Tag: South Korea

The Vegetarian

The Vegetarian

By Han Kang Ah, what a surprise. I thought this would be a lighthearted and fun book about a Korean woman who decided to turn vegetarian in a culture where meat is consumed as much as air is breathed.  As it turned out, not only 

South Korea – the DMZ and the Infiltration Tunnels

South Korea – the DMZ and the Infiltration Tunnels

We arrived at the infiltration tunnels as our last stop on the tour.  There was to be no cameras on this part of thetour. We watched a film about the specific history of the infiltration tunnels.  All was good and well, and I enjoyed the 

South Korea – the DMZ, Panmunjom and the Conference Room

South Korea – the DMZ, Panmunjom and the Conference Room

Military subsistence at the DMZ was supported by the Panmunjom Village.  Villagers did not pay any taxes to the Korean government as it did not come under its administration.  They grew food in their fields, and one important crop was ginseng.  The area being off-bounds to most human beings made it ideal for this cash crop to grow in isolation.  It took six years to grow ginseng and only under shades.  Thus when we passed by the fields we could see the black materials covering the soil.  We were not allowed to take pictures of the village.

There was, of course, a relationship between the troops and the villagers.  They went in to teach village children English.  The women could move about as they wished, but the men could not due to the military presence.  There was not one woman there besides my fellow tourists.

We passed by a golf course and the military guide said that it was the third most dangerous golf course in the world.  Someone asked, “what would be the first and second most dangerous?”  “First in Afghanistan,” he said, “second in Iraq.”

We then visited the shacks where the actual border was, the heart of tensions.  We entered through the hall, then to the conference room, the site where the peace negotiations once took place.  There were polymers in the middle of the conference table denoting the actual border of the two Koreas.  We saw two South Korean soldiers guarding the conference room.  They wore their military helmets with Koreans words on them.  One stood where the UN Flag was, right at the border.  He would beat anyone who attempted to desecrate the UN Flag.

      

This was as close as it gets for a foreigner to “go to North Korea” without a VISA.  As we could walk freely inside the conference room, we made symbolic entry into the North.  The guide was just taking note of how the North Korean soldiers would peep into the conference room when the tourists visit, and there they were, looking on at us from the outside, intending to intimidate us.  It did send chills down my spine.

 “You are not to communicate with them, directly or indirectly,” Officer Pearson said.  “Can we take pictures of them through the window?”  “No, you cannot,” he said, “in fact, do not even look back at them.

We left the conference room and went back far behind from the border.  At the steps of the building we looked far onto the military administration building in the North.  Three large Korean words were on display there, but I forgot what they meant.  A soldier stood on the steps very far away, and the view was of such communist menace, conveyed on a typical communist-styled building, that spoke loud intimidation past the distance.

I looked on, almost with tears in my eyes.  I wondered how it was that a country once one could be split along the rift of ideology.  Centuries of common heritage did not hold it together.  Could it have been Karl Marx’s mistake, or the motives of the powers of the world, that drove the wheel of history in the century past, causing one people in a relatively small nation in Asia to go their separate ways, each choosing ideas that were incompatible but neither represented the best of humanity?

Soldiers from the North and the South guarded the border at arm’s length to each other, but really living two worlds apart.  Would they not wonder what life was like on the other side?  Would it be better living in a world where truth was not allowed, or living in a world where truth can only come by with a lifetime’s effort to unmask the web of materialism that numbs the best of one’s soul?

We could freely take photographs from afar at the South Korean steps.  By now, quite a number of the North Korean soldiers have come out.  They pretended to take photos of each other at first, but a while later they stopped pretending and just took images of us.  I was sure my loud yellow down jacket would go down their records as the best propaganda material for the North Korean regime.  Two more South Korean soldiers came out and guarded between us and the North Korean soldiers.

The North Korean soldiers wore the classic communist military attire, reminding me of the older Soviet uniforms and Chinese PLA uniforms in a bygone era.  Maybe even in their dress code the North Koreans guarded the orthodoxy of communism,[1] or perhaps they did not have the means to upgrade to the helmets that the South Korean soldiers were wearing.  The true distance between the two Koreas was evident in plain sight.

We left the building and saw the South Korean Peace Museum, which ironically housed the two axes that killed the two UN commanders in the Axe Incident.  The building was already ahead of its time, its significance to be celebrated when one day the two Koreas are reunited.  It will act as a vivid reminder to future generations that peace was really a long path of past rife eventually reconciled, and it never comes by easily.

We visited the Dora lookout, but could not take photographs of the building or beyond the yellow line.  “There is internet there,” the guide said.  I thought what he really meant was satellite surveillance.  There, once again, North Korea’s landscape exhibited itself in a haze, standing still in an unreachable distance.

[1] Paul French has a very good section on North Korea’s spin on communism.  See Paul French, North Korea, State of Paranoia, chapter 2.

 

 

This is part of a series on the Demilitarized Zone at the 38th Parallel separating North and South Koreas.  Please visit the other entries in this series below:

South Korea – The DMZ and the Bollinger Hall.

South Korea – The DMZ and the Bridge of No return.

South Korea – The DMZ and the Infiltration Tunnels.

South Korea – the DMZ and the Bollinger Hall

South Korea – the DMZ and the Bollinger Hall

“There ain’t no D in the DMZ.”[1] It was a privilege for those from the West to be able to see the DMZ and Panmunjom via a U.S. tour organized by the USO.  If I kept my Hong Kong identity, I could not have gone.  

South Korea – The Golden Pond

South Korea – The Golden Pond

I met a young man on the plane to Korea.  He told me that he has already completed his mandatory service in the military.  “Mind the border,” he said, “it might be dangerous.” Korea was the first solo trip I made abroad.  Although this young 

South Korea – Please Look After Mother

South Korea – Please Look After Mother

By Kyung-sook Shin

The last time that I was aware of the idea of a “Korean farmer” was in 2005, when hordes of them came to Hong Kong to protest against the WTO meeting held here.  The Korean farmers organized more than a thousand members to rally behind their cause against globalization.  That there are still peasants living in the industrial powerhouse that is of South Korea today is beyond my ordinary stretch of imagination.  Yet the “Korean farmer” comes alive in this book by South Korean author Kyung-sook Shin, who tells the gripping tale of a countryside mother lost in the metropolis of Seoul and the fruitless effort to search for her by her family.

The story of this heartbreaking disappearance is told through the eyes of four people in the family, with regret being the thread that weaves together the joys and pains of fifty years of family life in the countryside.  Park So-nyo, the mother of the family, can grow anything that she touches.  Amidst flavorful descriptions of the rustic food that she makes, the story unfolds and lays bare the tensions felt between generations, spouses, in-laws, and siblings.  As the protagonists in each chapter reminisce their time with mom, readers are led into a world of delicate balance between familial obligations, personal sacrifices, spousal loyalties and the hopes and dreams that parents had for their children, all taking place in a difficult period of post-war reconstruction followed by a take-off of significant economic development and urbanization.

Yet despite its setting in a faraway place and time, in a peasantry and poverty that is little known even to most of the South Koreans today, the human emotions, aspirations and frailties revealed are familiar to all of us.  As the readers are told in the first chapter that mom buys her eldest daughter the first book she owns in her life after selling a litter of puppies, the daughter’s choice of Human, All Too Human seems to foretell the lament with which the readers will greet the ending.  This book has the power to elicit my deepest sympathies and moved me to abundant tears.

 

 

This book has been recommended by the Guardian’s World Literature Tour.