Kim Young Soon | Những Bài Hát Tâm Trạng Hay Nhất Của Kim Jun See 2019 | Kim Jun See 답을 믿으세요

당신은 주제를 찾고 있습니까 “kim young soon – NHỮNG BÀI HÁT TÂM TRẠNG HAY NHẤT CỦA KIM JUN SEE 2019 | KIM JUN SEE“? 다음 카테고리의 웹사이트 https://chewathai27.com/you 에서 귀하의 모든 질문에 답변해 드립니다: Chewathai27.com/you/blog. 바로 아래에서 답을 찾을 수 있습니다. 작성자 KhangProFilm 이(가) 작성한 기사에는 조회수 3,101,395회 및 좋아요 17,269개 개의 좋아요가 있습니다.

kim young soon 주제에 대한 동영상 보기

여기에서 이 주제에 대한 비디오를 시청하십시오. 주의 깊게 살펴보고 읽고 있는 내용에 대한 피드백을 제공하세요!

d여기에서 NHỮNG BÀI HÁT TÂM TRẠNG HAY NHẤT CỦA KIM JUN SEE 2019 | KIM JUN SEE – kim young soon 주제에 대한 세부정보를 참조하세요

1. ANH QUÁ NHẪN TÂM
2. VỊ TRÍ CỦA EM SAO BẰNG CÔ TA
3. QUÊN ANH TRONG TỪNG CƠN ĐAU
4. ANH NỢ EM MỘT HẠNH PHÚC ft Lâm Chấn Khang
5. PHẬN BÈO TRÔI
6. CÁI XÁC KHÔNG HỒN
————————————————————-
LIÊN HỆ QUẢNG CÁO trực tiếp qua email công ty KhangProFilm: [email protected]
————————————————————-
© Video Độc Quyền Bởi KhangProFilm. Nghiêm cấm sao chép dưới mọi hình thức !!!
————————————————————-
@ More Information About KHANGPROFILM \u0026 LÂM CHẤN KHANG:
► KhangProFilm’s Official Channel: http://metub.net/khangprofilm
► KhangProFilm’s FanPage: https://www.facebook.com/khangprofilm2017/
► Lâm Chấn Khang’s Official Channel: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCKuYWB_2cCBwmgkZYI0iF3g
► Lâm Chấn Khang’s Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/khangprofilm
► Lâm Chấn Khang’s FanPage: https://www.facebook.com/lamchankhangfanpage/
► Lâm Chấn Khang’s Official FanClub: https://www.facebook.com/fclamchankhang.official/
#LamChanKhang #KhangProFilm #Official #Channel #FanPage #FanClub

kim young soon 주제에 대한 자세한 내용은 여기를 참조하세요.

Tin tức mới nhất về Kim Young soon | baotintuc.vn

Kim Young soon- baotintuc.vn cập nhật thông tin mới nhất, nhanh nhất và đầy đủ nhất về chủ đề Kim Young soon.

+ 여기에 보기

Source: baotintuc.vn

Date Published: 4/19/2021

View: 5634

Kim Young Soon on North Korea’s secret prison camps …

Kim was imprisoned in Yodok after the authorities realised she knew of her friend’s affair with Kim Jong Il. Her family were imprisoned with her …

+ 더 읽기

Source: www.amnesty.org.uk

Date Published: 2/20/2022

View: 3840

Young Soon Kim – Artistic Director – WHITE WAVE … – LinkedIn

The mission of WHITE WAVE YOUNG SOON KIM DANCE COMPANY, a 10-member company formed in 1988, is to inspire audiences of all cultures with the multi-dimensional …

+ 여기에 표시

Source: www.linkedin.com

Date Published: 10/29/2022

View: 2216

Young Soon Kim – North Korean Defector

Hello, my name is KIM, Young Soon, author of “I Was a Friend of Sung Hae Rim”. I am a North Korean defector and a survivor of the North Korean political …

+ 자세한 내용은 여기를 클릭하십시오

Source: www.northkoreanchristians.com

Date Published: 2/26/2022

View: 6600

Young Soon Kim – Facebook

Formed in 1988, WHITE WAVE Young Soon Kim Dance Company (WHITE WAVE) strives to inspire audiences through multi-dimensional dance productions reflecting …

+ 여기에 보기

Source: www.facebook.com

Date Published: 2/2/2022

View: 810

Kim Young Soon: Sentenced to Yodok Concentration Camp …

Kim Young Soon, a former celebrated dancer in North Korea. In her 2008 book entitled “I was Sung Hye-rim’s Friend,” Ms. Kim described her ordeal …

+ 여기에 보기

Source: www.jieunbaek.com

Date Published: 6/15/2022

View: 8377

Kim Yong-soon | Photographer – ArchDaily

Latest images from architectural photographer Kim Yong-soon.

