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Making A
Difference in North Korea
What to pray
for! |
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1: IDOLATRY
North Korea s 24 million strong population lives
under constant propaganda. Isolated from the rest of the world, they are
taught that North Korea is paradise on earth and that every good thing
comes from the country s leaders. Kim Il Sung, the Great Leader is revered
and worshipped by the population. The word for God is banned and any
belief in a higher power is considered a very serious crime. The picture
shows the immense statue of Kim Il Sung before which North Koreans must
bow.
Pray that state enforced idolatry of North
Korea's leaders imposed throughout the country will be broken.
Pray that the leaders, especially Kim Jong IL, will be convicted
and converted.
Pray that there will be true religious freedom and that the True
God who really reigns in the heavens will be proclaimed as God.
Pray that all would freely hear and receive the good news of Jesus.
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2: PRISON CAMPS & EXECUTION
Those discovered to be Christians face brutal torture. Believers are sent
to unbelievably cruel prison camps, such as camp 22 pictured here.
Prisoners are forced to labour 16 hours a day to fulfil impossible quotas.
Abuse and violence characterize daily treatment. Food rations are at
starvation level. Sanitation is virtually non-existent. Prisoners labour
under crippling conditions, dying from abuse and overwork. Arbitrary
treatment at the hands of the guards goes unchecked, with prisoners killed
at the whim of, or for the entertainment of, the guards. The extent of the
cruelty is only defined by the limits of the torturers imaginations.
Believer s children are also imprisoned in such camps in pursuit of the
policy to eliminate the family of Christians and other undesirable
elements . Over 100,000 prisoners are believed to be suffering terrible
cruelty in the camps today.
Yet imprisonment in such camps is not the harshest punishment for having
faith. Other Christians are tortured and executed for their faith. Young
Hee Lee was a 37 year old North Korean woman who had fled to China to find
food. She had heard about the gospel and embraced Christ as her Saviour
and Lord. She decided to return to North Korea to testify to her faith and
tell people about Christ. She took money and Bibles into North Korea and
then repeated the trip, travelling across the border until she was caught.
After two weeks of severe torture she was executed at the market place in
Musan, Hamkyung North Province. According to an eyewitness report of the
execution, she was already "half dead through severe torture", her legs
were broken and she was blindfolded when she was brought out. She was tied
to a wooden post with a rope around her neck, chest and waist. Her broken
legs could not support the weight of her body. The village residents were
told to stop their work and assemble at the public market field to witness
the execution. Two members of the party performed a play about how she had
betrayed her motherland and party and why she should be executed, as a
warning to others not to follow her example. An officer shouted "ready to
shoot" to the gunmen. As he did so Young Hee Lee shouted out "Believe in
Jesus, oh, Jesus Christ" As she shouted, the gunmen shot her in the head,
heart and stomach, silencing her with their bullets.
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3:
EVIDENCE OF THE TREATMENT OF CHRISTIANS IN THE PRISON CAMPS
Soon Ok Lee
(pictured) survived six years of detention in a brutal interrogation
centre and a horrific prison labour camp. During interrogation she was
subjected to terrible torture, including water torture. She says the pain
is beyond all description. In prison she witnessed the mistreatment of
Christians. She says they alone were not sentenced to a particular number
of years, but were detained as long as they kept their faith. This meant
that they were subject to ongoing abuse and pressure. The guards were very
eager to force the Christians to recant their faith because they would be
promoted for doing so. She says the Christians were not allowed to look up
to heaven because they believed in God and had to always have their necks
at a ninety degree angle, making them disfigured. Even in death they were
buried facedown with their necks broken. She describes how Christians were
given the worst jobs in the prison camps, working in dangerous factories
or with the septic tanks, where they would suffer toxic poisoning. The
Christians in the factories were exposed to particular danger. In the
rubber factory they were forced to work almost naked, with just a little
apron covering their fronts. If they could not flip the rubber fast enough
before it went under the heavy rollers they would lose their hands and
arms. She says she even saw a man fall onto the conveyer belt and the
guard refused to stop it before he was crushed to death, saying I m glad
to get rid of this crazy God-believing man . She saw other atrocities,
including Christians being stamped to death. On one occasion, in the iron
foundry, the guard ordered eight Christians to recant and when they
refused, he had molten iron poured over them to kill them.
