An American’s Journey into North Korea
Kyle B. Smith
“Welcome aboard Air Koryo,” the hostess smiled from the small screens
that had descended from the ceiling, “where we strive to fulfill the socialist
ideals of our Dear Leader General Kim Jong Il.” My heart jumped a little as I
realized that this was finally happening.
After years of planning the details, researching the important things to
see and do, investigating how to actually get there, and worrying that as an
American I might be getting myself in over my head, I was finally on my way to
the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea (DPRK), or North Korea, as it is better
known. I sat in a rather new,
Russian-built plane and tried making out what the Cyrillic letters said on the
trays, aisles, and overhead compartments.
As Air Koryo had been banned from European Union airspace for safety
reasons, North Korean pride forced the airline to update at least some of its
aging Soviet fleet. I took my camera out
and started flashing some pictures. “No pictures!” I was politely, but firmly,
admonished by a pretty young flight attendant.
Though still sitting on the tarmac in Beijing, I figured it would be
best to follow DPRK rules since being inside the Air Koryo plane already made
me feel like I was under the watchful eye of the Dear Leader. In fact, you could tell who the North Korean
citizens were. Each of them had a pin on
his or her shirt, right over the heart, featuring either the beaming smile of
Kim Il Sung, the Great Leader and Eternal President of Korea, the only official
head of state who is dead, or a more innocuous pin with the North Korean flag
on it.
I put my camera away and picked up a copy of the complimentary and
unintentionally amusing Pyongyang Times that had been left on everyone’s
seats. “Kim Jong Il Gives Field Guidance…” the front page headline proudly
announced. There was a picture of Kim
Jong Il, who was still alive and leader of the country at the time of my trip, dark
sunglasses in tow, with a pack of wildly-cheering supporters in the
background. The article carried some
story about how the Dear Leader visited some factory and “solved many problems,”
thereby carrying the DPRK to the forefront of global innovation and technology and
so on. I turned the page and read about
visiting delegations of old-school Western European Communist parties who all
had fantastic things to say about the Dear Leader, the electoral system of the
DPRK, the international respect North Korea had, and the progress the nation claimed
it had made. Some articles made passing
references to Kim Jong Un, the leader’s son who would become leader in his own
right a few months later following his father’s death. Looking around I noticed that the plane was
filled with mostly Europeans, some who were tourists, others who were on
business. There were even some families
with children and I wondered what on earth a family would be doing visiting
North Korea. I glanced at some of the
Westerners on board the plane and I wondered what their own stories and reasons
were for traveling to this isolated country.
As about only 1,500 Western tourists visit the country every year, the
DPRK is hardly on many people’s must-visit list.
But it was on mine.
The flight arrived in Pyongyang around two hours later, landing at
Sunan International Airport. As the door
opened, I looked out the plane and I saw the first of many recognizable sights
from my years of following all things North Korea. I descended the stairs off the airplane onto
the tarmac and saw the giant, smiling face of Kim Il Sung greeting me. The excitement was palpable as most of the
travelers snapped photographs until the airport staffed shuffled everyone into immigration
and customs. All the passengers had to
turn over the multitude of forms given to us to fill out on the plane (“Are you
carrying a cellular telephone with you?” If so, those need to be surrendered at
the airport until you leave the country.
You could bring a computer, but there was no personal internet in the
country. “Are you carrying any published material?” You cannot bring in
materials about the DPRK published outside the DPRK. “Do you have a cough?” And
I guess they did not want any sick people spreading germs). The process to get the visas before the trip
was rather thorough so I was surprised that we were all individually held up
for what felt like a long time at passport control. Maybe it felt like a long time to me because in
the back of my mind I still was not fully convinced that they would look at my
American passport and scream, “imperialist bastard!” and ship me off to some
gulag in order to create an international incident, maybe one requiring another
top US statesman to come over and bail me out.
At least I could get to meet Bill Clinton, I laughed to myself as I
tried to remain calm. But, after a brief
time with the stern-looking official at passport control, my passport was
handed back to me without much fanfare.
It appeared that my concern had been little more than paranoia. Upon leaving the airport, I looked behind me
and realized that North Korea’s main airport terminal was just one large room
the size of half of a high school gymnasium.
It reminded me of how some of the earliest airports in the rest of the
world must have appeared. I liked it.
Sunan International Airport
I walked outside and the first thing I noticed was the oppressive
heat. It had not been nearly as hot in
Beijing just a few hours earlier. The
second thing I noticed was two guides, one male and one female, waiting for
me. They were both young and pleasant looking. After my brief episode of paranoia with the
stone-faced airport personnel, they were a breath of fresh air in the Korean heat. I had been warned that I would have a
no-nonsense, no-humor tour guide. These
two looked, by contrast, pretty damn cool. I noticed one was wearing a pin with the Great
Leader’s face on it. The other donned a
pin with the North Korean flag.
On the ride to downtown Pyongyang, I saw people walking along the road,
people in the fields, and some trucks passing by. “May I take pictures?,” I
asked the female guide. “Sure,” she responded.
I was pleasantly surprised since I had heard rumors that my camera would
be next to useless while in North Korea.
That had turned out to be another unfounded fear of mine. Except for military personnel, I would be
allowed to take pictures of anything and everything.
As the tour van got closer to the city center, I began to see more signs of life. The cars on the road were not as numerous as they are in Midtown Manhattan, but I did see decent traffic. Judging from the looks of the vehicles, many were from fellow tour groups, though. To visit North Korea meant that I had to book my trip through a foreign travel agency. I had made my arrangements with Korea Konsult, one of the largest travel agencies specializing in tours to the DPRK, which is based in Stockholm, Sweden. Korea Konsult then coordinated my tour through the Korean International Tourism Company (KITC), a governmental body that handles virtually all of the nation’s tourism. You cannot buy a ticket to Pyongyang and just arrive at the airport and flag down a taxi. There is no independent tourism in the nation. The KITC will pick you up from the airport, take you to your hotel, feed you (quite well, to be honest), guide you, and drop you off at the airport or international train station for your departure. And I liked that. For once, it was nice to have a trip where I did not have to do any of the planning myself and I could let myself be shuttled around. During my stay, though, there would not be any time alone outside the hotel, there would not be any opportunity to stroll the streets of Pyongyang, and there definitely would not be any chance to talk to average North Koreans. I did not like that. One of my favorite things to do when going to a new city is to spend hours just aimlessly wandering the streets, learning the plan of the city, and seeing how people went about their daily lives. There would not be any of that here. I had to take the good with the bad.
The drive to the hotel was interesting.
The propaganda was ubiquitous, and quite colorful, too. Half of it entailed artistic visages of
heroic military exploits or hard work by the people. The other half displayed the leadership. Of that latter group, almost all were of Kim
Il Sung, the “Great Leader” who died in 1994.
Kim Jong Il, the “Dear Leader,” appeared to be a little more camera shy
as he was not on display nearly as much as his father. I was surprised to see the number of “nice”
cars on the streets. Though I had
already been lectured on how the state owns “everything” in North Korea, my
guides did tell me that different color license plates indicated different
ownership. My guides let on that there
were in fact some privately-owned vehicles, identifiable, they said, by the
color of the plates. They were also
identifiable, I thought, by the relative opulence of the car in the otherwise
drab panoply of vehicles on the road. To
be honest, I was expecting there to be no cars in Pyongyang. But there is life and movement. Rush hour there may not resemble Beijing,
Istanbul, or Los Angeles at close of business time, but there are numerous
buses, trams, cars, and bicycles which ferry people around the city.