+ 여기에 표시

Source: www.archdaily.com

Date Published: 3/28/2022

View: 6394

‪Young Soon Kim, Ph.D.‬ – ‪Google Scholar‬

Research Professor, Institute of Carbon technology, Jeonju University – ‪‪Cited by 5486‬‬ – ‪Carbon Neutral‬ – ‪Superconductor‬ – ‪nanomaterial‬ …

+ 여기에 표시

Source: scholar.google.com

Date Published: 1/6/2021

View: 9321

주제와 관련된 이미지 kim young soon

주제와 관련된 더 많은 사진을 참조하십시오 NHỮNG BÀI HÁT TÂM TRẠNG HAY NHẤT CỦA KIM JUN SEE 2019 | KIM JUN SEE. 댓글에서 더 많은 관련 이미지를 보거나 필요한 경우 더 많은 관련 기사를 볼 수 있습니다.

NHỮNG BÀI HÁT TÂM TRẠNG HAY NHẤT CỦA KIM JUN SEE 2019 | KIM JUN SEE
NHỮNG BÀI HÁT TÂM TRẠNG HAY NHẤT CỦA KIM JUN SEE 2019 | KIM JUN SEE

주제에 대한 기사 평가 kim young soon

  • Author: KhangProFilm
  • Views: 조회수 3,101,395회
  • Likes: 좋아요 17,269개
  • Date Published: 2019. 9. 25.
  • Video Url link: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SmUvO0x2w84

My prison life: Kim Young Soon on North Korea’s secret prison camps

Last week I had the good fortune of meeting and introducing a remarkable woman in her late sixties or early seventies. She has spent 8 years of her life imprisoned in one of the darkest, most secretive prisons in the world today.

But far from being the broken shell ravaged by years of torture and abuse that I’d imagined, I was confronted by a woman of incredible zeal, possessed with a burning desire to share her story with as many as would listen. As I watched her being interviewed, her eyes blazed whenever she made an emphatic point or two to the often bewildered reporters.

This formidable woman is Kim Young Soon, a former detainee in one of the most brutal prison camps, the infamous Camp 15, a North Korean political prison camp otherwise known as Yodok, whose story is recounted in the documentary titled ‘Yodok Stories’.

Kim was imprisoned in Yodok after the authorities realised she knew of her friend’s affair with Kim Jong Il. Her family were imprisoned with her under North Korea’s ‘guilt by association’ laws. Most of them died there.

As part of the 2nd North Korea Freedom week, we hosted a film screening of ‘Yodok Stories’ here at the Amnesty HQ, and were very lucky to have Kim Young Soon providing an, at times animated, personal insight into the film!

Amid the many remarks she made, one stood out above the rest. Responding to a question on how she hoped to improve the plight of her fellow North Koreans, she replied (I paraphrase): ‘Far from being silent, I want the world to know about what is going on in North Korea. Silence and secrecy are the very allies the leadership rely on, granting an excuse to carry on perpetuating its crimes against humanity’.

I share Kim Young Soon’s hope that by sharing her story and speaking out we can shine a light on the most secretive regime in the world and slowly – unfortunately very slowly – improve the lives of everyone living within North Korea’s borders.

You can help by sharing Kim Young Soon’s story, and the Yodok Stories trailer.

North Korean Defector

Evidences: Defectors – Young Soon KIM

Young Soon KIM

Vice President, Committee for the Democratization of North Korea

September 20, 2011

House Committee on Foreign Affairs Subcommittee on Africa, Global Health and Human Rights

(http://foreignaffairs.house.gov/112/soo092011.pdf)

Hello, my name is KIM, Young Soon, author of “I Was a Friend of Sung Hae Rim”. I am a North Korean defector and a survivor of the North Korean political prison camp, Yoduk (camp #15).

First of all, I want to thank the Members of the United States Congress and related officials of the Congress for giving me a chance to speak at this important venue. I also would like to thank Ms. Suzanne Scholte of the Defense Forum Foundation for her years of friendship and for listening to my story of the North Korean political prison camp.

Camp number 15, Yoduk, where I was incarcerated, is now well known throughout the world. Yoduk Prison Camp was created in July of 1969 under orders of Kim Il Sung, in Yoduk-gun, South Hamkyung Province, in a region known for its rough and mountainous features. It is here that for 30 years people who have incurred the wrath of Kim Il Sung and Kim Jong-il have been sent for the “crime” of being a political prisoner and died silent deaths.

