This is Paradise! by Hyok Kang
Apr. 5th, 2010 02:18 pm![[identity profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/openid.png)
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This is Paradise!: My North Korean Childhood
is a memoir of the author's childhood in North Korea (illustrated in places with scenes from his life there) and how he and his family were able to escape to China and later on, to South Korea where he lives today.
What struck me about this story was the intense level of control that North Korea has over its citizens. Radios only receive the official channels (being caught with one that receives something else gets you sent to a forced labor camp). Everyone wears buttons with a picture of Kim Jong-Il on it; his portrait hangs in every building. School days are spent reciting Communist propaganda, rehearsing the dance you would do in case a high official comes to call, and denouncing your classmates (and being denounced, in which case you confess and do whatever penance the teacher inflicts).
During the North Korean Famine in the mid-1990's, the author recounts being forced to work as farm labor at school (during which the children mostly stole and ate the food), then after school he and his friends survived by stealing from the markets, catching grasshoppers and rats, and digging weeds to go in the soup at home. Many of his classmates died of starvation, including at least one close friend, before his family fled North Korea for China in 1998.
A well-done yet chilling story. I would recommend it to anyone interested in finding out what life is really like in North Korea.
What struck me about this story was the intense level of control that North Korea has over its citizens. Radios only receive the official channels (being caught with one that receives something else gets you sent to a forced labor camp). Everyone wears buttons with a picture of Kim Jong-Il on it; his portrait hangs in every building. School days are spent reciting Communist propaganda, rehearsing the dance you would do in case a high official comes to call, and denouncing your classmates (and being denounced, in which case you confess and do whatever penance the teacher inflicts).
During the North Korean Famine in the mid-1990's, the author recounts being forced to work as farm labor at school (during which the children mostly stole and ate the food), then after school he and his friends survived by stealing from the markets, catching grasshoppers and rats, and digging weeds to go in the soup at home. Many of his classmates died of starvation, including at least one close friend, before his family fled North Korea for China in 1998.
A well-done yet chilling story. I would recommend it to anyone interested in finding out what life is really like in North Korea.