Propaganda in Pyongyang
“Look to your left and you’ll see the Ryugyong Hotel,” the tour guide
excitedly announced. I looked out the
window and I saw another recognizable sight: a tall, pyramid or missile-looking
hotel that was unfinished with glass and steel covering part of a concrete
shell. Its odd shape would stand out
anywhere in the world, and especially did so in otherwise short and
Soviet-looking Pyongyang. “It’s 105 stories and when it’s finished soon it will
be one of the world’s tallest hotels.
It’s already one of the world’s tallest buildings.” Everything she said
was correct, except for the “finished soon” part. I was well aware that this hotel had been
under construction since the 1980s but due to the financial collapse brought on
by the fall of the Soviet Union, the building has been in a perpetual state of to
be “finished soon.”
There was a quick stop at the Arch of Triumph, Pyongyang’s answer to
Paris’ version. The one in North Korea
is a little bigger and definitely has more Asian architectural influences. The dates 1925 and 1945 are prominently
displayed. The first being, according to
North Korean sources, when Kim Il Sung joined the resistance against the
Japanese. The second date being, again
according to North Korean sources, when the Great Leader drove them out.
The tour van then continued on its way past some apartment buildings
that dotted the city. They were not
avant-garde, but they had an undeniable charm to them. Many could have used a touch-up, but the
people had taken the plain communist-looking buildings and turned them into a
rainbow of colors. There were pastel-hued
buildings all over the city, something I had not been expecting. And I was hard-pressed to find many balconies
that were not overflowing with flowers.
The streets were clean and nondescript.
There were few if any street signs, just revolutionary slogans that I could
not read but nevertheless knew what they were trying to express. I was here, in the nerve center of one of the
most closed-off countries and a perpetual thorn in the side of the United
States for six decades. And I loved it.
Ryugyang Hotel in Construction
Pyongyang
buildings
Traffic officer
Wide avenue in Pyongyang
“Your hotel is up ahead,” the tour guide announced again. I looked and saw a modern-looking and sleek
tower on an island in the river, hovering over the rest of the city. When the vehicle approached the hotel, it
looked a little more faded than it did from a distance, but it was certainly
not in shambles. The main lobby was
interestingly gaudy, with a sloped ceiling that was trying to dazzle with many
windows and lights. But it was bustling
and lively with many tourists and with an inviting bar nearby. The basement had a casino with dozens of
Chinese visitors noisily and excitedly spending their money, a massage parlor,
and other accouterments of large hotels.
“May I have your passport, please?,” my tour guide asked. I had known they would sequester my passport
upon arrival until I left. I had
researched enough to know this would happen.
I was curious, though, as to what my guide would say the reason for this
was, that being part of the fun of the trip, so I asked. “It’s so you don’t
lose it,” she politely responded. I would
not lose my passport so easily. I knew
that and she knew that, but I smiled at her as I handed it over, appreciating
the elusive answer. Stuff like this is
what made this trip so special.
After settling in to my room, I got back on the van and the mysterious
charm of the city was pulling me in further. “I love Pyongyang,” I whispered to
another traveler on the van with me. “So do I,” he whispered back. I looked out the window as we passed by
vehicles and pedestrians going on with their lives. Some were walking. Some were crammed into city buses. Others were working to cut down trees and
clear up weeds. What were they
thinking? Did they really like it
here? Were they happy? Were they scared? Frankly, I did not know and there was no way
I could find out. I had no opportunity
to talk to ordinary citizens, and they would not talk to me anyway. So I had no choice but to just not care what they
were thinking, and I thus pretended that they were all happy, just as I was
very happy in this unusual city.
“We’re here,” the tour guide announced.
I got off the van and I was on my first sidewalk in Pyongyang. I stood on the sidewalk and relished the few
seconds I had to be on the city streets, just like all the happy people I saw
minutes earlier. I looked up at the
restaurant. There was no flashy
sign. I looked at the windows. There were no menus posted. I had never seen a restaurant so
nondescript.
The Chogryu Hot Pot Restaurant served up traditional Korean hot pot
food in a hot building with no working air conditioning, probably due to a
power outage. And it was very, very hot. “I will show you how to cook the
traditional Korean hot pot,” my tour guide stated. The waitress lit the gas below the hot
pot. When I thought it could not get any
hotter than it already was in there, with perspiration dripping down my
forehead, it suddenly got a lot hotter with the open flame inches from my face.
“First put in the something, then the something else. Then you will add the other thing. Finally, mix it around with the final
thing.” I looked around me and saw half a dozen plates holding raw meat,
assorted vegetables, spices, and chili paste.
I was sweating too much for me to carefully listen to her instructions
regarding the order and timing in which I had to add each ingredient and I
began to fear that my lapse of attention would cause me to ruin my dinner. But my tour guide assured me she would guide
me through the complicated process. Kamsa
hamnida, I told her. I had learned
my first Korean phrase: thank you.
The hot Pyongyang air felt arctic and chilly compared to the steaming
restaurant, so I felt comfortable when I made it outside after dinner. Back in the van, it was not long before I
started hearing loud cheers and seeing lights filling up the otherwise dark
city sky as the van pulled up next to the May Day Stadium. The Arirang Mass Games were going to be
performed that night. I spent 100 euros
for a second-class ticket, and I walked inside the stadium after having my
ticket checked by a woman in traditional Korean garb. The Mass Games were popular in many Communist
nations during the Cold War, but North Korea has been the holdout which still
has them. They are not “games” at all,
but rather an artistic, acrobatic, and dance performance designed to broadcast
the success of the regime and dazzle the audience. At least on that second account, they
succeeded brilliantly. 100,000
performers take part in the show which is on almost every night from August to
October. These included hundreds of
dancers who would impress Broadway audiences, tightrope walkers who
effortlessly walked about the crowd and then fell in sync into a net, and, most
impressively, thousands of schoolchildren who flashed colored placards all on
cue creating a series of moving images for the audience to see. If you did not know there were children
controlling the moving images by rapidly switching colored placards, you could
be forgiven for thinking it was the world’s largest television screen.
I could not help but observe the moving images displayed in the Games
and what they tried to convey. I saw
pictures of factories, of dams, and the great industrial achievements over the
years that the country had accomplished.
These paralleled some of the articles and photographs in the Pyongyang
Times of large factories spitting out huge quantities of everything from
food to yarn. It reminded me of orthodox
communism’s relation to heavy industry.
The factory workers were to be the vanguard of the revolution for Marx
and many 20th-century communist societies liked to show off their
enormous factories and massive output as indices of their success. One of the many reasons that the Soviet bloc
fell behind the West was that the USSR and its allies were so preoccupied with
producing the biggest, and thus showiest, items to demonstrate their
superiority over the West that they neglected to see that by the 1980s, the
West was being revolutionized by electronics, a field where engineers worked
not to produce the biggest things, but labored instead to make their products
so small and even almost invisible. The colossal
fruits of labor that could be displayed and flaunted to the masses were being
eschewed by the West for electronics and information technology. The communist nations, in contrast, were
stuck in an early and mid-20th century model of industrial prowess
that was quickly growing outdated. North
Korea it appeared, as I watched images of large power plants flashing along the
moving displays, still valued those large, outdated displays as a measure of its
success. I thought about how their
cousins in the South were showcasing their own achievements through decidedly
21st century means: banking, high-tech innovation, and international
trade.
