The Japan Times - North Korean refugees long for family behind impenetrable border

EUR -
AED 4.239541
AFN 75.022521
ALL 95.94266
AMD 434.694321
ANG 2.06611
AOA 1058.399423
ARS 1599.786929
AUD 1.668857
AWG 2.077556
AZN 1.966353
BAM 1.956448
BBD 2.319489
BDT 141.306834
BGN 1.97288
BHD 0.435352
BIF 3429.120892
BMD 1.154198
BND 1.483259
BOB 7.957637
BRL 5.934533
BSD 1.151592
BTN 107.270553
BWP 15.799305
BYN 3.41239
BYR 22622.27179
BZD 2.316088
CAD 1.605766
CDF 2654.654418
CHF 0.921392
CLF 0.026776
CLP 1057.268357
CNY 7.943877
CNH 7.935962
COP 4252.213784
CRC 535.870642
CUC 1.154198
CUP 30.586235
CVE 110.658657
CZK 24.518099
DJF 205.123746
DKK 7.472507
DOP 69.973235
DZD 153.41072
EGP 62.593756
ERN 17.312963
ETB 180.864316
FJD 2.610215
FKP 0.873924
GBP 0.871882
GEL 3.092832
GGP 0.873924
GHS 12.707487
GIP 0.873924
GMD 84.835159
GNF 10130.961101
GTQ 8.80992
GYD 241.029885
HKD 9.046081
HNL 30.713354
HRK 7.533568
HTG 151.145511
HUF 380.319933
IDR 19654.021976
ILS 3.63204
IMP 0.873924
INR 107.29836
IQD 1511.998778
IRR 1518693.123711
ISK 144.401497
JEP 0.873924
JMD 181.559388
JOD 0.818307
JPY 184.311521
KES 150.16465
KGS 100.934631
KHR 4631.218411
KMF 492.84205
KPW 1038.777516
KRW 1741.649476
KWD 0.357039
KYD 0.959718
KZT 545.710867
LAK 25346.177755
LBP 103358.389946
LKR 363.346722
LRD 212.661071
LSL 19.465578
LTL 3.408045
LVL 0.698162
LYD 7.358037
MAD 10.823487
MDL 20.263243
MGA 4802.61616
MKD 61.573519
MMK 2423.547371
MNT 4123.0727
MOP 9.297181
MRU 46.306205
MUR 54.247384
MVR 17.832312
MWK 2004.265591
MXN 20.505505
MYR 4.648527
MZN 73.822701
NAD 19.471468
NGN 1591.834564
NIO 42.393433
NOK 11.208239
NPR 171.630654
NZD 2.020175
OMR 0.44334
PAB 1.151582
PEN 3.954569
PGK 4.971148
PHP 69.372464
PKR 322.078677
PLN 4.269925
PYG 7449.533572
QAR 4.207164
RON 5.098896
RSD 117.312749
RUB 92.535077
RWF 1686.282606
SAR 4.333781
SBD 9.285796
SCR 16.648207
SDG 693.672357
SEK 10.76838
SGD 1.483262
SHP 0.865947
SLE 28.39255
SLL 24202.957816
SOS 659.612571
SRD 43.110407
STD 23889.558769
STN 24.872957
SVC 10.07634
SYP 127.613267
SZL 19.460084
THB 37.603767
TJS 11.038158
TMT 4.039691
TND 3.369065
TOP 2.77903
TRY 51.468212
TTD 7.812691
TWD 36.88296
TZS 3000.913844
UAH 50.436279
UGX 4320.431938
USD 1.154198
UYU 46.635457
UZS 14052.354915
VES 546.474682
VND 30397.52352
VUV 137.702165
WST 3.192832
XAF 656.168792
XAG 0.015855
XAU 0.000248
XCD 3.119276
XCG 2.075488
XDR 0.815156
XOF 656.158773
XPF 119.331742
YER 275.390284
ZAR 19.436098
ZMK 10389.164608
ZMW 22.254569
ZWL 371.651137
  • RBGPF

