Park Yeon-mi

This is a Korean name; the family name is Park.
Park Yeonmi

Park at the Atlas Network Liberty Forum Conference in New York in 2014
Born (1993-10-04) 4 October 1993
Hyesan, Ryanggang Province, North Korea
Citizenship South Korea
Occupation Human rights activist
Author
Speaker
Park Yeonmi
Hangul 박연미
Hanja 朴延美
Revised Romanization Bak Yeon-mi
McCune–Reischauer Pak Yŏnmi

Park Yeon-mi (or Yeonmi Park; born 4 October 1993) is a North Korean defector and human rights activist who escaped to China in 2007 and settled in South Korea in 2009. She came from an educated, politically connected family that turned to black market trading during North Korea's economic collapse in the 1990s.[1] After her father was sent to a labor camp for smuggling, her family faced starvation. They fled to China, where Yeonmi and her mother fell into the hands of human traffickers before escaping to Mongolia.[2] She is now an advocate for victims of trafficking and works to promote human rights in North Korea and around the globe.

Park rose to global prominence after she delivered a speech at the One Young World 2014 Summit in Dublin, Ireland — an annual summit that gathers young people from around the world to develop solutions to global problems.[3] Her speech, about her experience escaping from North Korea, received more than 2 million views on YouTube. Her memoir In Order to Live: A North Korean Girl's Journey to Freedom was published in September 2015.[4]

Early life

Park was born on 4 October 1993 in Hyesan, Ryanggang, North Korea. Her father was a civil servant who worked at the Hyesan town hall as part of the ruling Workers' Party, and her mother was a nurse for the North Korean Army. Her father later established a metal smuggling operation in the capital, Pyongyang, where he spent most of the year while his wife and daughters remained in Hyesan. Her family was wealthy by North Korean standards during most of her childhood, although the family later struggled after her father was imprisoned for engaging in an illegal business.[5] Park has an older sister, Eunmi.

Escape from North Korea

Park's father was arrested for illegal trading and subjected to hard labor. Her views of the Kim Dynasty changed when she watched an illegally imported DVD of the 1997 movie Titanic, which caused her to realize the oppressive nature of the North Korean government. She states that the movie taught her the true meaning of love and gave her "a taste of freedom".[6]

When reunited with his family, Park's father urged the family to plan their escape to China. Unfortunately, her older sister Eunmi left for China early without notifying them.[1] Park and her family escaped North Korea by traveling through China with the help of brokers who smuggle North Koreans into China. Chinese and Korean Christian missionaries helped them relocate to Mongolia, and South Korean diplomats facilitated the family's transition into Seoul. After this harrowing journey, which concluded in 2007, Park became a full-time activist for human rights in North Korea.[1]

China

Park and her family escaped North Korea by crossing the border into China. On the night of 30 March 2007, with the aid of human traffickers, Park and her mother crossed a frozen river and three mountains to get into the Chinese border. Park’s father was sick and stayed behind in North Korea, thinking his illness would slow them down.[1][7] After crossing the Chinese border, Park and her mother headed for the Chinese province of Jilin. They unsuccessfully tried to find Park's sister, Eunmi, asking the traffickers about her whereabouts. Yeonmi and her mother assumed that Eunmi had died.[1]

One of the traffickers threatened to report Park and her mother to the authorities if Park didn’t have sex with him. Her mother intervened for her safety by offering herself to the trafficker. In October 2007, Park sent word to her father and arranged to smuggle him into China. There, he was diagnosed with inoperable colon cancer.

In January 2008, while the family was living in secret, Park's father died aged 45. The family was unable to formally mourn him, fearing that they would be discovered by Chinese authorities, and buried his remains in the ground of a nearby mountain. Park said, “There was no funeral. Nothing. I couldn’t even do that for my father. I couldn’t call anyone to say my father had passed away."

Park and her mother found a Christian shelter headed by Chinese and South Korean missionaries in the port city of Qingdao, China. Due to the city's large ethnic Korean population, they were able to evade the attention of authorities. With the help of the missionaries, they took a chance and fled to South Korea through Mongolia.[1]

Mongolia

In February 2009, after receiving aid from human rights activists and Christian missionaries, Park and her mother journeyed to Mongolia to seek asylum from South Korean diplomats, traveling through the Gobi Desert.[1]

When they reached the Mongolian border, guards stopped them and threatened to deport the pair back to China. Park recalls that at this point she and her mother pledged to kill themselves with their own knives. “I thought it was the end of my life. We were saying goodbye to one another.” Their actions persuaded the guards to let them through, but under custody at a detention center at Ulan Bator, the capital of Mongolia. On 1 April 2009, Park and her mother were sent to Ulan Bator’s Chinggis Khaan Airport to fly them to Seoul. Park felt relieved to be free at last; the Daily Telegraph reported, "'Oh my God,' she thought when Mongolian customs officials waved her through. 'They didn’t stop me.'”[1]

South Korea

Park Yeonmi in South Korea

Park and her mother had difficulty adjusting to their new lives in South Korea, but they managed to find jobs as shop assistants and waitresses. Park also continued her education in Dongguk University in Seoul.[1][8] In April 2014, South Korean intelligence informed Park that her sister, Eunmi, had escaped to South Korea via China and Thailand. Park and her mother eventually reunited with Eunmi.[1]