Paying homage to the alliance with the
People’s Republic of China
Globe highlighting a unified
Korea. You can also see the heads of the
children in the background who are holding the colored placards which create
the moving imagery that accompanies the performance.
The Grand Finale
The Pyongyang air had cooled down from what was a hot day and I was
headed back to the hotel. When all the visitors
got there, we received an order. Several
tourists in our group needed to give the guides another passport. Some people traveling to the DPRK had second
passports with their Chinese visas in them (proof of their being able to leave
North Korea), and the guides wanted to hold on to them along with their first
passports. Why they did not ask for this
before was beyond me, but what could be done?
Those affected by the directive offered up some futile resistance, but
they eventually returned to their rooms to fetch the documentation. Well, all but one of them had. It appeared we now had a missing tourist on
our hands.
“Where is he?,” the guides asked.
We shrugged our shoulders. We
tried calling his room, but there was no answer. We looked at the bar, but nothing. Our guides began to look worried, and then
they started to look panicked. If
anything goes “wrong” in the DPRK, the guides are the ones who get the blame. I did not know what exactly what would happen
to them, but by the look on their increasingly reddening and sweating faces, I did
not want them to find out. I also did
not want to risk the rest of us getting in trouble. I looked around everywhere I could for the
missing tourist. I passed the hotel
bookstore. I had heard somewhere that North
Korean bookshops only carried titles by Kim Il Sung and Kim Jung Il. I did not have time to verify this but I did
see some framed quotes by the nation’s leaders. “The book is a silent teacher
and a companion in life – Kim Il Sung.” “Books are treasure-houses of knowledge
and the textbooks for a person’s life – Kim Jong Il.”
I could not find him and I let the guides know when I got back to the
lobby. “Please, can you check the basement?,” the guide pleaded. I expressed a bit of surprise because I
figured the guide would have already gone down there himself to look. “We are
not allowed in the basement,” he responded.
Very odd, I thought. Another
tourist went down to look, and our missing travel companion was in fact
enjoying the entertainment venues in the basement. We snapped him up and trying not to rip his
head off for possibly getting everyone into trouble, we got his second passport
from him and turned it over to the guides.
The color returned to their faces immediately and they slowly breathed a sigh of relief. “I am so very sorry about this,” I offered to the guides, hoping to show them that I understood the gravity of the situation. “Please speak with him so this doesn’t happen again.” “I will,” I assured them. I needed a drink. Not only because of that stressful situation but also because hundreds of Chinese tourists were waiting for the elevators and their numbers did not appear to be waning. So my travel companions and I went to the bar. We ordered beers for each of us. They were big, cheap, and quite good. I was pleasantly surprised.
The following morning, I got a wake-up from the front desk. They were obviously having the front desk staff
call each room personally, rather than relying on an automated calling system
like most large hotels use. Today was going
to be a big day for various reasons. The
first of which was that I would be visiting the Kumsusan Mausoleum. Formal attire was required, so I got in the
shower and prepared to put on the dress shirt and tie I had brought with
me. As I was getting out of the shower,
I grabbed one of the small towels to dry myself, and then suddenly it was dark. We had had a power outage. “Are you OK in
there?,” my hotel roommate inquired.
North Korea is famous for its power outages, even in the capital
city. As the country sometimes had
difficulty meeting its energy needs, power outages were something I was
expecting. Just not at the awkward
moment of getting out of the shower and finding myself sans clothes in a
pitch black bathroom. “Um…I think so,” I responded, treading carefully to avoid
slipping. I blindly dried myself and
reached around, pressing my palm against the door in various places until I
came across the door knob. I opened it
and found natural light in the room. The
power came back on a few minutes thereafter.
After a delicious breakfast, the tour buses were loaded up and all the
visitors headed to Kumsusan. En route,
somebody inquired about North Korea’s oft-reported problem of food
shortages. My ears perked up, because I
was wondering how it would be addressed. “Well, in the early 1990s, after the
collapse of the international market, and along with some natural disasters,
there were some issues of shortages of food.
Also, the DPRK is very mountainous, so food cultivation can be
especially difficult here.” Well, they did not flat out deny it, I thought.
“For one month in the spring, the able-bodied citizens of Pyongyang go to the
countryside to help in the farming.” My eyes grew big. “Again in the autumn, we
return to the countryside to harvest.” “Both of you?,” I asked. “Yes,” the two
guides responded. I was astonished. To live in Pyongyang is a privilege reserved
for only the few. If you are allowed to
live in the capital, you are already elite in some respects. Furthermore, to interact with foreigners is
another privilege given to only some. My
guides, by virtue of living in Pyongyang and having constant contact with
outsiders, in many ways enjoyed certain opportunities not available to most
others. And yet they, part of the upper
echelon of North Korean society, had to spend two months of the year doing farm
work. I could not imagine myself being
shipped from New York for two months a year to do manual farm labor in the Mid-West. At all.
The tour bus arrived at the mausoleum and I saw many groups from all
over the world assembled. “Our Great Leader, Kim Il Sung, lived and worked here
until his death. Now, the eternal
president lies in state there, and it serves as a mausoleum for people from all
over the country and the world to come by and pay their respects,” one tour
guide said. “The president lived and worked there, and now he’s lying in
state,” a tourist chimed in. “So you can say he’s still at work then?” My heart
sank. I know North Koreans take their
leader very seriously, and jokes about him are not only taboo, but illegal. Not that this was a joke about the leader,
per se, but I was not sure how the tour guide would take it. Tourists have gotten into hot water by
“disrespecting” the Eternal Leader, even in ways they might not have known were
disrespectful. A camera crew years ago
was threatened with expulsion when they leaned on the ground to fit an enormous
statue of Kim Il Sung into the frame for a photograph. The guide looked confused by this tourist’s
comment, though. I was eternally
grateful for that.
While waiting for the mausoleum to open, I sifted through some copies
of local magazines sitting on a table.
Like the Pyongyang Times, these magazines spoke about the heroic
victories of the nation and were filled with pictures from European communist
and far-left parties who had come to view one of the last second-world holdouts
and to praise the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea without reserve. However, these magazines were bigger than the
other publications I had seen, and they had lots of color pictures, too. One article caught my eye. It was the story of a North Korean woman who
turned 100 years old and who received a fancy wood table personally sent to her
by Kim Jong Il. “When the table arrived,” read the article, “the woman, who had
been blinded for 20 years from cataracts, could magically see again.”
It was time to enter the mausoleum.
I emptied my pockets of everything except my wallet (“no cameras!”) and
left my belongings with an attendant.
Everyone had to pass a metal detector staffed by uniformed personnel. A tour guide asked if I was offended by
having to go through a metal detector. I
was surprised by his query considering that metal detectors are now so
ubiquitous as to be almost unremarkable in much of the world. The tour guide told me that some tourists get
very offended at having to pass through them and loudly protest. This was one of the last places in the world,
I thought, where I would want to make a fuss.
