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Super Bowl MVP Hines Ward was nervous for the first time in his life as he prepared for a trip to the land of his birth. He also looked forward to learning more about his heritage.

Ward and his mother became instant celebrities in South Korea after his MVP performance in the Super Bowl.

\"I\'m proud to be a Korean, that\'s something when I was little as a kid, I was ashamed of,\" Ward told a packed news conference room at the Seoul hotel where he was staying in a suite normally reserved for world leaders.

\"I had to overcome a lot, being teased a lot by American kids about my being 50 percent Korean, being 50 percent African-American.\"

Ward was virtually unknown here before the Super Bowl because American football isn\'t widely followed in Korea. Since the Pittsburgh Steelers won and Ward was named MVP, he has become a media phenomenon in South Korea and drawn attention to the discrimination faced in this country by children of mixed parentage.

\"The Korean community has supported my mother and I for the first time in my life,\" Ward said at the news conference, carried live by several TV channels.

Ward had lunch later Tuesday with President Roh Moo-hyun, presenting him with an autographed ball, cap and jersey. Roh gamely tossed the ball to Ward before the meal at the presidential Blue House.

\"You came back a hero,\" Roh said. \"Children growing up in South Korea can have big dreams by watching Hines Ward.\"

During his 10-day trip, he will be granted honorary citizenship by the city of Seoul and be greeted at a reception hosted by the U.S. Embassy.

He will also meet with children of mixed backgrounds. Ward was born in Seoul to a Korean mother, and his father was an African-American soldier.

The family returned to the United States while Ward was a baby and his parents soon divorced. His mother, Kim Young-hee, was initially ruled unfit to keep her son, but he ran away to live with her in second grade. She worked three jobs to support him, a story that has drawn sympathy from hard-working Koreans.

With Ward in mind, many South Koreans have said it is time to tackle the discrimination that mixed-race children face.

Due to a strict family registry system, a traditionally closed society and a history of leaders speaking of the pride of pure Korean blood, mixed race children often say they find themselves ostracized in South Korean society.

Opposition lawmaker Kim Choong-whan invoked Ward\'s name when proposing legislation recently to help mixed-race children.

The number of such children is growing as more farmers and fisherman find brides from other parts of Asia -- mostly China and Vietnam -- as local women shun lives in rural areas.

During his stay, Ward will visit the Pearl S. Buck International group, which helps mixed-race children.

\"Hines Ward\'s visit will help shine a ray of hope for mixed-race children,\" said Lee Ji-young of the group.

This is his first trip as an adult to South Korea.

\"I\'m very intrigued with the Korean heritage. It\'s something that I missed out for 30 years of my life,\" Ward said.

He said his mother taught him that race wasn\'t important, and called for understanding among people of all backgrounds.

\"You can learn a lot from someone else\'s culture,\" Ward said. \"If two people love each other, then love has no color.\"

Ward and his mother were greeted by a scrum of more than 100 reporters and photographers on arrival at Inchon airport, near Seoul. National broadcaster YTN carried the arrival live and called the event \"the return of the hero\".

Hundreds of riot police stood shoulder to shoulder to clear a path for the two.

One automaker is loaning his entourage three limousines. A Seoul hotel is providing one of its most expensive suites and a fashion house has given new clothes.

\"He [Ward] showed perseverance, resilience and modesty, the core characteristics of the Korean people, and gave pride to all Koreans at home and abroad,\" the Seoul city government said in a statement announcing it will grant Ward honorary citizenship.


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Hines Ward Father Headlines

Sports Recap - TV Sports Daily


Sports Recap
TV Sports Daily, FL - Nov 18, 2008
If the Cincinnati Bengals are seeking retribution for his hit that broke linebacker Keith Rivers' jaw last month, Hines Ward said they know where to find ...

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Ward provides a much-needed helping hand - Steelers.com


Steelers.com

Ward provides a much-needed helping hand
Steelers.com - Nov 14, 2008
Ward, who was born in Korea to a Korean mom and African American father, hosted the bi-racial kids through the Hines Ward Helping Hands Korea Foundation and ...

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The More Refined Side Of Steeler Hines Ward - KDKA


The More Refined Side Of Steeler Hines Ward
KDKA, PA - Oct 30, 2008
And Hines wants to be there for his son in every way. "[A]ll the things I didn't receive from my father help me to become a better father to my son. ...

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Giving hope to bi-racial children of South Korea - Pittsburgh Post Gazette


Giving hope to bi-racial children of South Korea
Pittsburgh Post Gazette, PA - Nov 7, 2008
By Dan Majors, Pittsburgh Post-Gazette When he started his Helping Hands Korea Foundation three years ago, Steelers receiver Hines Ward pointed to his own ...

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