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Olympian, Korean dad reunite after 25 years

U.S. skier Dawson and Turin bronze medalist got lost in market in 1982

Toby Dawson, Kim Jae-suAP
U.S. Olympic bronze medalist Toby Dawson, right, embraces his father Kim Jae-su during a news conference in Seoul on Wednesday.

SEOUL, South Korea - U.S. Olympic skier Toby Dawson embraced his tearful father Wednesday as they reunited for the first time since the athlete was lost in a South Korean market more than two decades ago, leading to his eventual adoption in the United States.

“Don’t worry,” Dawson, 28, told Kim Jae-su as the two met in front of dozens of journalists at a Seoul hotel, the culmination of a yearslong journey made possible after a bronze freestyle skiing medal win at the Turin Olympics last year earned Dawson wide attention in the country of his birth.

Following the Olympics, dozens of would-be parents came forward to claim Dawson was their child, including Kim. But after years of dashed hopes, Dawson put off an earlier planned trip to Korea and waited for confirmation from genetic tests before traveling here this week.

Dawson was 3 years old when he was lost in a market by his mother in the southern port city of Busan, Kim said. A truck driver at the time, Kim said it was too late when he got home to start searching for his missing child, whose original Korean name was Bong-seok. Over the next few days, he said he scoured local orphanages but was unable to find his son.

“I went to many orphanage houses only to hear that they didn’t have anyone like him. They wouldn’t let me come inside and look for him,” the 53-year-old Kim said, adding he would search orphanages whenever he had time but eventually gave up.

“I’m not here to beat him up for what happened,” Dawson said, adding that he had a fortunate life growing up with his adoptive parents, who were ski instructors in Vail, Colo.

At the start of a news conference, Dawson gave his biological father a Norwegian skiing sweater that he said signified his upbringing in the sport, which Kim immediately put on.

Dawson said he plans to use a new foundation he is starting in his name to help work to avoid cases like his in the future.

“Being caught in limbo between two different countries and not looking like your family is going to be tough,” he said. “We need to try to keep our children and work a little bit harder to keep these circumstances from happening.”

Dawson noted how he shared his healthy sideburns with his father, who during the news conference reached over several times to touch Dawson’s face while they also held hands.

“I am glad to meet my son and see that he has grown up so wonderfully,” Kim said. “I am thankful that he has come to look for me even after such a long time.”

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When they first hugged, Dawson said he told Kim a Korean phrase he had learned for the meeting, “I’ve been waiting a long time, father,” and also urged him to be strong because the day was a happy event.

“My life until now has been confused,” Dawson said. “I looked at my parents and I didn’t look like them. Then I also felt if I went to Korea I didn’t belong there.

“I felt like I was still lost, stuck between two different worlds,” he said.

Dawson said he hoped to eventually stage a reunion with all his parents. He also mentioned again his desire to become a professional golfer within five years, after retiring in September from professional skiing.

Kim declined to talk publicly about Dawson’s biological mother.

Also at the reunion was Dawson’s biological younger brother, 24-year-old Kim Hyun-cheol, who was wearing an earring in his left ear similar to those Dawson has in both ears. All three men wrapped their arms around each other before heading to a family lunch.

© 2010 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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