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The Skeptic

Disdaining Campus Politics, Jungmin Lee Focuses His Energies Elsewhere

Jungmin Lee '01 does not consider himself politically apathetic.

After trying on for size several of Harvard's more visibly political student organizations, Lee, a joint concentrator in government and East Asian studies, belongs today to only one such club.

And that organization, the Weatherhead Center for International Affairs Student Council, is not one that would top most students' lists of campus political clubs.

Though some might label him politically apathetic because of his relative lack of involvement, Lee says that underneath this apparent apathy lies a strong desire for political activism and impact.

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"I do care about social, political issues," Lee says. "I follow the presidential campaigns and I know that I'm a left-of-center moderate."

But political activism for him, he says, means more than party politics. To him it means contact with real people that achieves real, quantifiable results.

"I see the IOP or [Undergraduate Council] UC as not dealing with these issues which interest me, such as race relations, and what is the fair socio-economic distribution in society in the real world," Lee wrote in an e-mail message.

Lee recalls one of the more meaningful political experiences of his life. During his high school days in New York City, Lee volunteered for the Asian-American Legal Defense and Education Fund, an organization that helps poor residents of the city register to vote.

"When we went to get these people to register to vote, we could actually see the racial tensions playing themselves out," he says.

"The African-Americans and Hispanics would look distrustful when these nicely dressed Asian-Americans would come in and tell them to vote. Then, we would talk to them and make them feel comfortable," he adds. "It was a good feeling."

Then Lee came to Harvard.

He began with great enthusiasm for Harvard's more visibly political organizations, but says he soon found that "essentially, students were just doing administrative stuff. All these organizations were not getting to the root of political issues or the root of international relations enough for my taste."

Lee found himself dissipating his energies in activities that, to him, seemed futile.

One of these was Harvard National Model United Nations (HNMUN), a simulation of a United Nations conference, in which Harvard students serve as staff, running committees in which students from other colleges serve as UN delegates and debate controversial political topics.

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