Reading about North Korea

•June 20, 2008 • Leave a Comment

By Amie H

I’m trying to catch up on my reading of N.K.

I’m surprised at how many authors skip right over the brutality of the government towards its people.  It almost seems like the mindset is accepted:  If we don’t talk about it then we don’t feel obligated to do something about it.

That makes me sad.  I will start reading a book or watch a documentary and it seems so well put together; so wonderfully researched. Researched to the point that I can’t wait to read or hear about what they uncovered regarding concentration camps and the treatment of individuals.  I want to hear what that author’s take on it will be.

Then… nothing.  It is truly such a let down.  For a small moment, I question the situations that I am well aware of in N.K.  For that moment, I don’t realize the starving or the tortured. I am blinded by ignorance.  I open my “eyes” and remember.  Why isn’t it a big deal?  How can these authors who are well educated and obvious to the situation so easily overlook so grave a detail?  It is unbelievable.

Famine again looms over North Korea

•June 4, 2008 • Leave a Comment
Despite the efforts made by the US, many people in North Korea will die because the food they are sending will arrive too late. Alpha Relief has scheduled food aid through the next month and you can help, by donating.
As reported from Yahoo News: (emphasis added)

By Tim Johnson, McClatchy Newspapers Tue Jun 3, 3:53 PM ET

“It’s their way of saying, ‘We don’t care if people die. We’re not going to make concessions,’” Haggard said.

Haggard said Pyongyang is unlikely to show any sign of weakness to the South.

BEIJING — Food shortages are gripping North Korea amid signs that some of its citizens may already be starving to death, experts and rights activists said Tuesday.

Food rations across much of North Korea have been slashed, and the country’s 1.1 million strong military reportedly halted major exercises so that soldiers could help raise crops, according to reports out of South Korea .

After a three-year hiatus, the Bush administration is resuming food aid to North Korea , and a U.S. freighter carrying bulk grain is now sailing to make the first delivery from some 500,000 metric tons of food assistance that Washington in May promised the Kim Jong Il regime over the next year.

But experts said the bulk of U.S. food aid would arrive too late to help critical pre-harvest food shortages that intensify by the day and are likely to remain bad until August harvests.

“I would describe the situation as very serious. What we are seeing now are pre-famine indicators,” said Marcus Noland , a North Korea specialist at the Peterson Institute for International Economics in Washington, D.C. “Some hunger-related deaths are probably inevitable, if they haven’t already started.”

Dozens of South Korean religious and civic group leaders on Monday demanded that the new government of conservative President Lee Myung -bak relax its hard line on North Korea and deliver emergency food aid— even if North Korea spurns the offer.

About 200,000 to 300,000 people might die of starvation in the next two months if there is no emergency aid from the international community, Good Friends, a Buddhist group in Seoul that works to help hungry North Koreans, said in a statement.

“This is a real acute situation. We are already getting reports that in some counties there are three or four people dying every single day,” said Erica Kang , a spokeswoman for Good Friends.

North Korea suffered a severe famine in the late 1990s that took as many as two million victims in a nation of 23 million people.

Even North Korea’s controlled press has acknowledged the precarious food situation now, blaming it on factors such as unseasonably cold spring weather.

Prices for some grains shot up 25 percent last month, following a doubling of prices over the past year, Jean-Pierre de Margerie , the World Food Program representative in North Korea , said in a telephone interview.

The World Food Program said North Korea’s food deficit would double this year. De Margerie said he “hasn’t seen any evidence” of famine yet but noted that his office is not permitted free access around the isolated country.

North Korea faces shortfalls of food for a variety of reasons, including dramatic flooding that ravaged the western coastal plains nine months ago, chronic fertilizer shortages, and steadily falling harvests, experts said.

“The worst of the North Korean food shortage is going to be in the next month, and the (U.S.) food aid is not going to show up in that time,” said Stephan M. Haggard , a North Korea specialist at the University of California at San Diego. To help send food during the next month, donate here.

“This is really the crunch time,” Haggard said, adding that even when the first U.S. shipment of grain arrives in late June it will only serve to feed the nation for a week.

The Bush administration offered renewed food aid to Pyongyang last month amid hopes that a six-month impasse has been overcome in six-nation talks aimed at denuclearizing North Korea .

The U.N. Food and Agricultural Organization reported in late March that North Korea was likely to face a record shortfall of 1.66 million tons of grain this year.

Kang said the worst hunger is in a coastal plain southwest of Pyongyang that is the nation’s breadbasket region, source of 60 percent of the nation’s grain. Floods wracked the area last year.

Because farmers there are hungry, they are not working. They are staying at home, not doing any work,” she said.

Following the mass famine in the late 1990s, North Korea received nearly a decade of sustained humanitarian aid from the South, totaling about 400,000 metric tons of grain a year, along with regular shipments of fertilizer.

