Ranked No. 1 on watchdog Open Doors’ World Watch List for 12
consecutive years as the worst persecutor of Christians on the globe, North
Korea is estimated to have imprisoned between 50,000 and 70,000 Christians for
failing to revere their “Dear Leader,” the title initiated by previous dictator
Kim Jong-il and adopted by his successor and son Kim Jong-un, as a god.
“It is safe to say that nothing has improved for Christians
since Kim Jong-un took over power,” Open Doors states in its 2014 World Watch
List featuring 50 countries where persecution of Christians for religious
reasons is most severe. There are an estimated 300,000 Christians in North
Korea, officially known as the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea.
Open Doors adds, “The God-like worship of the rulers leaves
no room for any other religion. Any reverence not concentrated on the Kim
dynasty will be seen as dangerous and state-threatening. Not only will the
believers themselves be punished if they are discovered, but likely also their
families. Immediate family members, even if they aren’t Christians themselves,
will serve a sentence in a re-education camp. Christians are sent to political
labor camps, from which there is no release possible.
When not hosting basketball clinics with former NBA champs,
allegedly diverting food aid from its starving populace, conducting nuclear
tests, building multi-million dollar monuments, or executing “treasonous”
family members in reportedly the most vicious of ways, the North Korean
oppressive-paranoia machine is busy wrangling, imprisoning, and killing
citizens who stray from the dictatorial demands of its Juche ideology’s “Ten
Great Principles,” or commandments.
“The ‘Ten Great Principles of the Establishment of the
Unitary Ideology System’ is the highest norm that governs the daily lives of
North Korean people,” according to the Citizens’ Alliance for North Korean
Human Rights. The principles and their 65 clauses, first conceived by the
brother of DPRK founder Kim Il-sung in 1967, was officially initiated among the
populace by Kim Jong-il in 1974.
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North Koreans bow before the statues of Kim Il-sung (left) and Kim Jong-il on Mansu Hill in the capital of Pyongyang |
Reportedly among the principles meant to establish a Kim
family personality cult and govern the thoughts and activities of North Korea’s
24.7 million residents are directives to “accept the Great Leader Comrade Kim
Il-sung’s revolutionary thought as your belief and take the Great Leader’s
instructions as your creed” and to “respectfully worship our beloved Great
Leader Comrade Kim Il Sung’s sculptures, plaster casts, bronze statues, badges
with portraits, art developed by the Great Leader, board with Great Leader’s
instructions, [and] basic mottos of the Party.”
Those who fail to obey state ideology find themselves, as do
their complicit or innocent family members, facing capital punishment or a
tortuous life inside one of North Korea’s known six prison camps (No. 14, 15,
16, 18, 22, and 25). In Nov. 2013, there were reports that the government had
publicly executed 80 people, some of them for being in possession of Bibles or
watching South Korean videos.
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