Hyeonseo Lee

The Girl with Seven Names: A North Korean Defector’s Story

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  • Anna Chasovikovahas quotedlast year
    What were na chos, pop corn, and co la? Of course I knew these snacks, from China. But English transliterated into Korean words baffled me. And, as I soon found, there were many more. When people mentioned that they were in the elebaytoh,leaving their apateu to catch a tekshi to a meeting, I felt embarrassed. I had no idea what they were talking about
  • Anna Chasovikovahas quotedlast year
    The woman asked to be helped down.
    The policeman reached up to her. As she took his hand, her free arm shot up and her fist closed over the electrified wire above the train. Both were killed instantly. She must have thought, If I’m going, I’m taking this bastard with me
  • Anna Chasovikovahas quotedlast year
    In the villages children had to bring a quota of their own excrement to school for use as fertilizer.
  • Anna Chasovikovahas quotedlast year
    In North Korea, suicide is taboo. Not only is it considered gravely humiliating to the surviving family members, it also guarantees that any children left behind will be reclassified as ‘hostile’ in the songbunsystem and denied university entrance and the chance of a good job.
  • Anna Chasovikovahas quotedlast year
    Schooling in North Korea is free, though in reality parents are perpetually being given quotas for donations of goods, which the school sells to pay for facilities.
  • Anna Chasovikovahas quotedlast year
    We ate out quite often at restaurants that served naengmyeon, for which Hamhung is famous. These are noodles served in an ice-cold beef broth with a tangy sauce, although there are many variations. My mother would eat naengmyeon with her eyes closed in pure pleasure. She loved it to the point of addiction
  • Anna Chasovikovahas quotedlast year
    They reported to the provincial bureau of the Ministry of State Security, the Bowibu.This was the secret police. The translation doesn’t convey the power the word Bowibuhas to send a chill through a North Korean. Its very mention, as the poet Jang Jin-sung put it, was enough to silence a crying child
  • Anna Chasovikovahas quotedlast year
    Her safekeeping of the cards ensured the family’s high songbun. Those who destroyed their cards as the Americans approached were later to fall under suspicion. Some were purged violently and sent to the gulag.
  • drgnnxhas quoted5 years ago
    When you’ve lived your whole adult life as I had, calculating the cost of even the smallest decision, such generosity wasn’t easy to accept.
  • drgnnxhas quoted5 years ago
    A few were backpacking white Westerners in high spirits. I looked at them with envy. They were inhabitants of that other universe, governed by laws, human rights and welcoming tourist boards. It was oblivious to the one I inhabited, of secret police, assumed IDs and low-life brokers.
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