I was one of many tourists visiting, but I saw scores of North Koreans
visiting as well. The men were mostly
solders in their uniforms while the woman all wore traditional Korean
clothing. I stood on a conveyor belt as
it took me down the halls. The North
Koreans were all looking at me. There
are not many Western tourists, so I imagine I was somewhat of a novelty for
them. The looks on their faces did not
betray their thoughts. Were they curious
about me? Were they angry at me? Would they have liked to talk? Or were they content with looking and no
more? I could not be sure. For my part, all I could tell was that they
looked tired. The conveyor belt
continued on for what felt like an interminably long time. “How long does this
go?,” I finally asked a tour guide. “For one kilometer.” Geez. “Does Kim Jong
Il live here today?” “No,” he responded. “Where does he live, then?,” I
asked. The tour guide’s voice dropped to
barely above a whisper. He said to me alone,
“we are not sure.”
I finally arrived at the main body of the building. “When we get
inside,” a tour guide began, “file in a row of four. You will see a statue of the president. Walk up to the statue, and lift your head up
and look up at him. Do not bow.” I
arrived in the hall she mentioned. There
was a giant white statue of Kim Il Sung ahead surrounded by neon lights. Dramatic, militaristic music was
playing. I walked slowly up to the
statue, lifted my chin to look at the leader, and I must say, it worked. With the music blaring in the somber hallway and
with the giant statue like a god, I did feel a sense of awe. Next, I arrived in a room and was given an
ear piece with a recording on it. A man
with a vague British accent read the news of the fateful day of Kim Il Sung’s
death. “July 8, 1994 was a dark day for the Korean people,” the man began. “It
was a day when the Korean people lost their sun. Millions around the world,” he superlatively continued
“mourned the passing of the greatest man history had ever known.” My tour guide
nodded to me and said, “next, you will be seeing the body of the Great Leader
lying in state. When you approach him,
do so in a line. Bow in front of his feet, then walk to the left. Bow again.
Now walk behind his head, but do not bow behind his head because that
would be disrespectful. When you arrive
at the other side of his body, bow again.
Then you may exit the room.” I was hoping I would remember all of this
lest I cause a scene. I entered the cool
and heavily-guarded room where the eternal president lay in state. I successfully performed all of my bows
according to protocol and filed out of the room when finished.
Upon exiting, there was one final room to see. It was filled with honors from abroad,
photographs with international leaders, and honorary degrees from universities
all over the world. Most of the honors
were from nations now defunct: the People's Republic of Poland, the
Czechoslovak Socialist
Republic, the People's Republic of Bulgaria, the
German Democratic Republic, etc. Other countries still around, such as the
Hashemite Kingdom of Jordan, had given Kim Il Sung honors, as well. I looked up to see old photographs high on
the walls of Kim Il Sung meeting with foreign leaders. I saw him shaking hands with Fidel Castro,
Yasser Arafat, Moammar Qaddafi, and Hosni Mubarak. Universities from all over the world had
bestowed honors on Kim Il Sung, even one American school. Kensington University in California had given
the Great Leader an honorary degree.
Upon my return home to the United States, I discovered that this
for-profit school had been shut down by state regulators under accusations of
being a diploma mill. Later in the
mausoleum, I saw the Mercedes Benz that the Great Leader used as well as the
luxury train he traveled in for some of his international journeys. I was surprised at the honesty of the place
and had expected to North Koreans to tone down some of the ostentatiousness of
the site. After the spectacle, I was
able to retrieve my camera and other belongings and I went to take pictures in
front of the mausoleum.
I had one more
stop that morning before returning to the hotel. During the Cold War as relations between the
Soviet Union and the People’s Republic of China deteriorated, North Korea found
itself in a peculiar situation. The
Soviet Union had eschewed the excesses of Stalinism by the mid-1950s while
China continued to consider Stalin to be a great leader and even proclaimed Maoism
to be a natural evolution of Stalinism.
This ideological split divided the communist world into two camps, each
bitterly opposed to the other until the thaw in relations under glasnost
in the 1980s. North Korea bordered the
two nations and depended on both of them for political, economic, and military
support. So as not to have to choose
sides, Kim Il Sung developed his own interpretation of Marxism-Leninism,
denoting it “Juche,” or self-sufficiency.
Developing his own take on socialism allowed Kim Il Sung to not only
avoid having to choose between his allies during the Sino-Soviet split, but it
also put him in the same league as communist greats such as Lenin, Stalin, and
Mao, who had all fashioned their own philosophical tweaks of pure, orthodox
Marxism.
As the van drove,
the guide began to explain the Juche idea, the guiding political philosophy of
North Korea. “It is a man-centric political belief system. We believe that man is the center of the
world. Any problem can be solved through
the intellect and action of the human.
There is not a political or natural problem that can thwart the progress
of man.” All very well, I thought.
However, I did not hear about some aspects of Juche that I otherwise
knew from my previous studies of the nation.
For one, Juche adds a touch of nationalism, extolling the Korean people and
claiming they have a unique role in history.
Secondly, it states that the military, and not the working class, would
be the vanguard of revolution. This
nationalism and militarism would likely make Karl Marx turn over in his grave,
but North Korea may not even be technically communist anymore. Kim Jong Il “clarified” the Juche thought in
one of his writings, stating that it was a brand new political philosophy with
nothing to do with Marxism. This was a
departure from earlier explanations of Juche being just another form of
communism. Reports say that all
references to Marxism-Leninism and Communism have been removed from the North
Korean constitution. Juche is now the
sole ideology of North Korea. Even the
calendar has been renumbered to fit the state political thought, with the year
of the Great Leader’s birth being year 1 in the Juche calendar. 2011 was year 100 in the North Korean
calendar and preparations were underway for the centenary of the Great Leader’s
birth in 2012. In a short while, I
arrived at the Juche Tower, a seventy-story structure off the Taedong
River. The Juche Tower was constructed
for the seventieth birthday of the Great Leader, with one floor for each year
of his life at the time. At the foot of
it were dozens of stone tiles from Juche study groups all over the world,
including several in the West.
Juche Tower
Statue featuring the symbol of the Korean Workers’ Party –
hammer for the workers, sickle for the farmers, and a brush for the
intellectuals
Placards of international study groups of Kimilsungism
(Juche)
The views of the
city from the top of the tower were spectacular. I looked over the entirety of the
capital. Pyongyang wasn’t a bad looking
city. Before going to North Korea, most
people thought I was crazy for wanting to go there. “Aren’t you afraid of
getting kidnapped?” Well, not really. “But they’ve been kidnapping Americans a
lot recently.” Well, most of them had clearly entered the nation illegally
across the Chinese border. Arriving in
the airport with a valid visa would likely not provide a pretext for detaining
me. “I think you’re crazy to go to North Korea,” some said. It made me wonder what had happened to the
pioneer spirit that the United States was founded upon. Two centuries ago, society encouraged people
to seek out new and possibly dangerous frontiers. Why are you so soft, I wanted to
respond? Some people were hostile. “By
going there, you’re giving money to support the government.” Well, the US
government frequently gives financial and humanitarian aid to countries like
North Korea. If my tax dollars are going
to be used to benefit North Korea, I might as well get a visit out of it.
