Kim Ae-Sang was interviewed at a town that borders North Korea. This withered 32-year-old had been knocking on doors when she ultimately came to a Korean family that would talk with her. Her story was so typical but still so hard to grasp.
She had left her five- and seven-year-old with the grandfather in Hamhung, Nk. She was desperate for food because since the facility where she worked shut down, no food rations were being given out. Her husband went to the countryside hoping to work for food. For some imagine he never returned. So she stripped some copper from machinery at her old facility and headed for the border, hoping to sell the metal for food there.
News North Korea
It's 300 miles to the crossing point into China from Hamhung. Citizen have to wait long hours for a train to take them there. Starving and cold, at least 20 of the prospective passengers die every night. When the old train ultimately took its heavy load of passengers gradually towards China, it took so long that eight of Ae-Sang's fellow travellers died.
She had no ticket. Not even a permit to travel. So the railway guards had beaten her. She got to the border, still hoping to sell her metal. But border guards caught her and confiscated the copper. Still she planned to cross the river, with nothing to take into China but herself and the clothes on her back. Her new plan was naturally to beg for food.
After teaming up with a younger woman, she found a guide who offered to help cross the river. His plan was to sell both women upon advent in China. Then the guide found out that Kim Ae-Sang was married. He took the other girl, and Ae-Sang ran away.
Now what to do? Stay in China where she might find work and survive, or go back and save her children somehow?
We who know Christ believe that humans ought not to be having to make choices like that. Dads should not have to leave homes because there is no food or money or work. Moms should not have to leave children. Men should not be preying on others' misfortunes. And governments should not create conditions whereby only a few have the right to "normalcy."
There are more tragic things, to be sure, like eternal damnation, souls without Christ. Put all those tragedies together and one has the country before us. If ever there has been a nation that collectively said, "Help us!Pray for us!" it is this one.
This story was told ten years ago by Jasper Becker in his first-rate inventory of North Korea.
Tragedy in North KoreaTags : todays world news headlines
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