PSCORE People for Successful COrean REunification
managed by Y. Kim
About us
PSCORE is a non-profit, non-religious, non-partisan NGO based in Seoul, South Korea. PSCORE strives for mutual understanding and harmony between the two Koreas and aims to provide a platform to discuss topics such as democratization, human rights and social issues. PSCORE hopes to bridge the gap between South Korea, North Korea and the international community. PSCORE is not affiliated with any political organizations. One aspect of PSCOREās activities is the education program for North Korean defectors in which volunteers help the defectors to learn English through one-to-one tutoring and to gain confidence in themselves in order to be able to integrate into South Korean society. PSCORE collects detailed evidence about human rights abuses in North Korea through interviews with North Korean defectors/refugees living in South Korea. This data is used to create both written and innovative visual depictions of the human rights crisis in North Korea. PSCORE regularly holds campaigns and attends seminars and conferences. In 2012 PSCORE reached consultative status in the ECOSOC of the United Nations.
Latest project news
On Friday July 26th, Germany's most respected news organization, Deutsche Welle, featured an article about the workings of PSCORE within the defector community
Fighting in the Korean War war ended 60 years ago. Meanwhile, North and South Korea have grown further and further apart. For the 25,000 North Koreans who've defected to the south since 1953, fitting in is a challenge.
For Lee Min-young, life in South Korea was beyond her imagination. Now looking back, 10 years after her defection from North Korea, the 21-year old seems amazed that she's made it this far.
"When I first arrived here, I had a culture shock," Lee, who asked that her real name not be used, told DW. "I didn't know anything that other people my age knew, like using computers and the Internet or speaking English."
Lee is one of 25,000 North Koreans who now live below the demilitarized zone, the border that has divided the two Koreas since 1953. She and her mother escaped their homeland together, but were separated in China and never saw each other again. Lee only made it to South Korea with the help of Christian missionaries who still care for her to this day.
But resettlement isn't the end of the road for most refugees. Some say that getting by in hyper-competitive South Korea is even more frustrating and confusing than the lives they left behind. Overcoming discrimination is often the greatest obstacle.
Even though North Koreans have no trouble blending into South Korean society with their appearance, Lee say, their true origins are revealed every time they open their mouths.
"The way North Koreans speak is different from South Koreans. I was made fun of a lot because of my accent. I had a hard time communicating with them," she says.
Discrimination against defectors
Discrimination at the hands of South Koreans goes deeper than just different accents. North Koreans are looked down upon and distrusted because of their association with the regime in Pyongyang, say some observers.
"South Koreans have difficulty distinguishing between the North Korean government and its people," Shin Mi-nyeo of the Saejowi Initiative for National Integration, a research group in Seoul, says. "This bad image is where the discrimination begins."
Prejudice
combined with a lack of education and other skills taken for granted in
South Korea prevent many North Koreans from fully integrating, Shin
adds.
According to Seoul's Ministry of Unification, the government agency that handles refugee resettlement policy, the unemployment rate within the defector community is 7.5 percent, roughly twice the national average. The jobs they do find are generally low paid and ones that most South Koreans would not want to do.
Bridging the gap
Kim
Yong-il works to help refugees overcome the divide that prohibits many
from leading successful lives in the south. In 2006, Kim, a defector
himself, formed an organization called People for Successful Corean
Reunification (PSCORE), which relies on volunteers to help defectors
from the North bridge the gap.
The group provides free tutoring
services to about 600 people. Kim says the first step in bridging the
gap is teaching North Koreans the things they never learned back home.
"Refugees
cannot adapt to the education system here because in North Korea they
only learn about [past leaders] Kim Il Sung or Kim Jong Il," Kim told
DW. "Subjects that glorify the regime are the only things that really
count in North Korea."
But
beyond tutoring, Kim says one of the most important things PSCORE does
to help is creating an environment where Koreans from both sides of the
peninsula can interact. The volunteers are often South Koreans who want
to learn more about their brethren.
"One thing that's really
surprised me is just how similar we are," says 25-year-old volunteer Kim
Gina. "I tell my other South Korean friends that they are just like us,
they are normal people."
Breaking stereotypes
One of PSCORE's most popular programs is an English conversation class held each week at a police station in Seoul. In South Korea, English competency is a requirement for entrance into university as well as for many jobs.
Lee Min-young regularly attends the class. She says PSCORE has not only helped with her social welfare coursework at university, but she has also made many new friends through its programs.
Lee admits that before she got to know some of the South Korean volunteers, she had her own biases to overcome.
"I used to think all South Koreans were two-faced," she says, "but after meeting them here, my thinking has really changed."
DW.de, 2013.07.26 - http://www.dw.de/north-korea-defectors-face-long-road-to-integration-in-south/a-16973748Contact
Mijeong B/D 3F, 405-216, Mok 1-dong ,Yangcheon-gu
Seoul
South Korea
Y. Kim
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