I was at the top
of the Juche Tower overlooking the city while the cool breeze made me want to
spend an entire afternoon up there just watching life happen below. There were other tourists there on the
observation deck. “What brought you to North Korea?,” I heard asked to some
British tourists. They looked at each other and one answered, “because this
country exists. It’s so mysterious and
fascinating that we just had to see it for ourselves.” I smiled at his
answer. It was nice to encounter the other
rare Westerners who were also fascinated by North Korea enough to want to
travel there, even if I had to go to Pyongyang to find them.
Kim Il Sung Square from the Juche Tower
Pyongyang from above
I arrived back in
the hotel for a quick lunch and a rest. Another
exciting thing was happening today: I would be among the first Westerners ever
allowed to ride a bicycle inside the DPRK.
I got back to the hotel, and all the lights in the lobby had been shut
off. I guessed they were trying to save
electricity. My guide led me to the
restaurant for lunch. “After lunch, you may rest up and meet back in the lobby
with your bicycle.” I had purchased an inexpensive bike in China since none was
available for foreigners in North Korea. “Before we are ready, may I walk
outside the hotel?” Again, like with the passports, I knew what the answer
would be, but I was curious to hear the response anyway. “Well, you may walk
just outside the hotel, but not too far.
If you do, I’m afraid you’ll get lost.” I smiled and had my lunch.
Hours later, I,
along with other travelers, was dropped off outside Pyongyang on the highway
leading to the western port city of Nampho.
We were the first tourists to ever ride bikes in the country, and we
were accompanied by more staff than usual.
As the DPRK has been trying to increase tourism numbers, the KITC tour
agency allowed bike tours for the first time that year. Like everything else, though, this was to be
monitored. We had our usual guides
trailing us while we had other personnel in another van in front of us. We all got on our bikes and were off. We stuck to the sidewalk at first, but seeing
as there was virtually no one on the highway, we all decided to move to the
smoother highway after a few minutes.
Although I had been in the DPRK a short time, I had already felt how
stifling it could be to have omnipresent guides. A tourist generally does not have a minute
alone in the country or any time without being chaperoned outside the hotel. Yet as the tour guides were in vans a
distance both in front of and behind us, I felt an unusual sensation: I felt
free. The two hours on the highway,
except for stopping for the random photograph, were to be essentially the only
time in the DPRK where I was without a guide immediately to my side. And it felt incredibly liberating to feel,
even if it were only an illusion, that I was free to move about as I wished in
this country and say what I wanted to say without fearing it would offend
someone. I looked around at the scenery
and realized this country was much more beautiful than I had anticipated. I had heard stories about how the North
Korean landscape had been stripped bare years earlier for food or fuel. Maybe it was true in the past, or maybe it
was true in another part of the country.
But it certainly was not true here.
The countryside was incredibly green, soft-looking, and peacefully calming.
To be able to
live in Pyongyang is a privilege reserved for the elite of the nation. This is apparent when you enter the city from
the surrounding countryside and the soldiers at a checkpoint verify the
paperwork of those wishing to enter. As
I rode on my bicycle outside the city, though, I saw regular people walking in
nearby villages and next to the highway.
Since they may never have even been to Pyongyang, I imagined that the
only contact they would ever have had with foreigners would be those zooming by
on a tour bus along the highway en route to the nearby city of Nampho. Now I was riding my bike at 10 miles per hour
and people came out to gawk. The curious
reaction of Pyongyang residents to tourists is notable enough. For these country dwellers, though, I imagine
Westerners passing by must have been an incredible sight on par with seeing
Martians arriving on Planet Earth. Some
looked at us cautiously, others waved enthusiastically. Even the soldiers who were posted every few
kilometers looked intrigued at seeing us.
Many of them offered us a smile and a polite wave of the hand. And many looked genuinely happy to have
experienced even this most quick interaction.
I know I had. During the two-hour
bicycle ride, I could count the number of cars passing by probably on one had. One of the benefits, I supposed, of having a
nation still lagging in development was the preservation of its raw
beauty. There was even a noticeable lack
of any garbage lining the highway. The
absence of many commercial goods meant that the highway was immaculate. There was no trash that was tossed from any
passing car. And the air was
refreshingly clean, something that is becoming increasingly hard to find in
many corners of the world.
Upon arriving in
Nampho, my second city in North Korea, I saw more street scenes and more human
movement, mostly on foot. There was a
quick stop at the West Sea Barrage, a massive series of dams at the end of the
Taedong River. I saw a short
informational video on the construction of the dam in the 1980s with much help
and input from Kim Jong Il. I even saw a
photograph of Jimmy Carter at the dam during a visit in 1994 when he came to
North Korea for negotiations on the country’s nuclear program with Kim Il Sung
before his death. This dam was clearly a
proud achievement of the nation, but I thought again to how North Korea often pointed
to massive public works and large industries as evidence of its success rather
than other nations today that like to show off their skyscrapers and high-tech sectors.
Kim Jong Il is credited with having helped build the West Sea
Barrage
West Sea Barrage
I returned to
Pyongyang that evening and arrived at a restaurant for dinner. I saw many of the same tourists I had seen at
other sites, other restaurants, and in the hotel. All the tour groups often have the same exact
itinerary, and I was put in the same foreigners-only room in the restaurant. Unlike other restaurants I had been to in
North Korea, my tour guides could not sit with me here. One guest whispered that this was because
ordinary citizens used this restaurant, too, but I was not sure. All I know is that I entered the foreigners’
room secluded behind a doorway.
But as always,
the food was incredible. And it was
plentiful, too. I had known that
tourists were given a lot of food, and I assumed this was because the country
was sensitive about the issue, but I had not anticipated on it being so tasty. One tourist at my table mentioned that he was
an experienced chef. He claimed the
North Korean chili to be the best he had tasted. “Dry, yet sweet,” he
proclaimed. “Excuse me, Miss,” he said to the waitress. “What type of chili is
this? It tastes delicious.” The waitress
looked nervous and turned red. She shook
her hands; she obviously did not know a word of English. “No matter,” the
tourist replied. No more than two
minutes later, a tour guide came rushing into our room. “Is something wrong?,”
she asked, looking somewhat worried. “The waitress said you needed something.”
“I was just wondering what kind of chili powder is used here. This food is exquisite.” “Ah,” the tour guide
responded, laughing and looking calmer and explaining it to the waitress, who
bashfully smiled. The waitress ran off
while the tour guide said she was asking the chef. A minute later, she reappeared with a small
plastic bag filled with the chili powder. “A gift from our kitchen,” the tour
guide explained. I was surprised and impressed
at the generosity.
Typical meal for tourists in the DPRK
The
next morning I was back in the KITC van for a several-hour long trip to the
Demilitarized Zone (DMZ). I was very
excited about this. I knew that the tour
groups get to go right up to the line dividing North Korea from South Korea in
what is the most tense and most heavily armed border in the world. The day was not as beautiful, though, as the
previous ones had been. A typhoon was
passing through the Korean peninsula and the skies grew darker as we approached
what was still technically a war zone.