    -13.5000

    69

    -19.57%

  • VOD

    -0.0700

    15.14

    -0.46%

  • GSK

    -0.3200

    56.37

    -0.57%

  • RELX

    0.0200

    33.61

    +0.06%

  • CMSC

    0.1400

    22.18

    +0.63%

  • AZN

    -0.6600

    202.83

    -0.33%

  • RYCEF

    0.3800

    15.5

    +2.45%

  • NGG

    -0.9300

    87.06

    -1.07%

  • BTI

    0.4300

    58.71

    +0.73%

  • RIO

    -0.4400

    94.01

    -0.47%

  • BCE

    -0.1900

    24.26

    -0.78%

  • CMSD

    0.0900

    22.35

    +0.4%

  • JRI

    0.1200

    12.73

    +0.94%

  • BCC

    0.5500

    73.75

    +0.75%

  • BP

    0.3600

    47.48

    +0.76%

North Korean refugees long for family behind impenetrable border
North Korean refugees long for family behind impenetrable border / Photo: ANTHONY WALLACE - AFP

North Korean refugees long for family behind impenetrable border

After taking a bow and making an offering of fruit and a dried fish, Ryh Jae-hong tosses a cup of alcohol towards the thick barbed-wire fence that protects South Korea's Gyodong Island from North Korea.

Text size:

South Koreans perform this funeral ritual during the autumn harvest festival Chuseok at altars erected along the border to honour ancestors who remained in the North.

Just two kilometres (1.2 miles) from the Manghyangdae altar, on the northern tip of Gyodong, farmers work the land beneath red flags and a slogan in giant letters on a nearby hilltop reads: "Long live socialism!"

"They are there, I just hope they are doing well," said Ryh, whose father fled south at the end of the Korean War in the 1950s, but whose grandmother and other relatives stayed behind and have not been heard from since.

Gyodong Island, which sits at the mouth of the Han river, welcomed thousands of displaced people during the war.

Many crossed the water in small boats to Gyodong or swam across when Chinese forces -- allied with North Koreans -- advanced on the town of Yeonbaek.

Little did they know this would be their last crossing.

Those displaced have found some consolation in the island's swallows, which legend has it serve as messengers, capable of crossing the world's most impenetrable border.

Telescopes installed at the Manghyangdae altar have become their only means of seeing the place they once called home, now behind the border's barbed wire fence.

Most first-generation refugees have passed away, but a deep sorrow remains for the handful still alive.

- 'Hoping for reunification' -

"We are a people with broken hearts. Even though we live in abundance today, my parents, my brothers and sisters all remained in North Korea," said 94-year-old Chai Jae-ok.

"I came to the South and had to abandon them. What use is living in luxury if I cannot see them again? Day and night, I have never stopped crying out and hoping for reunification.

"Before my eyes close forever, I would like to see it happen."

His dream of reunification remains elusive for now.

While North Korea recently expressed an interest in resuming dialogue with the United States, it has made clear that speaking to the South is out of the question, labelling it a "hostile state" with which separation is irreversible.

Pyongyang has dismantled all institutions dedicated to potential reunification and demolished connecting roads and railways, built during periods of detente in the 2000s.

- 'Is there greater pain?' -

"My only wish is that even if reunification does not happen in my lifetime, an exchange between the North and South would allow me at least to mourn at my parents' grave," said Chai.

"It is only six kilometers from here. By car, it would take barely ten minutes. Is there greater pain?"

Min Ok-sun, 92, left her parents and four brothers in the North.

"I left my homeland at 17 and never saw them again," she said.

She married another refugee in Gyodong, Kim Ching-san, a former fighter who was tasked with missions to infiltrate the North and is now 96 years old.

"When I see birds returning to their nests at sunset, I tell myself that we humans also have this need to return home. It's our instinct," said Kim.

"My wife and I have different ways of coping with the longing for our homeland. She finds comfort in simple things, like curling up under a blanket. I cannot forget.

"Every day, I fight inside, as if I were still at war. That's why I look older than her."

Refugees and other elderly people gather in Gyodong on festive days to sing old Korean ballads from the Japanese occupation of 1910-1945, at the tops of their voices.

"These are songs that everyone, both in the South and the North, knew before the division," said Chang Gwang-hyuck, a volunteer who leads the sessions and whose grandfather came from the North.

"They reflect the aspirations and emotions of the people of that time. What these elderly people desire most is to soothe their nostalgia.

"When I see these people who left their homes at 20 and have never been able to return, I feel a deep sadness."

T.Ikeda--JT