shrinemaidens:EAST ASIAN MYTHOLOGY MEME:[5/7] KOREAN GODS AND GODDESSES | GAMEUNJANG-AGIGameunjang-a
shrinemaidens:EAST ASIAN MYTHOLOGY MEME:[5/7] KOREAN GODS AND GODDESSES | GAMEUNJANG-AGIGameunjang-agi (가믄장 아기) is the Korean goddess of fate and luck.The legend tells of a beggar couple who birthed their first child. The farmers in the area gather gifts in a silver bowl for mother and child. Therefore, the first daughter is named the silver child. After the birth of the second daughter, the farmers bring their gifts in a brass shell and the girl is named the brass child. After the birth of the third daughter, the people bring their gifts only in a wooden bowl, so the last daughter is named the timber child. This is Gameunjang-agi. With her birth, luck and wealth come to the house of the beggar. The parents become rich, forget that they were once beggars and ask their daughters to whom they owe their good life. The first two daughters claim that they owe their happiness to heaven, earth, and their parents. However, the youngest daughter replies against their expectation, that she owed her happiness to heaven and earth, father and mother, and her own power. The father gets so angry that he throws his youngest daughter out of the house. In retaliation, Gameunjang-agi transform her sisters into a centipede and a mushroom while the two parents are afflicted with blindness. Gameunjang-agi wanders around the country, finding shelter in the small house of a family with three sons. The first two sons come home with roots, cooking them and giving themselves the better parts. However, the third son saves the worst part of the root for himself, giving Gameunjang-agi a better part instead. Eventually, she and the third son fall in love. One day, they find roots of gold in the forest. Becoming wealthy, they marry and live in happiness. But Gameunjang-agi begins to long for her parents, so she organizes a party for all the beggars and the blind in the country. From everywhere they come, but her parents she cannot discover. As the festival approaches to its end, a blind beggar couple runs about the place: the parents of Gameunjang-agi. She gives them food from the feast and makes herself known as their daughter. Her parents, in a shock, begin to regain their eyesight. -- source link