But relations between the two Koreas have worsened since President Lee, a conservative, came to office in late February, pledging to end what he described as too lenient approach toward the Communist North.

Amid signs of famine in the North in recent weeks, South Korea said it would provide humanitarian aid to the North if Pyongyang would make a request. North Korea has spurned the offer.

Letter From the Inside

•May 28, 2008 • Leave a Comment

It is not very often that communication from inside North Korea makes it to the other side. It is even more rare to receive a letter while sitting at a desk in Colorado. When we read this, we knew that we couldn’t keep it to ourselves. Take a look at what you are doing in North Korea

Dear supporters,
I was so touched by your dear hearts as I received the food you have provided. I hope to show my appreciation by writing this letter.
Seeing this unimaginable miracle, which could only have happened through the love of Jesus, has been an incredible experience. Over and over it has brought tears to my eyes.
I am ashamed to confess that before becoming a follower of Christ, I was one of many who let my children starve to death in order to survive. After my two sons died I wandered aimlessly through life without purpose. Then Jesus found me.
Christ’s love has completely changed me and now I risk my life as one of the underground church members, preaching His name to those around me. Your gift of food has strengthened me and I will use that strength to preach that Christ is our savior. If He were not with us, I can only imagine how miserable we would be. There are so many in this cursed land that are despised, looked down on, and going to hell. Without Christ, life is not worth living. This is why we will continue to risk our lives to preach in His name.
As you continue to strengthen our cause, we will do our part to use that strength to further Christ’s love for the North Korean people. It used to bring me sorrow to see starving people all around me, but with your support, I no longer see misery. I appreciate you and want to thank you so much. For the future of this country, I will stand up, even to the death. I will persevere until His will is accomplished and His love has triumphed.
-A NK Believer

Song Mi, a Story of Desperation

•May 28, 2008 • 1 Comment

By Sue H

My family is gone. Before my eyes my sister, her husband, and their two children became shadows of themselves, slipping away one by one and I couldn’t stop it. The children went first, then my brother-in-law. One day my sister was too weak to join me in searching the woods for greens; I returned with only bark and clay, but it didn’t matter, she died while I was away. There is no food.

My brother worked in a munitions plant which used to mean regular food rations. He was required to sign in every day so he could not go elsewhere to try to survive. He waited for the rations to start again, but they never did. He collapsed and died at work. Two or three people die in that factory every day.

I am a seamstress, trading my work for food or anything that will help me get food. The authorities used to be much harsher with our entrepreneurial pursuits on the street, but there is so much unrest with the government’s inability to feed us that for now they let us continue. Still, we never know when a crackdown will happen.

I am surprised by the murmurings I hear, villagers voicing their discontent to one another, hoping for the death of our Dear Leader, hoping for change after he dies. These are dangerous words, but those enlisted to police us are also weary and disillusioned and sometimes do not enforce the penalty for such treasonous speech.

My friend pays someone in China to say they are her family so she can cross the border for visits, to buy food or bring back discarded items she can use to barter in the street markets. She says China is rich, everyone has enough rice to eat anytime. I don’t remember ever having enough rice.

For me it would be a whole day of travel just to get to the border, and I do not have the money required to pass through. My friend says the guards change often, and the crossing bribe depends on how desperate they are for their families. Guards used to receive better rations than most of us, but since the rations disappeared the bribes are now a matter of survival. To keep their loyalty the government rotates the men through the border positions, so as many as possible can sustain themselves and their families.

I am Song Mi, my story is not unusual, and my prospects fade with each passing day.

Note: This story is based on a compilation of recent reports. North Korea is in the midst of its worst famine in 60 years. Floods last August destroyed crops that would have eased hunger this spring. People are reduced to eating bark and foraging for shoots of any new plants, which further destroys future food sources. Even dirt mixed with sawdust is eaten in desperation for something to fill their stomachs.

Our last food aid shipment in the beginning of May contained 35 tons, or six truckloads, which is enough to feed 1500 people for three months. Another 30 tons will be delivered over the summer. The underground church shares some of this food with unbelievers in their community in an effort to tangibly demonstrate the love of Jesus.

Devistation in China

•May 14, 2008 • Leave a Comment

Information gathered from FoxNews.com

In a race against time, rescue workers are searching to find 40,000 people.  An estimated 26,000 are thought to be buried in the rubble, while 14,000 are still unaccounted for.

Go to FoxNews.com for more of the story, pictures, and videos.

Our hearts and prayers are going out to China during this hard time.

