Six months of living in the
This ignorance was not willful. Before my arrival in
But as early morning light flashed through a tall barbed fence just outside the bus window on way to the Korean Demilitarized Zone, my apprehension turned to a feeling of menace that lodged itself deep and distinct amongst my innards - and there parts of it have remained.
* * * * * *
That cold Tuesday February morning, my friend Emily and I sprung from our beds with deep excitement and it was still dark when we were waved through the guarded gates of
As the sky grew lighter, the bus carried us out of the city on a many-laned freeway where traffic became sparser the further north we traveled. When we had pulled even with a large river, devoid of human life besides the occasional flicker from the regular camouflage forts that sat just below the barbed fence, Joseph again stood to provide us with some background.
In a factual tone pitched low by what seemed to be a mix of anger and sorrow, he reminded us that peace on the Korean peninsula is suspended between 6 parties:
Today, the active military force of
While in the skies, the North Korean air force has a 2/1 airplane numerical advantage – their 1700 aircraft are now secreted in hollowed hills and underground facilities.
In a war between the two nations,
With these stats (which I cannot retrospectively verify), suddenly the barbed wire outside my window had a purpose and
Joseph grimly continued.
The South Korean capital,
“Life in
Passengers on the bus were seriously silent but our minds must’ve all wandered to the same place: remembering the joint smiles and raised hands of Kim, Dae-Jung and Kim, Jong-Il during their meeting at the height of the Sunshine Policy. Joseph informed us that “South Koreans” do not like the Sunshine Policy, the name of which comes from an Aesop fable and the policy is formed of three tenants: no armed provocation from the North will be tolerated, the South will not attempt to absorb the North, and the South actively seeks cooperation. “Why don’t South Koreans like this policy?” I wondered as the highway disappeared and we found ourselves stopped and then waved through the guard post for the JSA.
The JSA, Joint Security Area, is a 1950s era fort bordering the DMZ, shared by UN operations but mostly staffed by Republic of Korea (aka South Korea, in US Military speak “RoK”) and US troops. I craned my head to read the slogan on the water tower (“Infront of them all”) while our group was greeted by a US Soldier who meant business when he instructed us to leave everything on the bus and herded us into a no-frills auditorium where we were handed security badges, made to sign releases (“no need to read it, ma ‘am”), and yanked through a 15 minute debriefing regarding the history of the DMZ and JSA in about 7 minutes. There was a lot to absorb and we civilians continued our quiet as we were placed in different buses by the same soldier who debriefed us, a guy who I quickly summed up as a brilliant, attractive, ball-breaker with a wicked sense of humor and screwed up personal life while equally quickly, he summed me up (accurately) as the annoying woman who would be asking annoying questions throughout the tour. There is always one in the crowd.
After we had put our cameras away, we were driven through fortifications and into the DMZ. The roads were comfortably, if not newly paved, while the surrounding foliage was dead with winter. As we made our way into the interior, we were told about the one remaining village in the DMZ where South Koreans do live and given a glimpse of the famous empty North Korean propaganda village. We stopped at an unused 1990s era building (built for families to reunite) and were escorted into a courtyard occupied by several buildings little fancier than light blue painted huts. These huts, we were told, were on the border between North and
Eventually we were allowed past a RoK soldier positioned half out and half behind the hut and into a building furnished with a central, gleaming dark wood table surrounded by smaller, advisory wooden tables. We were let loose to take pictures, as long as we didn’t touch the RoK soldiers, and while we were milling and clicking, we were told a story: once upon a time, a high level official of the
(to be continued). --Laura