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'''Hyeonseo Lee''' (Korean: 이현서, born 1981 or 1982)<ref name="Korea Times 2012">{{cite news |url=http://web.archive.org/web/20150313073230/http://www.koreatimes.co.kr/www/news/special/2012/02/181_104943.html |title=It’s up to you to get life rolling |work=The Korea Times |last=Yun |first=Suh-young |date=February 15, 2012 |quote=Lee Hyeon-seo, a 30 year-old sophomore at Hankuk University of Foreign Studies}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |url=http://psiareview.org/2013/03/25/escape-from-north-korea/ |title=Escape from North Korea |work=PSIA Review |first=Garrett |last=Redfield |date=March 25, 2013 |archiveurl=http://web.archive.org/web/20150206062308/http://psiareview.org/2013/03/25/escape-from-north-korea/ |archivedate=2015-02-06}}</ref> is a [[North Korea]]n [[defector]] and activist who now lives in [[South Korea]], where she is a student. She escaped from North Korea, and later personally guided her family to freedom from the country through [[China]] and [[Laos]].
'''Hyeonseo Lee''' (Korean: 이현서, born 1981 or 1982)<ref name="Korea Times 2012">{{cite news|url=http://www.koreatimes.co.kr/www/news/special/2012/02/181_104943.html |title=It’s up to you to get life rolling |work=The Korea Times |last=Yun |first=Suh-young |date=February 15, 2012 |quote=Lee Hyeon-seo, a 30 year-old sophomore at Hankuk University of Foreign Studies |deadurl=yes |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20150313073230/http://www.koreatimes.co.kr/www/news/special/2012/02/181_104943.html |archivedate=March 13, 2015 }}</ref><ref>{{cite web |url=http://psiareview.org/2013/03/25/escape-from-north-korea/ |title=Escape from North Korea |work=PSIA Review |first=Garrett |last=Redfield |date=March 25, 2013 |archiveurl=http://web.archive.org/web/20150206062308/http://psiareview.org/2013/03/25/escape-from-north-korea/ |archivedate=2015-02-06}}</ref> is a [[North Korea]]n [[defector]] and activist who now lives in [[South Korea]], where she is a student. She escaped from North Korea, and later personally guided her family to freedom from the country through [[China]] and [[Laos]].


==Early life in North Korea==
==Early life in North Korea==

Revision as of 16:52, 31 March 2016

Template:Korean name

Lee Hyeon-seo
Hyeonseo Lee in 2013
Born1981-1982
NationalityNorth Korean
CitizenshipSouth Korean
Alma materHankuk University of Foreign Studies
OccupationActivist
Known forNorth Korean defector

Hyeonseo Lee (Korean: 이현서, born 1981 or 1982)[1][2] is a North Korean defector and activist who now lives in South Korea, where she is a student. She escaped from North Korea, and later personally guided her family to freedom from the country through China and Laos.

Early life in North Korea

Lee grew up in Hyesan, North Korea. "When I was young, I thought my country was the best on the planet," Lee explained in her TED talk in February 2013. "I grew up singing a song called ‘Nothing to Envy’. I felt very proud. I thought my life in North Korea was normal, even though when I was seven years old, I saw my first public execution." Her family was not poor, but after the North Korean famine struck in the 1990s, she witnessed much suffering and death.[3]

She later recalled a letter her mother received from the sister of a colleague, stating "When you read this, all five family members will not exist in this world, because we haven't eaten for the past two weeks… We are lying on the floor together, and our bodies are so weak we are ready to die." Not long afterwards, Lee "saw another shocking sight outside a train station – a woman was lying on the ground apparently dead, with a starving child in her arms staring at her face." Lee later said, "Nobody helped them, because they were so focused on taking care of themselves and their families."[4]

Escape

China

In 1997, Lee crossed the frozen Yalu River alone to in cahoots with a friendly border guard to fulfill a dream she had before going off to college, only planning to stay a short while before returning. However, due to complications with the North Korean security police, she had to live with relatives in China as an illegal immigrant. At one point, after being accused of being North Korean, she was interrogated by police and tested on her Chinese and her knowledge of China. Fortunately for her, she passed the test.

South Korea

After 10 years of hiding her identity and living in fear in China, Lee managed to escape to South Korea.[3] Arriving at Incheon International Airport in January 2008, she entered the immigration office and declared her identity as a North Korean asylum-seeker. She "was quickly ushered into another room," where officials inspected her papers, asked her if she was actually Chinese, and "informed me that I would be incarcerated for an unspecified period of time and then deported back to China if I was in violation of Korean law.

Moreover, if the Chinese government learned that I was not actually a Chinese citizen, I would be jailed, heavily fined and then deported again: back to North Korea." She asked them to call the National Intelligence Service, which three hours later drove her into downtown Seoul.[5] She studied for the university entrance exam.[3]

She was put through an orientation course for life in South Korea, then given a house to live in. She "started out with mixed feelings of fear and excitement, but settling down turned out to be far more challenging than I had expected. I realized there was a wide gap between North and South, ranging from educational background to cultural and linguistic differences. We are a racially homogeneous people on the outside, but inside we have become very different as a result of the 63 years of division."[5]

She also endured anti-North Korean prejudice, and sometimes thought "it would be so much easier to return to China." After "a year of confusion and disorder," however, she "finally managed to find meaning in [her] new life."[5]