After the Korean War, neither side signed a peace treaty, so the DMZ is
considered a temporary border and the two states are still officially at
war. A few miles from the DMZ, the tour van
passed through the city of Kaesong, which was an old capital of Korea centuries
ago during the royal period. After World
War II, the Allies set the border exactly at the 38th parallel, and
Kaesong found itself in South Korea. A
few years of horrifically bloody fighting left both North and South Korea with
roughly the same amount of territory they had before, but with the border no
longer directly following the 38th parallel. At the western end of the peninsula, the
North Koreans had seized extra territory south of the parallel and at the
eastern end of the peninsula, the South Koreans had seized extra territory
north of the parallel. Kaesong, being
close to the 38th parallel and on the western side of the peninsula,
found itself in the unique position of being in South Korea before the Korean
War and in North Korea after the war. As
I drove through, I wondered what the city would have been like had it stayed in
the South. The streets looked more desolate
than I imagine they would be. But after
all, a typhoon had hit the city.
I
do not speak Korean, but I could roughly make out what the road signs
said. I saw the decreasing number of
kilometers as the van approached the DMZ.
As the numbers denoting kilometers reached single digits, I realized
that I was very close to the border. But
then another sign popped up saying something was “70 kilometers” away. “That’s
the sign to Seoul.” And in South Korea there are train platforms that
symbolically say, “To Pyongyang.” Both Koreas at least officially seem to be
eager for eventual reunification.
I
arrived at the edge of the DMZ, and after waiting for the throngs of Chinese
tourists to pass through, many of us Western tourists stood together. Most of us needed to purchase umbrellas at a
souvenir shop just outside the DMZ due to the torrential rainfall. I scanned the options and picked up a Chinese
umbrella with ghastly flowers covering it.
I opened it for protection and returned to the group awaiting entry when
I heard a tour guide ask if any of us had been to the South. A few responded in the affirmative. “What was
Seoul like?,” one guide asked. “Very busy!,” one tourist chuckled. Pyongyang, though certainly not without its
own charm, was certainly not busy. “Did you have guides?,” another tour guide
inquired. “Or could you walk around on your own?” The tourist answered, “no,
you don’t need a tour guide. You can go
around on your own.” The tour guide cocked his eyebrow and responded, “ah, so
you were free.” We were ready to head
into the DMZ itself and I got back in the van and found there were two heavily
armed soldiers aboard as escorts to the actual border. One of the soldiers reviewed everyone’s
paperwork. Maybe it was the fact that a
machine gun-wielding soldier was sitting next to me in the van now, but I
started to feel a lump in my throat again for being an American. The van pulled out and started driving into
the DMZ and I saw massive concrete blocks teetering over the side of the narrow
roadway. Those were put there in case of
an invasion from the South. They could
be easily collapsed onto the road, stymieing any advancement of enemy troops. The van took us to a building where tourists could
see the exact table where the armistice was signed as well as a copy of the
original agreement. The van drove a
little further into the DMZ then. The
DMZ, I was told, was a four-kilometer stretch, with both nations agreeing to
keep out heavy military materiel in the last two kilometers of their territory.
The
van let everyone off and my heart jumped a bit in the way it does when I have
seen something in countless photographs and news reports but am finally
physically in front of it, like what many people feel when finally seeing the
Pyramids or the Coliseum. I was at
Panmunjom, the famous border between the two countries, also known as the
“Truce Village.” Specifically, I was at the Joint Security Area, where there
were seven small, blue sheds that straddled the border, and where meetings
between officials from the North and South can take place. Beyond those was a large, modern-looking
building, the Freedom House pagoda, which was entirely in South Korea. I could have thrown a baseball and it would
have hit the building. It was an extremely
odd sensation to know that I was in one of the most difficult to enter and
politically-isolated countries on earth, feeling like I was a million miles
away from everything, and yet the building I was looking at was filled with
American soldiers.
Before
me were three North Korean soldiers at the border, the Military Demarcation
Line, which was a clearly visibly raised concrete ledge. Two stood immediately next to the border
facing each other while a third soldier stood facing us a few meters away with
his back towards the border. Rumor has
it that the two soldiers face each other to prevent the other from defecting
and jumping to the South and the third stands with his back to South Korea in
case anyone tries to escape. I am
honestly not sure, but I find the explanation a bit fantastical. If anyone is going to escape from the North
to the South, he will not do it here, where at best he would risk getting himself
shot, and at worst he would spark a war.
Not a single South Korean or American solider was in sight, but they
were there. I was informed that when
tour groups from the North come, the South Koreans and Americans retreat into
the Freedom House. I entered one of the
seven sheds that straddle the border, where half the room inside is in North
Korea and other half is in South Korea.
A North Korean guard walked to the other side of the room, technically
in South Korea, towards a locked door. I
imagine that the South Korean guards do the same at the other end of the room
when they give their tours. What was
cool about this was that while the door was locked, I was free to walk to the
other end of the room. Here I was now,
in South Korea! I looked out the window
and saw the three North Korean soldiers guarding the border, yet I was looking
at them from behind the border in the South.
The normal rules regarding taking photographs of soldiers did not apply
here. I was told that I was free to take
pictures of anything and everything. It
felt strange acting so touristy at this sensitive spot. Another visitor pointed to someone in my
group and announced, “that must be the bravest man in the world, walking along
the world’s most tense and heavily fortified border with a giant teddy bear
umbrella.” Apparently, I had not picked up the worst umbrella at the souvenir
shop. I had my picture snapped with a
North Korean solider and returned to my tour van.
Copy of the Armistice Agreement signed
after the Korean War
In the foreground are three out of the
seven blue sheds straddling the North Korean-South Korean border, which is
marked by the raised concrete line that runs through them. Soldiers stand guard
mere centimeters from the border. In the
background, the tall structure is the Freedom House pagoda, which is in South
Korea.
This picture was taken inside one of
the blue sheds straddling the border. It
was taken on the South Korean side. Note
the South Korean, American, and UN flags
The
same guards accompanying me to the border were in the van for the return trip
back. We arrived back at the entrance of
the DMZ a few minutes later. I reached
my hand out to one of the heavily-armed soldiers. He looked at my hand and then my face. He gave me a huge smile on his face right
before he extended his hand back to me. We
exchanged a firm handshake as we smiled at each other. I was not sure if he knew I was American. He had seen the paperwork of all the tourists
on board, but I did not know if he realized I was the one American on board. After spending time at the world’s most
dangerous border, where American soldiers have faced off North Korean soldiers
for decades, I wanted to do something to express some sort of friendship. He finally let go of my hand and smiled at me
again as he got off the bus. I hoped he
did know I was the American.
