Read My Holiday in North Korea Online
Authors: Wendy E. Simmons
7. As mentioned, Koreans believe their first Dear dead Great Leader is still running the country—literally calling the shots—from his glass-encased mausoleum inside the Kumsusan Memorial. In fact the North Korean people refer to Kim Il-sung as their Eternal Leader—and in addition to him being an all-around amazing human being and one awesome guy, Koreans will proudly tell you he is also their sun (as in
shine
) and their father (as in
dada
…ism). Do not laugh. It’s one hundred percent true. They swear to Sung.
8. As if they’re not busy enough running the country while dead, and being gods and the sun, etc., the Great Leaders are also expert geniuses at literally everything. Whenever mortal man is in a bind, a Dear Great Leader (living or dead) needs simply to show up, stand, and point—officially referred to as providing “on-the-spot guidance”—and presto chango, all is great. Just like that of their fictional superhero counterparts, the preternatural genius of the Great Leaders knows no bounds. They effortlessly dispense expert advice on everything from hydroelectricity and satellite technology to proper desk height and SPFs. Every place you visit during your trip—from the hospital to the dam (which the Koreans call the Barrage)—has the Dear Great Leader’s on-the-spot guidance written all over it, usually in the form of a commemorative plaque (red writing on paper in a frame) or some kind of monument (red writing etched in concrete walls, red writing etched in rocks), which you will stand staring at while your handlers or local guide retell His Supreme Genius’s genius advice, given at that very spot. Try not to think too hard about why such a supreme genius can’t sort out the country’s chronic lack of toilet paper, water, electricity, and food. This too is considered impolite to ask about.
9. Be it the statues, murals, monuments, or commemorative plaques, or the billboards, signs, posters, paintings, or photos that dot every spot—from street corners to schools, parks to stamps—propaganda is
everywhere
. Taught in school, enforced at home, played on the radio, blasted from loudspeakers day and night. Only government-approved books, art, film, music, and fun exist. No freedom of the press, no internet, no outside news, no outside
anything.
Unless it’s Great Leader love (specifically, how great and smart the Great Leaders are, how great and smart the Great Leaders are at being great and smart, and how great and smart the Great Leaders are at giving genius on-the-spot guidance) or how strong and powerful their military is (particularly when crushing the American Imperialists), or how disgusting and despicable the U.S. and South Korea are (just in general), or how pleasing and fantastic their lives are in North Korea—basically anything other than propaganda simply does not exist, and it will be force-fed to you from the moment you arrive until the second you leave.
10. Koreans have adopted a calendar system predicated on Kim Il-sung’s birthday instead of Jesus Christ’s. Year one is 1912, the year the Dear Great Leader was born, making 2014 year 103, 2015 year 104, and so on. They correlate his birthday and other important dates in his life to all kinds of things: the length of a road, the number of floors in a building, the number of lines in a poem, and how many people can fit in an elevator. Your local guides and handlers will often say things like, “The poem on this rock is written in three lines of forty-eight characters each because our father, who is our sun, was born on this day.” They will also tell you in what years and how many times a Great Leader has visited every place you go. If you add the Great Leader’s birthday to the number of places he’s visited and multiply by the years, you can probably calculate pi.
11. If you want to push your handler’s buttons, ask about the giant elephant in the room, the Ryugyong Hotel. This towering pyramid, which defines the Pyongyang skyline, has been under construction since the 1980s and still isn’t finished. This is particularly curious because, according to your handlers, every other structure erected in North Korea, regardless of size or complexity, took no time at all to build.
DAY ONE
Cut to: immediately upon arrival anywhere in North Korea, when Wendy was still being polite
.
OLDER HANDLER: To be honest, this building is 600,000 square meters and took three weeks to build.
ME: Wow. That’s very impressive.
DAY SIX
Cut to: immediately upon arrival anywhere in North Korea. Wendy, no longer so polite.
OLDER HANDLER: This building is 800,000 square meters and took one month to build.
ME,
to myself
: Huh, that seems pretty unlikely. There’s absolutely no way you were able to build this gigantic thirty-story building in only thirty days since you have no power tools or electricity or running water. On the other hand you are a country of slaves, so I guess it’s possible your Dear Great Leader could have just said, “Hey, you 300,000 normal people are going to do nothing for the next thirty days but build this building, and I don’t really care how many of you die doing it.” (He probably whispered that last bit.)
So, it’s equally likely that it’s true, or not true, which is the fundamental conundrum with everything everyone says to you in North Korea, and it will slowly make you crazy.