Family escape

Lee received word that North Korean police had intercepted money she had sent to her family through a broker, and that her mother and brother were "going to be forcibly removed to a desolate location in the countryside".[3] Lee agonized over the issue for a while and decided to go back for them, knowing that neither of them could speak or understand Chinese. She returned to China, sneaked into North Korea, and helped her mother and brother back over the border into China.[5]

She then guided them on a 2000-mile trip through China, during which they "were almost caught several times." At one point, when they were stopped and interrogated by a police officer, Lee told him that her family, who could not understand Chinese, that they were deaf and dumb people that she was chaperoning. He accepted the story and let them pass.[3] At the Laotian border, Lee met a broker and paid him to take her mother and brother across the border and to the South Korean Embassy in Vientiane. On her way to an airport in China to fly back to South Korea, however, she was informed that her mother and brother "had been caught as they crossed the border."

She then proceeded to travel to Luang Namtha, Laos, where she paid a bribe and fine and after a month of ordeals her family members were released.[5] She traveled with them to Vientiane, where her family members were arrested and jailed again, "just a short distance from the South Korean embassy."[3] Lee went back and forth between the Immigration Office and the National Police Agency for almost fifty days,[5] "desperately trying to get my family out … but I didn't have enough money to pay the bribes. I lost all hope."

To her luck, however, an English-speaking stranger, later identified in her autobiography as an affable Australian named Dick Stolp, asked her: "What's wrong?" She explained, in her broken English, with the use of a dictionary, and that "the man went to the ATM and paid the rest of the money for my family and two other North Koreans to get out of jail." When she asked him, "Why are you helping me?," he replied, "I'm not helping you….I'm helping the North Korean people." Lee described this as "a symbolic moment in my life," with the man serving as a symbol of "new hope for me and other North Koreans….He showed me that the kindness of strangers and the support of the international community are truly the rays of hope that the North Korean people need."[3]

She later said that this encounter marked the moment "when my view of the world changed and I realized there were many good people on this planet. I also realized how precious life is."[5] Soon she and her family were living in South Korea.[3]

Current life

In 2011, Lee wrote that she was learning English "to boost my prospects," noting that North Koreans’ "lack of English is a handicap" on the job market. In China, she had devoted a great deal of time to learning Chinese, but "never thought I would be under this much stress about language in South Korea." She also worked part-time and "took accounting classes at different institutes and obtained the certifications needed for work." In 2011, she was "admitted to the Chinese language department of the Hankuk University of Foreign Studies (by special admission). [She] chose the language as [her] major hoping that [she] would be able to take part in ever increasing trade with China."

She noted that she was also "working at South Korea’s Ministry of Unification as a student journalist alongside South Korean college students. [She wrote] articles about the relationship between North and South Korea as well as the possibility for reunification." In addition, she was one of "50 college students who had escaped from North Korea for the ‘English for the Future’ program sponsored by the British Embassy in Seoul, which helps [her] keep up [her] English studies."

She also was doing volunteer work "out of gratitude for all the aid I have received since I came here and of hope to return the favor to other people in need."[5] As of May 2014, Lee was still studying at the Hankuk University of Foreign Studies and working as a student journalist with the Ministry of Unification.[6]

Activist work

Lee spoke about her experiences at a TED conference in Long Beach, California, in February 2013.[7] The YouTube video of her talk has received over 3 million views.[8]

In May 2013, Lee appeared on an Australian TV program on which she was reunited with the stranger who had helped her in Vientiane in 2009, Australian Dick Stolp. "I was really happy," said Lee. "He says, ‘I’m not a hero,’ but I say he is a modern hero." Stolp said: "You help a small hand and it reaches to other hands and you think, ‘That’s great, that’s good stuff.’…I’m meeting someone who is now doing good things, and inside I can’t help but feel ‘Hey! I helped this lady to go out and change her life.’"[7] She has been interviewed by the BBC, CNN, CBS News, and many other TV and radio outlets in countries around the world.[8]

She spoke at the Oslo Freedom Forum in May 2014.[6]

References

  1. ^ Yun, Suh-young (February 15, 2012). "It's up to you to get life rolling". The Korea Times. Archived from the original on March 13, 2015. Lee Hyeon-seo, a 30 year-old sophomore at Hankuk University of Foreign Studies {{cite news}}: Unknown parameter |deadurl= ignored (|url-status= suggested) (help)
  2. ^ Redfield, Garrett (March 25, 2013). "Escape from North Korea". PSIA Review. Archived from the original on 2015-02-06.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h Lee, Hyeonseo (April 14, 2013). "Why I fled North Korea". CNN.
  4. ^ Gye, Hugo (April 15, 2013). "'I saw my first execution at SEVEN': North Korean defector reveals ordeal of growing up in dictatorship where famine was so bad the streets were lined with dead bodies". Daily Mail.
  5. ^ a b c d e f g h Gale, Alastair (July 11, 2011). "A Defector's Tale: Lee Hyeon-seo". Wall Street Journal.
  6. ^ a b "Oslo Freedom Forum: Speakers" (PDF). OsloFreedomForum.com. May 12, 2014. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2014-04-21.
  7. ^ a b Ha, Thu-Huong (May 20, 2013). "North Korean defector Hyeonseo Lee reunited with the man who saved her family". TED Blog.
  8. ^ a b "Hyeonseo Lee". Premium-Speakers.hk. Archived from the original on 2014-08-08.