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I find this hopeful despite the inherent sadness involved... they have suffered and survived through so much, it just cannot be that they will lose their second chance at life because of difficulties adjusting to the new society. My heart and prayers go out to them....
Young N. Koreans face ostracism in South
But 'defector school' provides haven for teens adjusting to modern society
By Burt Herman
The Associated Press
Updated: 1:03 a.m. ET Jan. 22, 2006
SEOUL, South Korea - Wearing jeans, digital music players dangling from their necks and faces speckled with acne, they look like typical youth in South Korea. Only at this school, the students are all North Korean defectors, and the lessons here are aimed at more than getting good grades but at integrating them into a new way of life.
The Yeomyung School is one of a handful of small private schools seeking to keep young North Korean defectors from falling through the cracks of society in their new home. Many of the students have dropped out of regular South Korean schools, facing harassment from their peers for their differences and unable to apply lessons they learned in North Korea, where education is focused on churning out devoted followers of the totalitarian regime.
Defectors have flooded to the South in recent years, with a record 1,894 arriving in 2004. South Koreas Unification Ministry, in charge of North Korean issues, said it supports education for 1,659 defector students aged from 6 to 24 some 28 percent of all defectors now living in South Korea.
High drop-out rates
Statistics on the problem of how many defectors drop out of school are hard to find, but one civic group surveyed three top universities and found nearly 50 percent of defector students dropped out or were expelled. The group tried to get a more complete survey but a dozen other universities declined to respond to their questions.
The government has no will to take care of these kids, said Ma Sok-hun, head of the group Hanul Samter. The dropout rate is such an embarrassing result.
The Unification Ministry said it keeps statistics on dropouts but declined to release them, claiming they werent completely accurate.
All defectors young and old arriving in South Korea go through a three-month program at a high-security center that aims to give them basic knowledge for living in a capitalist society. Still, children heading back to regular school sometimes after years off while living in hiding as refugees in China before making it to the South find they simply cant keep up.
At first other children are nice to them but then they bully them in the end, said Woo Kee-sup, president of Yeomyung School. Most (defector) students cant survive at a normal school.
Realizing the problem, the Unification Ministry said it is planning to set up a transitional school for children next year.
But for now, the organizers of the Yeomyung School say theyre filling a need that the government has been reluctant to acknowledge, providing a lifeline for children defectors since opening in September 2004.
Modern society overwhelming
The North Korean youths have had to cope with famine and economic crisis, and know how to get by with only the basic necessities for life. But Cho Myung-sook, vice president of the Yeomyung School, noted that South Koreas modern society is simply too complicated for many with its always-wired technology culture and breakneck development.
Even youth who have had higher education in North Korea cant adapt themselves to South Korea, she said.
Woo said only about 100 students attend special schools like Yeomyung which administrators said was the largest of four such full-time facilities in South Korea with capacity for 30 youths, who range in age from 17 to 25. Located on a bustling street in a southern Seoul neighborhood, the school takes up two floors of a commercial building with three classrooms, a dining hall and computer center.
Students attend Yeomyung for up to three years, and the school boasts that all seven of its graduates last year were accepted to universities.
Deprogramming students
The school is funded by about 20 churches and other private donations, and bible classes are a part of the curriculum. Students are taught they shouldnt be subject to ideology like in the North, but that each are precious sons and daughters of God, said Cho.
In one classroom, a student speaking in a North Korean accent reads a Korean legend from a standard middle-school textbook. Other lessons focus on famous artists, or talking about how history can be viewed from different perspectives, teachers said. Math, English and sociology are also taught.
Those who attend are fed and given transportation vouchers. Teachers also visit students at home on weekends to bring extra food, all part of the nurturing environment they seek to create for the defectors.
The students include five youths who braved the trip to the South on their own, without any relatives. One 21-year-old who is alone here said his hunger drove him at age 11 to swim across the river forming the North Korea-China border. He survived in China by begging, gaining the help of a South Korean priest to get schooling in China before making it to the South last year.
I dont have the basic knowledge to attend South Korean school, said the student, who didnt want his name publicized because of fears that relatives in the North could face punishment. It was Gods will to bring me here, he said of the Yeomyung School.
Lonely, but hope for the future
The student said the toughest part about living in the South now is spending holidays alone. He has tried to contact his parents back in his home village, but had heard they were dead, possibly from famine.
In the future, the student said he hopes to become an architect or doctor, possibly one day returning to the North if the Koreas are reunited.
The schools president Woo said thats just what he hopes that someday his students can serve to help reintegrate the Koreas that both deeply long for reunification after decades of division.
If North Koreans dont understand South Koreans, these children can help them, be like ambassadors, he said. Thats why God let them live.
© 2006 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
© 2006 MSNBC.com
URL: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/10909939/