Inside North Korea
INSIDE NORTH KOREA
Practice English with your teacher
Warm-up
Talk about these questions with your teacher.
선생님과 이야기해 보세요.
- The passage describes North Korea's food crisis in the 1990s. What do you know about the current situation in North Korea?
- The text says the "obvious solution" is for North Korea to open up to the outside world. Why do you think the regime has resisted this for so long?
Vocabulary
Listen and repeat after your teacher.
선생님을 따라 읽어보세요.
Reading
Read the passage with your teacher.
선생님과 함께 지문을 읽어보세요.
Kim Jong Il faces a difficult problem? Either opens up the country to the outside world
or face starvation for his people and a possible revolt against his authority. It’s not an easy choice, and he has to be a little worried.
Reports about food shortages in the north started appearing in the newspapers in late 1993 and now defectors from the north are saying that the food riots are becoming more and more common as people are desperate for food. Most experts think that Kim Jong Il’s government will fall if he cannot find a way to feed the people.
During the early 1990s Kim and his father before him tried to solve the problem by telling the people that eating too much was unhealthy and that the best way to live was to eat only two meals a day. But the food shortage is now more serious than ever.
One of the reasons for the new crisis is that North Korea can no longer depend on China for food aid. Because of a bad grain harvest in China in 1994, the Chinese government banned shipments of grain out of the country. That was the worst possible news for North Korea, because since 1992 North Korea had been getting 80 percent of its grain from China.
According to defectors, some people are being executed for committing robberies out of hunger. The food shortage in the North has turn into a serious social problem.
The obvious solution to the North’s problems seems to be very simple. The government has to open up to the outside world by allowing free movement in and out of the country through tourism and trade with foreign countries.
But the problem with that solution is that Kim Il spent decades lying to the people about how rich they were compared to the South. So by allowing the free movement of people and information in and out of the country, North Korean citizens will find out that their leaders have been lying to them. That would almost certainly downfall to the government. So what is Kim Jong Il going to do about the food crisis? He has to feed the
people to keep them happy, but he has no money to buy any food. If he opens up he country in order to get the money, the people will find out that they’ve been lied to, and then they might revolt. Kim Jong Il must have trouble sleeping at night.
Dialogue Practice
Practice the dialogue with your teacher.
선생님과 대화를 연습해 보세요.
1.Do you think there have been any changes in North Korea since the death of Kim Il
Sung in 1994? If so, what changes have occurred?2.Have South Koreans changed their opinion of North Korea since the death of Kim Il
Sung? Tell why you think so.3.There are also reports of riots(violent demonstration) in the North because of the
food shortage. Do you think those reports are true or not?4.What are the reasons why Kim Jong Il doesn’t want to open up the country to the
outside world?5.In this day of high technology and worldwide instant communication, northKoreans remain in a closed world, unaware of what is going on in the rest of theworld. How long do you think this situation can continue ? 2 years, 5 years longer?Tell why do you think so.
Korean Trap! / 한국인 실수 교정
Common mistakes Korean speakers make.
한국인이 자주 하는 실수를 알아봅시다.
'starve'는 동사이고, 'from' 뒤에는 명사가 와야 합니다. 'starvation'(기아)이 명사형입니다. 동사를 쓰려면 'The people are starving'으로 표현하세요.
Discussion
Share your thoughts with your teacher.
선생님과 의견을 나눠보세요.
- The passage presents Kim Jong Il's dilemma: open up or face revolt. Decades later, the regime still exists despite continued food shortages. What has sustained it?
- The text mentions the government telling people that "eating too much was unhealthy" to manage food shortages. How do authoritarian regimes use propaganda to control narratives about hardship?
- North Korea lost Chinese food aid when China banned grain exports. How does dependency on a single ally create vulnerability for nations?
- Defectors report people being executed for robberies driven by hunger. At what point does international intervention become a moral obligation?
- What are the most likely scenarios for the future of the Korean Peninsula, and which would be best for the people of both Koreas?
Lesson Summary / 수업 요약
Today's Topic: INSIDE NORTH KOREA
Level: Low Advanced (L.A)
Review this lesson before your next class! / 다음 수업 전에 복습하세요!