The
typhoon passing through Korea was strong and there were some small landslides
as well as overturned trees along the highway back to Pyongyang. Once in a while, a villager would appear
along the highway and flag us down, hoping in vain for a ride in the torrential
storm. Those in the van passed the time
by telling the Korean tour guides dirty Western jokes at which they bashfully
laughed. As the van arrived at the city
limits, though, the weather appeared to have calmed down. After a few hours in the countryside, I was
again among the hustle and bustle (or what passes for that) in the
capital. The tour van stopped at the
Korean War Museum. A stately-looking
building, I was greeted by a giant mural depicting Kim Il Sung leading his
people. I was brought inside to a room
with various artifacts from the war along with an “informational” video. I “learned” from the video that the US was
experiencing a massive economic depression after World War II (that was news to
me) and plotted to attack the DPRK because it had a glut of weapons that it did
not know what to do with. I saw a black-and-white
video of children having a picnic while the narrator stated, “the citizens of
the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea were enjoying a peaceful day when the
United States started their act of aggression by crossing the 38th
parallel and invading the nation.” Interesting, I thought. Also interesting was that I did not see any
mention whatsoever of the Chinese’s role during the War in the Museum. For the North Koreans, the victory over the
Americans was total and complete. And it
was theirs alone.
I
was brought to a giant, circular, revolving room with a mural covering the
entire round wall. The painting
dramatically depicted a fierce battle between American and North Korean
troops. One of the museum curators
discussed in great detail the happenings of the battle in which the North
Koreans dealt a deathly blow to the American invaders, pushing them back and
liberating the city. “I’m sorry, where did you say this town was that is
depicted in this painting?,” I asked. “Today it is in the South,” she
responded. “Oh,” I muttered. In the
basement, I saw seized American weapons, downed American planes, and captured
American flags and letters. My heart
felt panged. To be honest, up until the
museum, I had seen and heard very little of the “evil Americans.” Maybe because
they blamed the Japanese imperialists more for their problems. Or maybe because I was there and my guides did
not want to make me feel uncomfortable.
Maybe because they have moved beyond their distrust of the US, even if
only a little. I was not sure, but
America-bashing was conspicuously absent during my trip there. However, when I saw the American machinery,
flags, and letters on display in a basement in Pyongyang, I could not help but
be overcome with a certain sadness.
Regardless of one’s opinion on the War, these objects had all been in American
hands. Had I lived half a century
earlier, these could be my neighbors’, my friends’, or my family’s personal
items now on display. And I could feel
the fear they must have felt, and the loss their loved ones must have
endured.
Entrance to the Korean War Museum
Captured American affects
Afterwards,
there was a stop at the USS Pueblo. In
1968, the North Koreans captured an American intelligence ship that the US
claimed was in international waters and the North Koreans insisted was in their
territorial waters. It was one of the
most daring acts of the Cold War and certainly had the potential to heat it
into an active war. It was also another
opportunity for the Great Leader to show the world, and especially the Soviets
and the Chinese, who were apparently furious at the act, that he was in charge
and he was not anyone’s client.
Regardless if the Americans’ or North Koreans’ version of events were
correct, the ship still sits in the Taedong River in Pyongyang and is a tourist
attraction today. I toured the whole
ship, seeing the bunks, the dining hall, and finally the bullet holes from the
battle between the two parties, and again felt similar pangs of discomfort when
thinking about what the Americans on board must have experienced.
USS Pueblo
I
walked back to the tour van and looked at all the locals walking the sidewalk
before I boarded again. “Would it be all right if we took a ten-minute walk or
so around the city?,” I asked my tour guide.
It was again one of those questions to which I already knew the answer.
“Well, why do you want to do that?” She looked surprised I had asked. “Just to
get a sense of what it’s like to walk around this city.” “Well,” she
started. I was looking forward to
hearing what the answer might be. “Unfortunately we don’t have any time for
that.” I smiled and nodded my head. “I understand.”
The
final day in North Korea ended with a high note and in a very low place. “Now
we will go to the Pyongyang Metro, the world’s deepest.” I was very excited
about this. I have always been a mass
transportation aficionado and the idea of seeing and even riding the Pyongyang
subway put me in a cheerful mood. It was
rush hour in Pyongyang, so even if the streets were not packed, there were
still other vehicles jockeying for road space along with us. “Do you like the Sound
of Music?,” my tour guide asked me. “Excuse me?,” I responded, expecting
that to be the last question I would hear in North Korea. “It’s one of my
favorite movies,” she replied to me. I
must admit that I had assumed that the DPRK had no access whatsoever to Western
media or culture. I was wrong about
that. “Doe, a deer. A female deer.”
Our tour guide, who had previously sung Korean folk music from time to time as
an accompaniment to our long drives, began singing a more universally known song.
“Ray, a drop of golden sun.” The van pulled up to the metro station which
was rather busy looking. “Me, a name I call myself. Far, a long, long way to run.” The van
was emptied and I ran into the subway station.
I quickly took out my camera and began snapping pictures of anything and
everything. I took pictures of the token
booth, the lobby, the turnstiles. The
locals looked somewhat perplexed by my frantic picture taking and they were
right to look at me as if I were crazy.
As I have always been fascinated by mass transit, seeing this for me was
the equivalent of seeing the Eiffel Tower in Paris for most other
tourists. People lined up to buy tokens
which cost only five North Korean won, about three U.S. cents. I did not need a token, though. My tour guide caught up with me and invited
me to pass the turnstile.
I
was in.
Entrance to the Pyongyang Metro
I
stepped on the escalator and looked at the North Koreans ascending on the other
side. Most gave me that by-now familiar
look, an almost bewilderment at seeing Western tourists. I am not sure if Pyongyang’s metro is the
world’s deepest (I have heard many cities try to lay claim to that honor), but
I can say that it certainly was very deep.
I got to the bottom after a very long escalator ride and surprisingly
found a woman selling official pamphlets of the Pyongyang Metro. I purchased one and quickly leafed through
the pages telling the story of the construction of the subway system. At the rope-cutting ceremony, it read, Kim Il
Sung exclaimed, “I think it is difficult to build the metro, but not to cut the
tape.” The pamphlet said that the Great Leader’s humility brought a lump to the
throat of everyone hearing him on that day.
I
walked into the main hall of the subway.
It was magnificent. It looked
grand and like a palace. There were
chandeliers of colored glass shaped like grapes. Mosaics and murals covered the walls. Wide marble columns held up the ceiling. It was dazzling. “The North Koreans did well
here,” I said to myself. Again, I was
furiously snapping pictures. I saw that
the station had a woman in a white uniform waving a signal for the trains. How quaint, I thought. A subway car pulled into the station. I could not tell but I had previously read
that the subway cars were East German.
They ran well. Inside, I took a
seat with my tour guides. “May I walk across the train taking pictures?” Sure,
they responded. I walked to the end of
the car and took a picture of the portrait of Kim Il Sung and Kim Jung Il that
hung over this, and every, subway car.
The amount I walked back and forth appeared to elicit the same reaction
among the Pyongyang citizens that New Yorkers have when crazy people enter the
subway: they ignored me. I walked back
and forth, taking as many pictures as I could, knowing that I would have to get
off at the next stop. Tourists are
usually only brought between the Yonggwang (“Glory”) and Puhung
(“Revitalization”) stations. Rumor has
it that only these two stations are grand, while the rest are shabby and kept
away from outsiders’ eyes. Yet pictures
taken from the rare foreigners who have seen the other stations appear to show
that at least some of the other stations are quite fancy, as well.
