Forgetting Someone?
The Korean War Abductees Research Institute (KWARI) will hold a press conference next Thursday, July 26, 2007, at 2 p.m. in the Zenger Room of the National Press Club in Washington. The subject will be whether the return of abducted South Koreas should be a prerequisite to a North-South peace treaty. It’s a question you can hardly believe anyone would have to ask — isn’t the first prerequisite to peace that each nation ends its continuing offenses against the other nation’s people? Or so you would think.
Lee Mi-Il — a tiny, frail, and dignified woman whose father was abducted during the Korean War — is the President of KWARI. Lee has dedicated much of her life to getting her father back. I’ve heard her speak before, and she’s a very compelling witness. You can read the full press release here.
In case you were wondering, the man at right isn’t Lee’s father. His name is Kim Yong Nam, and he was kidnapped off a beach near his home as a boy in 1978. He was recently granted a brief and tortuous “reunion” with his family, on condition that he make up some kakamamie story that the North Koreans “rescued” him. Here, you see him at the moment he was pried away from his brief, tightly supervised visit with a family he hadn’t seen in decades. It’s things like this that leave me unimpressed with so-called “family reuinions” between North and South as a means of engagement. Anything arranged with the North Korean regime will be too controlled and scripted to be worth the ransom the regime will demand. The answer is to demand that North Korea let these people go.
That segues us to a string of messages I’ve exchanged with Sam Kim, President of the Korean Church Coalition. Sam forwards YouTube videos of the Let My People Go events (here, then click “more from this user”). He claims 200-400 attended the various events, and the rally on Capitol Hill looks to have had a strong turnout. I couldn’t guess at a specific number, the crowd looks like at least 200 people. One thing they did right was to design a good banner, order plenty of them, and ask the demonstrators to hold them up. It makes the crowd look bigger, it has more visual impact, and it lets any passing driver get the point in just a quick glance.
See also:
* Things Fall Apart. A seven-story building has collapsed in Hyesan, killing 20, mostly kids and old people.
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One suggestion I have for people with bilingual skills in Korean and English if they want to help from time to time on NK Human Rights issues is to visit a site like KWARI and just translate a page or two here and there…
I believe that group does not have an English section. Another site is free NK radio, I believe that’s the name. It has a “Eng” button but it doesn’t take you anywhere.
You wouldn’t need to be terribly fluent or a professional level translator to help out — since these sites have no English up at all.
I would bet money they would be thrilled to get a trickle of translations emailed to them of their pages to put up on their site.
I’ve been doing that with just editing English with the Daily NK. It is the type of thing you can do when you have spare time and that you can put aside when you get too busy….