// you must be the change you wish to see in the world \\
one1004
read my profile
sign my guestbook

Visit one1004's Xanga Site!

Name: hannah
Country: Nicaragua
Birthday: 3/19/1981
Gender: Female


Interests: jesucristo. comida. byg'07. *nk*
Expertise: nada.
Occupation: Advertising


Message: message meEmail: email me
AIM: one1004


Member Since: 4/30/2002

SubscriptionsSites I Read

Blogrings
betHany yOuth grOup~
previous - random - next

HIC USA
previous - random - next

NYU KSA MEMBERS
previous - random - next

Liberation in North Korea [LiNK]
previous - random - next

The BYG Class of '07
previous - random - next

Christians4LiNK
previous - random - next


Posting Calendar

|<< oldest | newest >>|
view all weblog archives

Get Involved!

Suggest a link

Recommend to friend

Create a site

Wednesday, July 02, 2008

nkchildren

A Call To Conscience in Free Korea



Friends,

Over a decade ago, the world watched as over a million North Koreans starved to death. Hundreds of thousands of North Koreans fled their country in search of food, and brought with them stories of a land very different from the South. A nation where freedoms of religion, speech, assembly, movement and dissent did not exist. Where listening to a foreign radio broadcast was grounds for treason. Where failing to honor the leader meant disloyalty. Where public executions were common. Where concentration camps reminiscent of Nazi Germany dotted the landscape.

Since our inception just over four years ago, our organization and our allies have worked to raise awareness of the plight of the forgotten North Korean people throughout the world. Today, thousands upon thousands of refugees remain in hiding throughout Asia, fearing forcible return to North Korea, where many would face torture or execution for leaving without permission. Today, at least 250,000 inmates guilty of no real crime live in a network of political prison camps, where survivors say unspeakable acts take place in inconceivable conditions. Recently, NGOs and experts have warned that in coming months perhaps several hundred thousand North Koreans will die of starvation.

yoduk

Inmates at North Korea's Yoduk Concentration Camp

It was not long ago that the two Koreas were one. A great number of families on both sides of the DMZ have intimate family connections on the other side. And yet here today, in Seoul, awareness and interest in the plight of these people is painfully lacking. The average South Korean knows more about the uninhabited island of Dokdo or members of the latest Korean pop group than about their brothers and sisters to the North. And in past weeks, reports of a resurgent famine and painful stories of North Korean suffering have been drowned out by public protests against American beef.

bethereds

The beef issue has complex roots. It is not as simple as an issue of food safety. Intertwined with concerns over mad cow disease are larger concerns about the power of the Blue House, the relationship between Korea and America, and concerns about the impact of free trade on Korea’s domestic industries.

witnesses

At the same time, 25 million North Koreans today live in a nation that is, essentially, a prison-state. And despite over 13,000 North Koreans walking the streets among the citizens of the South, Free Korea has yet to use it’s voice on behalf of these voiceless. In a most succinct, perhaps insensitive summary – while South Koreans bicker over what they don’t wish to eat, North Koreans are dying for want of any food at all.

shinchonlove

Many of us involved in this work are foreigners. Often, our voice is not always well-received in debates here in Korea. We long have worked to build local allies and work to politely, gently, but firmly raise the issue of North Korean human rights. Perhaps we have lost the urgency of this issue amidst a small sea of conferences, symposiums and petitions.

People are dying. We must do more.

 freeze

This weekend, groups organizing protests in Seoul have pledged that one million will turn out to protest over the beef issue. Last week, protestors came brandishing steel pipes and bricks, toppling police vans and attacking the offices of several major newspapers. Right or wrong, we believe that violence is never an acceptable form of civic discourse in a democracy.

koreashame

Throughout history, men and women have had moments where they came to believe that their lives meant something greater. Individuals have lived through eras where injustice reigned and suffering was widespread, and stood against it, often at great personal cost. This weekend, here in South Korea, we believe we must do our part. If politicians, academics, celebrities and others cannot raise the notion that there are perhaps more important and urgent matters deserving of Korea’s attention, then we will.

In the end, we will remember not the words of our enemies,
but the silence of our friends.

Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.

signs

This weekend, we ask you to join us at Seoul City Hall. On July 5, protest organizers have pledged their largest and most aggressive protest yet. LiNK, in conjunction with No-No Demo, a group of South Korean students 30,000 strong, defector organizations, expatriate groups, Korean Americans, international students and many other sympathizers, will hold a public funeral for the dead and dying of North Korea. We will stand beside protestors and remind them that perhaps there are more pressing issues.

We are aware that we may face violent reactions to our message. Others bearing similar messages have faced beatings or threats of violence. If struck we will not strike back. We will be vastly outnumbered, highly unpopular and quite possibly offensive. But the fact remains – North Koreans are dying, and Free Korea has forgotten them. We have been warned repeatedly that any criticism of protests, perceived or real, will spark backlash. But what then shall we do? Remain silent? Shall we be content to read wire reports and news briefs of more lives lost? Shall we tell escapees of concentration camps and victims of sexual trafficking who share with us their stories, “I am sorry, but now is not the time to raise this issue.”?

care

Justice delayed is justice denied.