It
was definitely rush hour as the subway was pretty crowded. I exited the train and made my way up another
very long escalator. I was lagging
behind the others as I kept taking pictures in my last few minutes in the metro
station. As I got outside, I took a few
photos of the entrance sign and figured I should make my way to the tour van. But I did not see it. Nor did I see my guides. My eyes grew big and my heart began to
race. I was alone in a crowd of dozens
of North Koreans all looking at me with that same indiscernible look I felt
that everyone in this country had when staring at me, a look that made me
wonder if they were fascinated by me, envied me, or despised me. They briskly passed by carrying on their
daily errands as I pondered what to do.
But I was finally alone in North Korea.
I was finally alone on the Pyongyang streets. I could fulfill my dream of taking a walk
unhindered along the capital’s wide boulevards.
I was free. “Over here!” My tour guide was flagging me down a short
distance away. The tour van was waiting
for me, but it was hard to see behind the throngs of people passing by. “Oh,
well,” I thought to myself, as my scheme faded.
I would not have actually gone on a walk around the city by myself like
that. My tour guides would have gotten
into serious trouble and they were too nice for me to let that happen to
them. But the dream was nice
regardless.
Inside a station in the Pyongyang
metro
Socialist mosaic
Watching over the subway train car
Locals riding the metro
In case you get lost…
The
last dinner in North Korea was at the Duck Barbecue Restaurant. As amazing as all the sights had been in the
DPRK, the food was something I began to look forward to the most, and something
I knew I would miss. Dinner featured
barbecued duck, appropriately so given the name of the eatery, along with
delicious spices, Korean tapas, and beer.
I took a picture of the hostess in her traditional Korean dress, and
then I was off back to the hotel for my last night in the country.
The
tour van had a lively conversation about North Korean family life en route back
to the hotel. Several tourists in my
group were living in China and noted that in China it is still fairly common
for parents to arrange marriages. “Not so here,” one of the guides replied. “In
the past, yes. But today it’s more and
more common for people to marry whomever they want.” Very nice, I thought. “You
live with your family in Korea, and when it’s time to get married, you let the
authorities know and they provide you with a new home. When you are ready to have kids, you get an
even bigger home.” A lot of moving around, I thought. “Is divorce prevalent
here?,” I asked. “Not too much. It’s
still a pretty rare phenomenon, though it does happen once in a while. If you get divorced, you have to surrender
your apartment and move back with your family.” “So if you’re 45 and you get
divorced, you have to move back in with your mom and dad?,” I
asked amusingly. “Yes.” No wonder no one gets divorced here, I chuckled to
myself. “But the state is generous with benefits. Mothers get time off to take care of their
children. And if you have twins, even
more so! But if you have triplets, the
government takes them from you and puts them in a state orphanage.” “What?!” I was
not quite sure I had heard that correctly, but since everyone in the van had
the same reaction, I figured my hearing likely had not been off. “Well, taking
care of three children at once is a big burden, so the state assumes the
responsibility.” Jaws were on the floor. “Do they take just one kid? Or two?,” I asked. “Nope, they take all
three,” was the response. “Oh,” I responded. “But you can visit them in the
state care facility as much as you’d like,” the tour guide continued, vainly
attempting to mitigate the shock of this information by demonstrating the
state’s generosity in providing unfettered visitation rights for the seized
triplets. “Oh,” I answered, now even more purposefully nonchalant. It was probably best, I figured, not to
inquire further. The van had arrived
back at the hotel now. After a beer at
the hotel bar, it was time to settle in for the night after a very busy day.
“Are
you coming down?,” my tour guide asked me on the telephone with a sense of
worry in her voice. The sun was peeking
through the curtains as I rubbed my tired eyes, half asleep lying in bed. “It’s
7:25.” I jumped out of the bed like a cannon. “What? How?” I was almost stuttering. I was supposed to have received a wake-up
call at 6:30 A.M. from the front desk.
My flight back to Beijing was at 9:00 A.M. As the hotel was not using an automated
wake-up call system, someone at the front desk must have forgotten to call. I threw my things together at an
uncomfortably fast speed. I got to the
lobby and met the tour guides. “I’m so sorry.
I didn’t get a wake-up call this morning.” I was apologetic and worried I
would never make the plane. The tour
guide got me a to-go breakfast as I ate on the road. My last few moments in Pyongyang were spent
with me trying to lower my blood pressure after the stressful morning, but I
tried to remain calm as I looked at the last of the city streets.
I
arrived at the airport 45 minutes before the flight was scheduled to
leave. In most of the world’s
international airports, this is a fatal sin that will likely result in the
passenger not flying, but at Sunan International Airport in Pyongyang, it was
no problem. I grabbed my bags from the
van and watched as a luxury car with a Russian flag flying on its fender
stopped short of hitting another tourist at the entrance to the airport. I gave a firm handshake and a warm hug to my
male and female guides, respectively. I
only knew them for a short time, but I would miss them.
I
made my way through passport control and in contrast to the stone-faced woman
who checked me in, the agent now looked very friendly, made small talk, and
asked me if I would return. “Absolutely, I love the DPRK,” I chimed back. He gave me a big smile. “Enjoy your flight,”
he said. “Kamsa Hamnida,” I responded. Thank
you.
I was back at Pyongyang airport’s famous tarmac, with the giant, welcoming picture of Kim Il Sung. The plane I was about to board was a lot older than the one I had arrived on. Most tourists leave by train, yet unfortunately Americans cannot leave by train and we must leave by plane, at least for now. The airplane I got on was an old Soviet-built vessel. I sat in the vintage seats, looked at the overhead compartments that did not close, and marveled that I could find myself in a plane so, well, kitschy. I took my camera out and began taking photos. “No pictures!,” I immediately heard. It was the same pretty young flight attendant who had chided me for taking photographs on my inbound flight. I smiled politely at her and put my camera away.
As
I sat on the plane as it took off and left the ground, I reflected on my trip
to North Korea. I had fulfilled a dream
of mine to see firsthand one of the world’s most unknown and least accessible
countries. My trip was only superficial
and I cannot pretend to have in depth knowledge of the nation beyond what I saw
and what I could easily deduce. I saw
what my guides wanted me to see and no more.
The only way you can get a deeper look into the country is if the
authorities trust you, which can take several return trips to achieve. From what I saw, Pyongyang was not the
underdeveloped backwater I was expecting.
Sure, it does not look like Shanghai by any stretch of the imagination,
but I have certainly visited more rundown places in the world.
The
few people who visit and report on what they saw sometimes push what I find to
be an inaccurate view of the country. Some
may either repeat a falsehood such as saying the DPRK does not admit tourists
or say it is extremely difficult to get in.
For the average tourist, the process to get a visa is not all that
difficult. Or others may paint a bleak
picture of a country that I will not say does not exist, but I doubt many of
them actually saw. The trip is tightly
controlled and honestly, a chaperoned tourist or journalist is unlikely to be
shown anything that will portray the country in too negative a light that they
could later report. But being shown or
told something while you know there is an alternate reality behind it is part
of the fun. There will still many
oddities and unusual sights that make North Korea truly an eye-opening place
unlike any other.
Many
things surprised me, but one did especially.
I knew I would love my time in the DPRK because I had always wanted an
inside look into the country. As many
people had told me, my desire to see the nation made me quite a rare breed
amongst travelers. But after leaving, I
realized that in fact any traveler with a modicum of adventure would find a
visit there just as fascinating and rewarding, too.
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