Activism and reception

Since escaping, Park has written and spoken publicly about her life in North Korea, having written for the Washington Post, and has been interviewed by The Guardian.[9][10] Park volunteers for activist programs such as the Freedom Factory Corporation,[9] a free market think tank in South Korea. She also became a member of LiNK (Liberty in North Korea), a nonprofit organization that rescues North Korean refugees hiding in China and resettling them to South Korea and the United States. On June 12–15, 2014, Park attended LiNK’s summit at Pepperdine University in Malibu, California. She and the other North Korean activists, Joo Yang and Seongmin Lee, worked in sessions and labs, educating participants in the conditions of North Korea and how LiNK can support the refugees. Park took part in LiNK’s campaign, the Jangmadang (장마당). Park has also been outspoken about tourism in North Korea, as visitors are encouraged to bow to statues of Kim Jong Il and Kim Il Sung, which she sees as "[aiding] the regime’s propaganda by allowing themselves to be portrayed as if they too love and obey the leader."[11] She was selected as one of the BBC's 100 Women in 2014.[12]

Park told the story of escape at several well-known events like TEDx in Bath, the One Young World summit in Dublin,[3] and the Oslo Freedom Forum.[3]

Park worked as a co-host for Casey Lartigue, a talk show host of the podcast-show North Korea Today. The podcast discusses North Korean topics and the life of the refugees after their escape. Park volunteered for this opportunity to make the world become aware of the repression of the North Korean refugees and how people can take action for their need of freedom. They hosted five episodes of the podcast.[13]

Some aspects of Park's story have been doubted, including by some other defectors.[14][15]

Journalist Mary Ann Jolley, who interviewed Park for SBS Dateline in Australia, states that various aspects of her account were inconsistent across interviews to different media. Jolley also states that some of the details in her story were questioned by other North Korean defectors.[15] Some North Korea analysts have also challenged parts of her story.[16]

Park has stated that the inconsistencies arise due to her imperfect English and mistranslations of her statements by journalists.[16]

Beliefs

Park believes that there are positive and negative possibilities for North Korea to be reunified with South Korea. She believes that there are neither northerners nor southerners in Korea, just Koreans themselves.[3]

Park believes that change might occur in North Korea as long as she and the other North Korean defectors continue to be an advocate for human rights in North Korea. According to the National Review, Park presumes that, “the regime adjusts, as the Chinese Communists and the Vietnamese Communists have done. That would allow the North Korean Communists to hang on for untold years longer,”[8] therefore the Kims would be able to focus on their people, and then they would be able to become more opened to the world. Park also believes that the Jangmandang, the Black Market of North Korea, will transform or develop the country's society. In the fact that Jangmandang provide wide access to the outside medias and information. If Park will ever return to an improved North Korea, she will be delighted as we try to bring wealth and freedom to the North Koreans who were forced into destitution by the Kim dynasty. [17]

Park considers Kim Jong-un to be a cruel leader for continuing the abuse of his own people. Park likens Kim Jong-un to a description from Al Jazeera, berating him as "a criminal for killing 80 people in one day for watching a movie or reading the Bible. This young man is so cruel. He ordered that people who attempt escape should be shot."[3] According to the Telegraph, Park believes that he must be punished for not just oppressing them, but for toying with his own people.[1]

Publications

See also

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 Phillips, Tom (October 10, 2014). "Escape from North Korea: 'How I escaped horrors of life under Kim Jong-il'". The Daily Telegraph. Retrieved 2015-09-18.
  2. ""Kim Jong Un doesn't like me at all," says 21-year-old defector from North Korea". Retrieved 2015-09-18.
  3. 1 2 3 4 5 Gupta, Priyanka. "Escaping North Korea: one refugee's story". www.aljazeera.com. Retrieved 2015-09-25.
  4. Park, Yeonmi; Vollers, Maryanne (29 September 2015). In Order to Live: A North Korean Girl's Journey to Freedom. New York: Penguin Press. ISBN 978-0-698-40936-1. OCLC 921419691.
  5. "Summit Speaker — Yeonmi Park - Liberty in North Korea". Retrieved 2015-09-25.
  6. Hakim, Danny (2014-10-25). "The World's Dissidents Have Their Say". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 2015-09-25.
  7. Vollers, Maryanne. "The woman who faces the wrath of North Korea". the Guardian. Retrieved 2015-09-25.
  8. 1 2 Nordlinger, Jay (November 17, 2015). "Witness from Hell". National Review. Retrieved 2015-09-25.
  9. 1 2 Crocker, Lizzie (October 31, 2014). "How 'Titanic 'Helped This Brave Young Woman Escape North Korea's Totalitarian State". The Daily Beast. Retrieved November 1, 2014.
  10. Park, Yeon-mi; Shearlaw, Maeve (October 29, 2014). "The North Korean defector who continues to defy regime – live Q&A as it happened". The Guardian. Retrieved November 1, 2014.
  11. Thompson, Nathan A. "The Ethics of Taking a Trip to North Korea as a Tourist". NBC News. Retrieved 3 November 2014.
  12. "Who are the 100 Women 2014?". BBC. 26 October 2014. Retrieved 4 December 2016.
  13. "(ARCHIVE) North Korea Today: Featuring Casey and Yeonmi (ARCHIVE)". (ARCHIVE) North Korea Today: Featuring Casey and Yeonmi (ARCHIVE). Retrieved 2015-09-25.
  14. "Defectors speak of North Korea horrors". Japan Times. AFP-JIJI. 12 Dec 2014. Retrieved 16 May 2015. However, she faces a growing number of doubters — including other defectors in South Korea — who say her story lacks credibility.
  15. 1 2 Jolley, Mary Ann (10 December 2014). "The Strange Tale of Yeonmi Park". The Diplomat. Retrieved 16 May 2015. A 59-year-old woman from Hyesan who escaped in 2009 laughed when asked was anyone ever executed for watching an American movie
  16. 1 2 Power, John (29 Oct 2014). "North Korea: Defectors and Their Skeptics". The Diplomat. Retrieved 16 May 2015.
  17. "North Korea's best hope". The Washington Post. 26 May 2014.
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