Media
being what it is these days, there is a lot of information being
broadcast regarding the situation in North Korea, all of which must
be taken with a grain of salt. What is stereotype and what is truth?
What is veiled jingoism and what reflects reality? For certain it
is understood North Koreans live under an oppressive regime, but to
what extent does the oppression extend? It is Pol Pot Year Zero
madness, or a milder version of socialism like that of Cold War
Poland, for example? Told from the mouth of a man who lived for
decades in the country and escaped, A River in Darkness: One Man’s
Escape from North Korea by Masaji Ishikawa sheds a first-hand
light on the realities of life in North Korea the past half-century,
and it’s not a pretty picture.
Caught
between two cultures and therefore not belonging to either, Ishikawa
was born to a Korean father and Japanese mother in Japan in the years
immediately following WWII. Looked down upon as low caste by the
Japanese, his family’s fortunes only change for the worse when they
give in to pressure and decide to repatriot to North Korea to live in
the socialist paradise said to be awaiting them. Called a ‘Japanese
bastard’ by everyone upon arrival, Ishikawa quickly learns that no
paradise awaits, only a hell far worse than the low caste existence
his family had in Japan. All of the relative luxuries they
owned—bicycles, washtubs, running water, etc.—now gone, in their
place are leaky roofs, forced indoctrination, bent-back farming, and
barely enough rice to feed the family, not to mention a social
environment prone to backstabbing, paranoia, and generally
scrabbling, egotistical behavior. Coming to terms with the life but
never accepting it, A River in Darkness describes the arc of
Ishikawa’s many years living in North Korea, and his eventual
escape.
Giving
weight to the media’s depiction of North Korea yet adding details
that complete the picture in real life, A River in Darkness
portrays existence in the “Democratic Republic” of North Korea in
terms that can only be described as frighteningly Orwellian. From
the military turning people out of their homes to irrational farming
methods that actually reduce yields, late night brain-washing
sessions to paradoxical political ideologies, starvation to freezing,
purges to interrogations to executions, the life described offers
tangible scenes that chill. A literal hell on Earth, nobody in the
Western world would wish for such an existence, likely even
prisoners. Our existence is certainly not without its flaws, yet
River highlights in concrete terms—nearly unbelievable
detail—just how much further certain societies outside North Korea
have evolved.
As
many readers (and film aficionados) are aware, Unbroken is one
of the most powerful stories of humanity’s survival in the face of
subjugation. A River in Darkness hits harder. Incapable of
not evoking in the reader fear, sympathy, and understanding for the
lives of North Koreans, it likewise induces deep questions regarding
the human ego and its capabilities, the effect of totalitarian rule
and oppression, and the meaning of human power paradigms and how we
fit into them. Impossible not to stick in the mind long after…
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