Prayer Meetings in Colorado Springs

•May 14, 2008 • 1 Comment

If you would like to have a monthly prayer meeting in your local area, please email Amie at amh@alpharelief.org

Friends,

I am happy to invite you to join us for a monthly prayer meeting for the Persecuted Church of North Korea.  The intent is to have a Spirit led time of prayer that is hosted by our Korean friends who live in the local area.  Their heart is sensitive to the Lord and there are many places that prayers can reach that people cannot.

This will be a GIG group out of New Life Church in conjunction with Alpha Relief’s staff and volunteers.

Where:  World Prayer Center (no child care provided)

Time:  6:30-7:30pm

When:  The 4th Thursday of each month.

Dates: 5/22, 6/26, 7/24, 8/28

Starting in the Fall Semester there will be new dates.  Please feel free to come and join our hearts in prayer for our Brothers and Sisters of North Korea.  We cannot even imagine what they face on a daily basis.

Earthquake in China kills thousands – FOXNews.com Reports

•May 12, 2008 • Leave a Comment

Devistation.  Death.  Sadness.  

Feelings of helplessness overcome people who live in and near Chongqing, China.

An earthquake has raged through central China, destroying homes and lives.  Over 8,500 are found dead and the count is rapidly rising.  Fear of more than 10,000 deaths cloud the minds of citizens that are still filtering injured from rubble.

To read more, click here.

Send the Light Banquet, April 4, 2008

•April 29, 2008 • Leave a Comment

To help continue to raise funds for Alpha Relief, click here.

To view pictures of the event, click here.

by sue h.

We all gathered in a beautiful room at the Cheyenne Mountain Resort to learn more about Alpha Relief’s work in North Korea.  The room was packed to capacity.  Candles flickered, slender springtime arrangements stretched high, piano music wafted through conversations. 

After enjoying our dinner, we learned of technology that can supply fresh, nutritious food for a starving population that fights for survival most intensely during April and May, known as “the hard times”.  Pretty much any time is a hard time right now in North Korea, but these months in particular are devastating.  We saw pictures of vibrant green leafy plants, crops that are sustainable in subzero temperatures.

A video interview highlighted a family made up of a man, his wife and two children who escaped from North Korea, but were subject to a fierce manhunt because of their former government connections.  We heard their testimony, how the love of believers caring for them in their time of trouble brought them to faith, and now as they live in freedom, they work diligently to see more souls know Jesus Christ in North Korea.

Excerpts of letters were read from individuals in North Korea whose hearts were deeply impacted by people they didn’t know, people they’ve been taught to hate and fear. We are those people, and compelled by our love for Jesus we send rice, other food aid, and scriptures to those who would starve without outside intervention.  With their strength renewed, they are gratefully and humbly committed to preaching the gospel.  They look forward to sharing the next shipments of food.  One hundred orphans will benefit, their caretakers eager to share God’s provision with them.

Because of your generosity in giving the night of the banquet, Alpha Relief will be able to step up food aid, scripture distribution, and proceed on other projects.  We want to extend our sincerest thanks to the many people who gave of their time and talent to make our first banquet such a success, and we welcome all of our new friends and partners.

Together we can make an ever increasing impact in the lives of those who are in dire need.

The price on their heads

•April 9, 2008 • Leave a Comment

by jennifer h.

 

Chances for North Koreans to escape their country and get into China have never been good.  Getting over the border can be next to impossible, and if they are able to make it across, the safety they find is very relative.  People who choose to try and help them can be fined, and people who turn them into the government can be rewarded.  Getting caught and sent back to North Korea means an imprisonment equivalent to a death sentence.  And things are getting worse.
The punishment for people aiding refugees has been increased to not only include being fined, but now to be imprisoned themselves.  Officials are attempting to attract informants to turn in North Korean defectors by increasing the financial reward by an unheard of 1600 percent.  It has gone from 500 RMB ($160) to at least 8000 RMB ($2,564) for turning in a single refugee, an amount that is equivalent to the annual income for many people living in China. 
Instead of the North Korean defectors being protected as refugees under the UN international refugees convention, they are being hunted and offered as a means to provide financial stability.  To an impoverished person with no perspective other than the one being given by a corrupt government there is little reason to protect, let alone help these escapees.
Please pray for the safety of the refugees and for truth and courage to fill the hearts of those able to help them.

Alpha Relief Director participates in D.C. Symposium

•March 31, 2008 • 1 Comment

clip_image003.gifAlpha Relief Director, Chris Moore, has been invited by the White House to be a regular participant in the White House Office of Faith-Based and Community Initiative’s monthly Roundtable meetings in Washington D.C. The first symposium Chris attended gathered organizations dedicated to eliminating poverty. Among those represented were Planet Aid, Angel Food Ministries, and World Vision.

Alpha Relief looks forward to the ongoing networking possibilities offered by these meetings, and the potential that exists in these venues to influence national policy regarding faith-based, non-governmental organizations.