I wrote of my time at Yoduk into a book and titled it “I Was a Friend of Sung Hae Rim”. Sung Hae Rim was at one point in my life my friend and also a hidden mistress of Kim Jong-il, and anyone who knew this secret in North Korea were either executed or sent to political prison camps, and I became a victim of this myself and was sent to Yoduk; I want to tell the world about what happened to me and also tell the world about the reality of the North Korean political prison camp system.

Why I was sent to Camp Number 15 (Political Prison Camp)

The Worker‟s Party‟s establishment of the “One Thought Principle” was instituted whereby the citizens were sent to prison camps for total isolation from general society for the following crimes: the crime of defaming the authority and prestige of Kim Il Sung and Kim Jong-il; the crime of knowledge about the private life of Kim Jong-il and leaking information about it to the general public, thus defaming the prestige of the Great Leader.

When I was sent to the prison camp, I had no knowledge about these facts.

Other political crimes that I came to know of after I was incarcerated in the prison camp

“The crime of talking about a cyst/lump on Kim Il Sung‟s neck.”

“The crime of (unwittingly) damaging or soiling the statue or portrait of Kim Il Sung.”

“The crime of knowing about the private life of Kim Jong-il. For example, knowing about Sung Hae Rim being the hidden mistress of Kim Jong-il, and disclosing this information to an outsider.”

“The crime of revealing the birth of Kim Jong Nam, the firstborn son of Kim Jong-il”

“The crime of listening to or viewing foreign radio or TV.”

“The crime of questioning or criticizing the policy of the Worker’s Party.”

“The crime of expressing criticism or complaints about North Korea society.”

I was close friends with Sung Hae Rim, having gone to the same school with her from girl’s high school to college, and one day I heard directly from her that she would be “going to the Special Residence #5”; at that time, those in the know knew that “Special Residence #5” meant the residence of Kim Il Sung and Kim Jong-il.

However, at the time I was taken to the political prison camp, I had no idea why I was being incarcerated, and it was only in the summer of 1989 after I was released did I find out the reason why, from a state security agent in Pyongyang. The security agent said the following to me: “Sung Hae Rim was not the wife of Kim Jong-il nor did she bear him a son. These are all groundless rumors. If you mention anything about this again you will not be forgiven.”

Interrogation and life in the political prison camp

On August 1st, 1970, I was forced into a car by state security agents and taken to a secret location where I was interrogated for two months by Unit 312 for preliminary investigation in a state security interrogation room. Under extreme fear for two months, I was told to write my entire life story, and include everything and leave out nothing, and I wrote on and on. In my writing, I confessed and wrote about Sung Hae Rim coming over to my house and telling me that she would be going to Special Residence #5, and also admitted that people around me knew this information as well.

After the investigations were over, on October 1st, 1970, my entire family and I (7 people total) were sent to Yoduk Political Prison Camp.

– The person who committed the crime was labeled the “conspirator/ringleader‟ while those taken along for “yeon-jwa-jweh‟ (guilt by association) were labeled “non-principal criminal‟ – this was how the criminals were classified.

– We woke up at 3:30 in the morning to go to work by 4:30am, and the labor was from sun up until sun down.

– Meals had to be provided by ourselves, through self-sufficiency.

– I saw countless prisoners contract pellagra, and suffer from diarrhea and die.

– After work was finished, there were daily “Fight for Ideology‟ meetings.

– Those who were unfortunate enough to be caught by security agents during the ideology meetings and sent away in shackles, were never seen again.

– The forced manual labor was beyond anyone’s imagination, and in case of falling short of work goals, the whole group was punished.

– There were so many dead bodies, enough to fill up a field.

– My three sons, one daughter, father and mother, died from starvation; there were no coffins so their bodies were rolled in a straw mat and buried.

– One of my sons, who was 9 years old at the time, drowned to death in Ryongyung River, which is near the prison camp.

– My daughter was given away for adoption, after our release; to this day, I do not know about her whereabouts, whether she is alive or dead.

– My youngest son was publicly executed by firing squad for trying to escape North Korea after his release and attempting to go to South Korea, in 1993 at the age of 23.

– My husband was sent to another political prison camp, a total and complete control zone, in July 4th, 1970, and to this day I do not know whether he is dead or alive.

– From our original family of 8 people, currently only two have survived and successfully escaped from North Korea (myself and another son), the rest of my family, 6 people, have all died.