ME,
aloud
: Uh huh. That’s pretty fast.
OLDER HANDLER: Yes.
ME: So then let me ask you this…what’s the deal with that pyramid hotel? I mean it’s been under construction for what, like 30 years? Why can’t they get it done? What’s the holdup? I bet it’s still completely empty inside! Have you been inside? But you’re a guide…surely as a guide they’d want you to see inside. When will it be finished? Why wouldn’t they tell the guides? I just don’t understand. I mean if they can build an entire movie studio in a week, why can’t they get one hotel finished?
OLDER HANDLER,
while making a sweeping, grandiose arm gesture
: Who can know the future?
ME: Well, I thought your Dear Great dead Leader could?
OLDER HANDLER,
VERY tight smile
.
12. Unless you’re inside your hotel, where you’re free to roam alone, you will never be without your handlers and usually your driver. And every place you go, you and your handlers and driver will be met by local guides, sometimes one, sometimes a few, sometimes many. So at each of eight to ten activities scheduled for every single day (I was on a solo private tour, so this could be different for people on group or preplanned tours), you are suffocated in bombast by entirely new groups of people. As a single person who lives alone because I like it, I found this, above all else, to be one of the hardest parts of my trip. I could not wait to get back to my room at night so I could decompress from ALL THE TALKING
AT
ME.
13. You can take photos of almost anything you want in Pyongyang. This is because Pyongyang is the Workers’ Party of Korea’s gleaming showcase city. Even so, the Party and your handlers do their best to keep your movements restricted to the official tourist routes, and almost everything is staged, and the following photographic subjects are strictly forbidden:
Conversely, you are not allowed to take photos of anything outside of Pyongyang without prior authorization from your handlers or local guides because the rest of the country is a primitive, third-world shithole. You will entertain yourself devising ways to thwart this.
14. Everyone in North Korea lies to you about everything, all the time. Doesn’t matter what, who, or why, or whether it’s small stuff or big stuff. And when they aren’t outright lying to you, they’re either purposely unclear, or evasive—or if they really object to what you’re asking or saying, they’ll just pretend you aren’t talking or they can’t hear you.
Cut to: Older Handler, Fresh Handler, and Wendy standing in the driveway of the Koryo Hotel, waiting for Driver to pull the car up. It’s raining.
ME: Sad. It’s raining.
OLDER HANDLER: Very lucky. Nice sunny day.
ME: It’s raining.
OLDER HANDLER: No.
ME: Yes, it’s raining. See?
OLDER HANDLER,
tight smile.
15. Everything in NoKo is the same everywhere. Everyone wears the same 1950s-era clothing or uniforms. All the local guides have the same hairstyles and speak in the same urgent whisper. All the buildings have the same basic decor. It’s all the same marble, the same wall coverings, the same chairs, the same tablecloths, the same bicycles, the same uniforms, the same smiling portraits of the dead Great Leaders, the same bowls and the same beer.
16. Bring only small-denomination bills as spending money—euros, RMB, or U.S. dollars will do—because there is no change in North Korea. By small, I mean
small
. By no change, I mean
no change
. Even so, more than once I was given bottled water as change for small-denomination bills.
17. Whether you’re on an independent tour, as I was, or a scheduled group tour like most everyone else, everything you do in North Korea is nearly flawlessly scheduled in advance by the Korean International Travel Company (KITC). The company meticulously plans for and prepares every detail of your hour-by-hour itinerary with military precision, making sure everything is in place and everyone is on script, so you will leave North Korea believing it’s the best place on Earth. They are the ultimate event planners. Whether it’s a tour of the Fatherland Liberation War Museum or a visit to an orphanage, the KITC has it covered. But, as you actually are on Earth, interruptions will occur, and when they do, DISCUSSIONS will be had. The length and severity of said DISCUSSIONS are wholly dependent on the nature of the anomaly. Arrive someplace and the local guide is sitting down instead of standing up: a threatening grunt or two will do, as the guide jumps to his or her feet like the chair has suddenly caught fire. Wendy deciding at breakfast she doesn’t want to go to the town of Sinchon to visit the Sinchon Museum of American War Atrocities: CODE RED! DIS-CUSS-IONS! And since there are no cars on the roads, or lines to contend with anywhere, the KITC can control time, too, choosing to schedule start times on less commonly used increments like 7:55 a.m., 1:35 p.m., or 6:55 p.m.