If you are willing to stand with us this Saturday, please contact rsvp@linkglobal.org for more information. Whether you are a student, a teacher, a professional or a tourist, this is a rare chance to stand for your convictions, and be a part of something greater. Perhaps we will make history. Perhaps we will see the beginnings of a sea change in the South Korean grassroots. Perhaps this will spark a moment of reflection and a call to conscience. Or, perhaps, we will fail, unnoticed, maybe bearing fresh wounds. But this is what is right, and sometimes that is all that matters.
Free Korea must stand for her enslaved brothers and sisters.



--

sunshine2006funeral

WHO: You.
WHERE: Seoul City Hall, meet at exit 2
WHEN: Saturday, July 5, 2008 @ 6 pm
WHY: To speak for 25 million voiceless North Koreans
ATTIRE: Black Funeral Attire
IMPORTANT INFORMATION: rsvp@linkglobal.org

MORE:
http://blog.daum.net/linkglobal
http://libertyinnorthkorea.blogspot.com/

--


Our lives begin to end the day
we become silent about things that matter.

Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.







Saturday, June 07, 2008


LA PRIVATE SCREENING:  "CROSSING"


Please join us on Thursday, June 19 at 7:00 pm in LA, for a private advance screening of the forthcoming film Crossing, presented by LiNK, KoreAm Journal, and ImaginAsian Entertainment. Production quietly began on this film in 2004, and today we have the first feature film touching upon the North Korean human rights and refugee crisis. It is slated for theatrical release in South Korea on June 26. This film may very well be our movement's "Hotel Rwanda" or "Schindler's List." We are excited to be able to present this film here in the US for special advance screening.


THURSDAY, JUNE 19
Date/
Time: 7:00 pm
Location:
ImaginAsian Center, 251 South Main Street, Los Angeles, CA 90012
Presented by: LiNK, KoreAm Journal, and ImaginAsian Entertainment.
RSVP with name, affiliation, and reference. Affiliation and reference required: rsvp@linkglobal.org.
http://washingtontimes.com/news/2008/may/31/drama-focuses-on-horror-of-re-education-camps/



Monday, May 05, 2008





<< born & raised in a north korean concentration camp  >>






       come   see, hear  & learn

  *  *  *


also private pre-screening  of "CROSSING " next thursday in ny
(and following week in LA) - more info

DON' T miss it...


Thursday, March 27, 2008


Project: Real Sunshine









Join us this summer....









"The difference between what we do and what we are capable of doing
would suffice to solve most of the world's problems. "  
||  gandhi ||







Tuesday, January 29, 2008



the story....



once upon a time there was

a girl





and a boy




who were "just friends"....
in fact, best friends.
they met at church and eventually served in youth group together (it was a 2 for 1 deal)
but this boy was so nice because he always tried to set up this girl with all his friends (because she had no game.)
plus, she didn't like him like that, and he thought she was loud. 


well this boy and girl hung out all the time with their friends- he introduced her to baden, and she introduced him to Jesus (jkjk). they did lots of fun things together and they thought they would be best friends forever! they even made a marriage pact- if neither one was married by the time they turned 30, then desperation would force them to marry each other... time flew by and soon boy and girl decided to amend the pact because 30 was too soon and they just didn't like each other (like that). 
so 35 it was!


fast forward many years and suddenly this girl starts to think about moving away for this amazing job...and so she ponders this idea for a full year. then on april fools, she thought it would be funny to text her friends as a joke that she was moving away!  well, this boy did not think it was funny at all and cried when he found out (maybe?) suddenly he started wondering what life would be like if his super-cool-awesome and funny friend picked up and moved away....
who would he go to all those christian concerts with?
who would come over and clean his dishes for him?
who would teach him how to play football or how to be a good gopher?
who would stand up for him and his red couch and pahma?
who would plan his birthday parties and make fun of him at teachers mtgs?


well....this boy wallowed in all of these thoughts
and by the time this girl really decided to make the move to DC-
this boy realized he had to make some moves too.


 - - fast forward - -

boy likes girl
girl finally caves in
and boy gets girl
and...
voila!






boy and girl date for over a year...and one day this girl finds out she has to go to asia for work for 5 weeks. 
boy is sad and cries (again) but everything works out because now this girl can meet this boys family.

finally at the end of the long trip, this girl is in the motherland and she prepares herself to meet this boy's father.
 he set up a meeting for her and told her exactly where to be at exactly what time....
but she was running late! 

*nervous* but excited, she finally arrived at TechnoMart on the 9th floor.
searching around, she finally spotted his father and walked over.....


only to realize she was mistaken
and it wasn't papa park.
OOPS!!




it was this guy




who flew all the way to korea just to surprise  this girl...



to ask her to spend forever with him.


and she said no....

then eventually yes  
and then they went to pojangmacha to go celebrate.

and now this girl is the luckiest girl in the world!







-- the end --





or....the beginning


 ||o4.o4.o9||









Next 5 >>