My older brother, who was the pillar of our family, was a colonel in the North Korean army during the Korean War, in the 3rd Infantry, and while on a mission for the division commander, was killed in battle at the age of 25.

Accordingly, our family received favors from Kim Il Sung and lived well until being sent to a political prison camp, and as a result of feeling betrayed, I escaped from North Korea. Even after I was released from Yoduk political prison camp, I was classified as an anti-regime reactionary and suffered under the monitoring by the state security apparatus. I escaped North Korea on February 1st, 2001, and entered South Korea in November of 2003.

In Conclusion

In the political prison camps of North Korea is a place where the political prisoners will eat anything that “flies, crawls, grows in the field‟.

I wasted 9 years of the prime of my life in that hellhole of a place where even animals will turn their faces away; I lost all my family members, and have lived a life of tears of blood and extreme hardship. Please save the 23 million people in North Korea who are living a life of misery not unlike what I suffered.

Even though I am now over 70 years old, I will fight for the freedom of my people, my countrymen until all my strength is expended. This is the reason why I have lived so far, and also my purpose. In that note I want to deeply thank again the members of the United States Congress for your interest in the human rights situation of North Korea, especially the political prison camps.

Thank you.

Kim Young Soon: Sentenced to Yodok Concentration Camp for Knowing Kim Jong-Il’s Secret Consort

On October 5, 2012, the North Korea Study Group at HKS hosted Ms. Kim Young Soon, a former celebrated dancer in North Korea. In her 2008 book entitled “I was Sung Hye-rim’s Friend,” Ms. Kim described her ordeal at the hands of Kim Jong-Il, whom she never met. In an excerpt of the book, she wrote, “I was sent to Yodeok prison camp because I knew Kim Jong Il was with Sung Hye-rim. Even Kim Il-sung was not aware of Kim Jong Il’s relationship with Sung. Kim Jong Il, a would-be No.1 leader of the republic, was in a relationship with a (once) married woman would be a huge scandal, and Kim Jong Il tried to keep the highest security.”

In this blog post, I will write about what Ms. Kim shared with her audience members at our event last month. Ms. Kim and her family were part of the North Korean elite because her ancestors were anti-Japanese fighters when Korea was colonized by Japan in the early twentieth century. She was sentenced to Yodok political prison camp for 9 years. Her crime? She was school friends with Sung Hye-Rim, a famous North Korean actress who became a secret consort of Kim Jong-Il, and bore Kim Jong-Nam, the Dear Leader’s eldest son.

Ms. Kim and Ms. Sung were classmates and friends from high school throughout college. One day, Ms. Sung told Ms. Kim that she was invited to Chamber #5, a residence reserved for the regime’s ruling clan. After the state made the connection that Ms. Kim’s friendship with Ms. Sung led to a civilian knowing too much of the Dear Leader’s private affairs, Ms. Kim and her entire family were sentenced to Yodok political prison camp. In the camp, Ms. Kim’s husband was ratted out for an alleged crime by an inmate, and he was taken to the total-control zone portion of Yodok. Her entire family—parents, three sons, one daughter, and husband–passed away in the camp. Ms. Kim, along with numerous defectors, argue that Yodok and the other North Korean concentration camps have been modeled after Auschwitz under Kim Il-Sung’s reign.

North Korean civilians are sentenced to Yodok camp with zero knowledge of their crimes. They don’t know if they committed a crime –and if so, the nature of the crime–, or if they were sentenced due to the guilt-by-association policy. If the latter, whose crime are they associated with? Guilt-by-association is an antiquated policy that was employed during Korea’s Chosun Dynasty in order to cut off the seeds of the next generation of criminals. North Korea is the only regime that exercises this policy today. It was only ten years after being released from Yodok that Ms. Kim was told why she landed in the prison camp.

Political prisoners ate anything that “flew, crawled, or grew in the field.” While in the camp, Ms. Kim witnessed mothers desperately try everything to keep their emaciated children alive. One common ‘medicinal’ practice was to cut open a pregnant rat to harvest its fetuses, roast the tiny creatures, and feed this to sick human babies in the camp. This was believed to cure human diseases. On multiple occasions, she–along with the other estimated 200,000 concentration camp prisoners–were forced to watch public executions of camp prisoners who were caught while trying to escape the prison.

After speaking about Yodok, Ms. Kim spoke more broadly about the regime. By the 1980s, Kim Il-Sung’s leadership had purged all factious groups. The fall of the Soviet Union—on whom North Korea had been heavily dependent for economic support—devastated North Korea’s public distribution system. Years later, one domestic campaign to showcase the power of its regime widely circulated the movie, The Titanic, among its citizens. The regime declared that the sinking of the ship on April 15, 1912 was symbolic of the fall of evil capitalism and the rise of the Sun of North Korea.

