31 Jul

Democracy FTW II

Posted by S.K.

This is funny, Kim Jong-Il “votes”

On the 29th, the Chosun (North Korea) Central News Agency reported that for the Local People’s Assembly representative elections that is held every four years, Kim Jong Il voted at the Hamju’s polling booth located at the Choosang Collective Farm.

The Chosun Central News Agency reported that Kim Jong Il was accompanied by the Central Committee’s Secretary Kim Ki Nam and Director Park Nam Ki and visited the polling site in the 85th Voting District’s 36th Division. After receiving voting ballots from the district chairman, Kim Jong Il voted for the district and county representative candidates separately.

Ordinary North Korean citizens vote at the district in which their resident registration is filed but Kim Jong Il presented an exception by voting for the regional candidates at the actual site of Hamju in South Hamkyung.

30 Jul

North Korean Sociology

Posted by S.K.

Well, looks like taking Sociology has finally paid off

To defectors who come from living in North Korea, a closed country, small things of a democracy state can appear significant to them.

There are things about South Korea which are incomprehensible to the eyes of defectors.

First, from the moment defectors step foot in a Korean airport, there is the image of the airport staff sincerely bowing their heads. North Korea is a stratified country. Kim Jong Il is the first of his country, where people’s ranks are decided by their level of privilege and power, which means that the general populace is inevitably the last. Thus, even the elderly have to bow their heads in front of a young party staff.

Greetings have only been thought of as signs of obedience and submission in the North, but in South Korea, the fact that it is just a sign of familiarity, gentleness and goodness makes the defectors puzzled. Even then, they cannot help but to shed tears and don awkward expressions as they receive bows from the airport employees. In the first moment of their lives where they are treated like human beings, smiles stemming from happiness and gratitude continuously appear on their faces.

This is ironic since in service industries like the airport things like bowing and smiling are part of the regulations dictated by the company. This is especially the case for flight attendants, whom one can presume those are some of the first South Koreans a defector would encounter. In other words, flight attendants in some airline companies smile and bow because it is required.

But still, the reason it is required is because that is what passengers expect. Coming from a place where even your interactions are dictated based on one’s political rank, I would think it is an astonishing sight.

27 Jul

Busy Week

Posted by S.K.

It’s been a busy week for me. Any North Korean related news dried up as the media focused their attention to the plight of 18 South Korean missionaries kidnapped in Afghanistan. Comments in the blogosphere range from “time for the ROK Forces to hunt them down” to “what the hell were they thinking?” I do not know what is the best course of action but I can address the second, why they were there.

I think it is safe to say that this is similar to Korean missionaries in China or even North Koreans returning to NK to become missionaries. Before one can judge why they went to one of the most hostile places in the world, in a free society (which the US is trying to build in Afghanistan), there are many ways to address an opposing ideology. Kidnapping and executing hostages is not one of them.

In this war of ideologies, it is important to remember that we must raise others to our standards, not lower ourselves to theirs. Should I blame a group of missionaries, who probably should have known better then to enter a war zone, or the intolerant and murderous Taliban?

The same case can be made about South Koreans in China helping refugees escape. If a group of North Koreans trying to escape get caught, am I going to blame the South Koreans for putting them in danger?

I think you know my answer to both questions.

flickr/northkorea

Syndicate

Powered by FeedBlitz