Korean that there's no equivalent for it in the English language.\n\nAlthough han is considered indefinable, it is often described as an internalized feeling of deep sorrow, resentment, grief, regret and anger. Scholars say it's a uniquely Korean characteristic borne out of the country's long history of invasion, oppression and suffering.",
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        {
          "alt": "Screenshot of an instagram post featuring the arabic word \"qaher\"\nThe caption reads:\nThere is no English equivalent to the Arabic word qaher قهر. The dictionary says “anger” but it’s not. It is when you take anger, place it on a low fire, add injustice, oppression, racism, dehumanization to it, and leave it to cook slowly for a century. And then you try to say it but no one hears you. So it sits in your heart. And settles in your cells. And it becomes your genetic imprint. And then moves through generations. And one day, you find yourself unable to breathe. It washes over you and demands to break out of you. You weep. And the cycle repeats.",
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  "text": "There are words for this in Korean and Arabic\nDescribing an internalized resentment and all-consuming rage stemming from oppression which is so powerful that some believe you can die from it.\n\nThe Korean one is \"han\"; the Arabic one is \"qaher\"."
}