Despite the regime’s attempt to demonize the United States by blaming the U.S. for all its own misfortunes, and calling it a wolf that can never turn into a pure sheep, it continues to pay its elites in $ USD.

She then spoke of the luxury that shrouds the ruling family. Among the numerous mansions that exist for the elite, Mansion #72 is Kim Il-Sung’s mansion. All rice that enters these mansions is called Rice #1. Rice #2 is the name designated for emergency rice for war. Every article of clothing for the Kim family is specially designed for the members. She gave several anecdotes of the extremely fresh, large, and exotic seafood that were sent into Pyongyang daily with special government funds. If the seafood delivery food trains were to ever be late, the supervisor of the train would be killed immediately. As one could imagine, these trains were never late. Ms. Kim knew Mr. Han, the supervisor of Train #8 and #9. He was a master of the sea surrounding North Korea, and he was responsible for delivering goods to the Kim family.

Kim Il-Sung had told Kim Jong-Il that the successor must concentrate on keeping the party and military officials appeased. Do not “waste time on the economy,” Ms. Kim quoted the Dear Leader. She claims that Kim Il-Sung argued that a reformed (and presumably a more open) economy would inevitably lead to the country’s demise and the successor’s death.

Despite Ms. Kim’s ardent hope for reunification, she understands that this is not possible in the near future with North Korea pointing 15,000 artillery units at South Korea.

She escaped North Korea on February 1, 2001 and entered South Korea in November of 2003. She serves as the vice president of the Seoul-based group Committee for the Democratization of North Korea.

For more information about Ms. Kim Young Soon, please read this Reuters article.

Throughout our event, Ms. Kim repeatedly encouraged her audience members to watch ‘Yodok Stories,’ a controversial theater play that chronicles the experiences of several North Korean survivors of this political prison camp. This documentary captures the play and interviews of defectors who helped create the play. Please watch this — Ms. Kim tells you so! The actual movie link: http://www.yodokfilm.com

Yodok Stories

Here are the transcripts of her testimony for the House Committee on Foreign Affairs Subcommittee on Africa, Global Health and Human Rights (September 20, 2011)

Here is an interview that a report for Radio Free Asia conducted with Ms. Kim

As always, please do not hesitate to reach out with questions or comments.

Kim Yong-soon

We are currently in Beta version and updating this search on a regular basis. We’d love to hear your feedback here.

Young Soon Kim, Ph.D.

This “Cited by” count includes citations to the following articles in Scholar. The ones marked * may be different from the article in the profile.

키워드에 대한 정보 kim young soon

다음은 Bing에서 kim young soon 주제에 대한 검색 결과입니다. 필요한 경우 더 읽을 수 있습니다.

이 기사는 인터넷의 다양한 출처에서 편집되었습니다. 이 기사가 유용했기를 바랍니다. 이 기사가 유용하다고 생각되면 공유하십시오. 매우 감사합니다!

사람들이 주제에 대해 자주 검색하는 키워드 NHỮNG BÀI HÁT TÂM TRẠNG HAY NHẤT CỦA KIM JUN SEE 2019 | KIM JUN SEE

  • Lâm chấn khang
  • lam chan khang
  • khangprofilm
  • lam chấn khang 2019
  • lâm chấn khang album
  • lâm chấn khang va kim jun see
  • lâm chấn khang hạo nam
  • lâm chấn khang phim
  • phim ca nhạc lâm chấn khang
  • phim lam chan khang
  • trần hạo nam
  • người trong giang hồ
  • lam chan khang kim jun see
  • nhạc kim jun see
  • nhạc hot kim jun see 2019
  • a minh
  • a mẫn
  • pé đẹp
  • nhạc tuyển tập hay nhất
  • kim jun see 2019
  • nhạc lâm chấn khang và kim jun see
  • nhạc con giáp thứ 13

NHỮNG #BÀI #HÁT #TÂM #TRẠNG #HAY #NHẤT #CỦA #KIM #JUN #SEE #2019 #| #KIM #JUN #SEE


YouTube에서 kim young soon 주제의 다른 동영상 보기

주제에 대한 기사를 시청해 주셔서 감사합니다 NHỮNG BÀI HÁT TÂM TRẠNG HAY NHẤT CỦA KIM JUN SEE 2019 | KIM JUN SEE | kim young soon, 이 기사가 유용하다고 생각되면 공유하십시오, 매우 감사합니다.

Leave a Comment