Despite all the horrors endured, Soon Ok Lee says she never saw a
Christian recant their faith. Instead they would say Amen and sing to God
when they were being beaten. She says the Christians were the happiest of
the prisoners despite the harshness of their treatment. They alone would
volunteer to take punishment for the offences of others, even laying down
their lives for their fellow prisoners. At the time, convinced by the
all-pervasive propaganda, she could not understand why they held onto
their beliefs, but their faithfulness made her wonder about God. Their
testimony helped lead her to her own faith when she reached freedom and
could hear the gospel for herself.
Pray for God to uphold those believers who
follow Christ so wholeheartedly in such a spiritually hostile environment.
Pray for all those Christians detained for their faith and subject
to inhumane treatment, appalling conditions and horrific abuse.
Pray for those who are undergoing torture and interrogation at the
moment.
Pray for those facing execution for their faith.
Pray for family members who are incarcerated.
Pray that God would be with believers in the fiery furnace as he
was with Shadrach, Meshach and Abednego.
Pray for the secret believers in North Korea to grow in their faith
and be shielded from those who would persecute them.
Pray for the growth of the church and the spread of the gospel,
even in this harsh environment.
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4:
HUMANITARIAN CRISIS
Prisoners in the camps receive starvation rations, but even those outside
the camps cannot feed themselves. Over a million people have died of
starvation in the last ten years and the famine has left up to 85% of the
country s children malnourished. The little child pictured died the day
after the photo was taken.
Even the food that is given by foreign governments and aid agencies is
very often diverted to the military. At times it is distributed in front
of the giving agencies, only to be demanded back on their departure.
The desperation and hunger has led to horrific human suffering. Lee Min
Bok, who was imprisoned in a camp after attempting to defect to China
stated: The food situation was so bad that cannibalism was quite
widespread. A woman who had just given birth was so hungry that she ate
her own newborn baby. Brothers ate their own brothers in order to survive.
Due to the severe food shortages, North Koreans have become desperate
enough to risk their lives to cross the border to China in the hope of
finding food. However, life in China is fraught with hardship and danger.
Pray for
those desperately clinging to life and for their loved ones.
Pray that aid would not be diverted to the military.
Pray for effective international access to those areas
where 'opposition classes' reside, who are deliberately cut off from food
by the regime.
Pray for those ministering aid in the country.
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5:
REFUGEE SITUATION - CHUL MIN
Chul Min (pictured) was seven when his father decided to leave North
Korea. He had watched as his four year old brother had starved to death
next to him. His mother too fell victim to the famine s clutches and died
from starvation. Only Chul Min and his father, Mr Yoo, were left. Already
severely weakened by the famine themselves, they knew that the same fate
would be likely to befall them if they remained in North Korea. Despite
the high risks involved, they decided to escape over the border. Mr Yoo
sold their house for about £5, bought some shoes for Chul Min and arranged
their escape. The two travelled illegally on a train heading to the
Chinese border. Chul Min hid in the bathroom while his father had to jump
out of a window each time the train stopped for police checks. They
managed to reach China, but barely survived the next few years, constantly
moving to avoid detection by the police and scarcely earning money.
Chinese employers know that they can exploit North Koreans who have no
recourse to law and face repatriation to terrible brutality if found by
the police. In desperation, Mr Yoo left Chul Min with a missionary and
escaped to South Korea where he secured enough money to bring his son to
freedom. However, as Chul Min was close to the Mongolian border, his
pathway to freedom, he and his group were separated from their guide.
Unfamiliar with the inhospitable terrain, they wandered for the next 26
hours. Tragically Chul Min, weakened by years of malnutrition, died of
dehydration before reaching freedom.
Chul Min s story is just the tip of the iceberg of the situation faced by
the estimated 150,000 North Koreans hiding in China. Lacking legal status,
they are highly vulnerable to criminal elements and exploitative
employers. Women are often sold into prostitution or as brides, at times
unwittingly. Once married the man considers her his property and may keep
her under lock and key, abusing her physically and sexually, even renting
her out or selling her on to other men. Tragically these women have few
alternatives. They have nothing to escape to. If they go to the police, or
are turned in by their husband, they will be sent back to North Korea.
Chinese police are known to attach refugees together with wire passed
through their wrists and noses. Once back in North Korea, they are liable
to face torture, and cruel imprisonment. Those who have been in contact
with missionaries or South Koreans are subject to especially harsh
treatment. Christians are likely to be executed or sent for life to hard
labour camps.
