Andrew & Esther - Through Our Eyes Archive
Our Thoughts

November 20, 2005
North Korea - Revealing the Darkness
North Korea is called "the last slave society left in the world" and a "gulag with nukes".

It is perhaps the most closed country left in the world, making it hard to get detailed reports of what really goes on there. But without question, North Korea is led by a tyrannical (even insane) dictator, Kim Jong Il. The official "Biography of the Dear Leader Kim Jong Il" from the official North Korea website is laughable, but tragic at the same time. This 160 page document of "brief history" opens in the way you might expect (as it is written by those under his dictatorship):
"Comrade Kim Jong Il...has scored immortal exploits for the Party and the revolution, for the country and the people...[He] has always held fast to the banner of socialism, the banner of the revolution, and turned misfortunes into blessings and adversities into favourable conditions, thus leading the Korean revolution to continuous upsurge and brilliant victory."
These "immortal exploits" and "favourable conditions" are unknown to the rest of the world, unless those phrases are code for "the worst human rights records of any nation".

In the 1990's a massive famine hit the population of 22 million, killing an estimated 3 million people. During this time, food aid is believed to have never really made it to the starving people, instead being funneled into nuclear weapons programs etc..

It's estimated that there are prison camps that hold between 150,000 and 200,000 inmates. People are sent here without trial or explanation, typically on the whim of North Korea's dictator.

As you might expect, many try to flee North Korea - some are caught and killed, while others make it out. Most tragically, many that make it across the border into China are actually caught by the Chinese and returned to North Korea, where they are undoubtedly executed.

Video of Public Execution in North KoreaReports occasionally make it out through these escapees, and recently some powerful video footage was smuggled out of the country from one of thes prison camps showing public executions of defectors in North Korea that took place in March 2005. After the execution in the video, a voice over the loudspeaker says "traitors who betray the nation and its people end up like this". I encourage you to watch the video, as it conveys the reality of the situation in North Korea much more than statistics and words in an article can.

Those who escape North Korea have many reports like the video shows, and worse. The U.S. Committee for Human Rights in North Korea published a defector statement that:
"pregnant women inside these camps reputedly either have forced abortions or the newborn child is killed. In some of the camps, former inmates say the annual mortality rate approaches 25%. A former prison guard and army intelligence officer told the BBC that in one camp, chemical weapons were tested on prisoners in a gas chamber. None of these claims can be verified, as North Korea denies them and does not grant entry to independent human rights observers."
The stories could go on and on. The situation is bleak in North Korea. But these stories beg the question, what about the church in China? Voice of the Martyrs reports that "many thousands of Christians have been murdered since the Korean War. In 1953, there were about 300,000 Christians, however the number has reduced to a few thousand today. Christians must practice their faith in deep secrecy and constant danger."

We really don't know much about the church in North Korea. But we do know that whatever followers of Christ exist in this closed country, they certainly must face intense persecution. And in the examples of the early church, and more recently the church in China, we know that the church tends to grow exponentially when it faces the worst persecution.

So let us pray for North Korea, that the light of Jesus Christ might truly pierce the darkness of that nation. And above all, let's pray that the church truly would grow exponentially. That God might give boldness and faith to his people in North Korea. We also can pray for ways to partner with the church in North Korea. Since we don't much of anything about the church there, it is difficult to know what to do, but our prayers are certainly the most effective aid we can give.