The best hope for a North Korean escapee is to be cared for by Christians.
Pray for
the North Koreans in hiding along the border areas, for their protection
as they seek food and shelter and as they come into contact with
Christianity, usually for the first time.
Pray
for North Korean women who arrive in China terribly
vulnerable to being unknowingly sold as brides and then subjected to
appalling sexual, physical and emotional abuse.
Pray
for refugees who become Christians, that they would
grow in their faith and be protected.
Pray
for those forcibly returned to North Korea from
China, especially those who have become Christians who face very severe
torture and likely execution if their faith is discovered.
Pray
for protection, wisdom and guidance for all those
helping North Koreans.
Pray
for those who have been arrested and detained in
China and North Korea for their efforts to help North Koreans.
Pray
for solutions to be found so that North Koreans can
reach freedom and safety.
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6:
MISSIONARIES WORKING WITH NORTH KOREANS AT THE BORDER
Chun Ki Won (pictured) is a South Korean missionary to the North Korean
people. Moved by the terrible plight of those suffering in China, he has
helped provide food and shelter. For most North Koreans this is the first
time they will ever have met a Christian, seen a Bible or heard the
gospel. Many accept the gospel with open hearts.
However, sheltering in China is not a long-term option. The international
community has failed to provide any effective protection for North Koreans
who manage to escape the regime. China refuses to allow the United Nations
High Commissioner for Refugees access to the North Koreans, in breach of
international law. Thus the only way to reach safety is to make the
perilous journey across China to a third country.
Chun Ki Won has helped many North Koreans reach freedom in this way.
However, others have been caught and returned to an unknown fate. Chun Ki
Won himself was arrested by the Chinese authorities. He was imprisoned and
a long sentence was expected. However, through prayer and international
pressure he was released after seven months. Many other missionaries have
been detained in China and many have been sentenced to long terms of
imprisonment. Again, China is in breach of international obligations.
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7:
ABDUCTED MISSIONARY - REVEREND DONG SHIK KIM
Other missionaries have faced an even
worse fate. Reverend Dong Shik Kim (pictured), a South Korean pastor, with
serious disabilities, witnessed firsthand the sad plight of the North
Koreans who fled their country. He moved to China and became very involved
in helping the North Korean people, advocating for their human rights and
providing humanitarian aid for their immediate needs.
Rev. Kim taught North Korean refugees the gospel, training them to be
disciples of the Lord Jesus. He translated the gospels of Matthew, Mark,
Luke and John into the dialect of the North Koreans and sent these Bible
booklets into North Korea. Unfortunately the North Korean authorities
misinterpreted his religious activities as efforts to subvert the North
Korean government.
On 16th January 2000, after a Sunday service in Younbyun city, three
secret agents from North Korea told Rev. Kim that they would guide him to
a new refugee couple. Rev. Kim served the men lunch and followed them. He
has not been seen since.
An eyewitness told Mrs. Kim that he had seen her husband being
interrogated in a prison in Musan, in which prisoners are placed in
boiling springs during interrogation.
All of Rev. Kim s eight children, five of whom are adopted and the
youngest of whom is 12, eagerly hope for the safe return of their father.
However, no one knows whether he is alive or dead.
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8:
ABDUCTED MISSIONARY REVEREND AHN SEUNG WOON
Reverend Ahn Seung Woon (pictured), a South Korean pastor, was working in
China when he was abducted by North Korean agents. On 7th July 1995 he had
attended a worship service and was talking to a North Korean couple by his
car. He had the car running with his wallet and glasses inside, when he
was approached by two North Koreans. They took him aside and made him get
into a taxi. He was not seen again until he appeared on North Korean
television two weeks later. His wife was horrified to learn that he had
been abducted into North Korea and described him as looking very tense and
thin.
Mrs Ahn has never seen him since. She and her three children, who were 16,
20 and 22 when he was abducted, miss him greatly. He also has four
grandchildren. She describes him as a very loving and caring
family-oriented person, with a fun, warm personality.
She says: I am convinced that he does not want to be in North Korea and
that he was forced to go there. However he was very concerned about the
spiritual life of the North Korean people and very keen to see them find
salvation. Maybe that is why God has allowed him to be there, to reach
them in a way that would be impossible otherwise. Whatever the situation I
ask people to pray for him and for the mission work amongst North Koreans.
(We gratefully acknowledge the assistance of Christian
Solidarity Worldwide for the development of this material.)
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