Korea Prayer
2025-03-31 23:21:25
Apr week1, 2025 Prayer for North Korea
1. “Some North Korean Officials Posing as South Koreans in China”
In April 2017, tourists walk on a bridge spanning the Yalu River between North Korea and China. (Reuters)
▶ ▶ Article Summary
It has recently been reported that some North Korean officials in China are removing their “badge of the Kim family,” which immediately identifies them as North Koreans, and are pretending to be South Koreans. According to a Korean-Chinese source in Shenyang, China, he met a North Korean trade company executive he knew from business dealings at a famous restaurant. The official not only hid his Kim badge but also asked the source to introduce him as a South Korean. The source said that in China, South Koreans are seen as people from a wealthy, prosperous country, which may explain the official’s behavior. He added, “I also thought that being an official from one of the poorest countries in the world might be something to be ashamed of.”
Another source in Yanji, Jilin Province, said, “North Korean officials take off their Kim badges and pose as South Koreans when they are not attending official events.” However, he added, “Even if they dress and style their hair like South Koreans, it becomes obvious once you start talking to them.” He continued, “Some North Korean officials who have been in China for a long time confide in their Chinese acquaintances about their hardships,” and added, “I can somewhat understand how it must feel for a North Korean official to be unable to reveal their identity abroad.”
[March 26, 2025 / RFA – View Article: https://url.kr/ce3btd]
▶ ▶ Prayer Points
“See, I am setting before you today a blessing and a curse—the blessing if you obey the commands of the Lord your God that I am giving you today; the curse if you disobey the commands of the Lord your God… and follow other gods.” (Deuteronomy 11:26-28)
2. “Youth League Patrols in North Korea Crack Down Even on 7-Year-Olds’ Clothing – Public Outcry Growing”
A scene from an internal North Korean video lecture emphasizing the crackdown on unusual attire and personal grooming. The image shows a female resident identified for wearing nonconforming clothing. /Photo = Daily NK
▶ ▶ Article Summary
Recently in Chongjin, North Hamgyong Province, patrol units made up of young people have been cracking down on residents’ clothing in the streets—going so far as to target the outfits of small children, leading to widespread public discontent. The patrols are composed of high school and university students from the Youth League. These students attend school in the mornings, then patrol the streets from 2 to 6 p.m. Patrol duty comes around every 5 to 6 days, and if a team fails to report enough violations on their assigned day, they are not rotated out of duty—forcing them to produce results, even by force.
There is growing criticism even among the young patrol members themselves, with some saying, “We don’t even know what the purpose of this crackdown is.” In one instance, a 7-year-old child was stopped and detained on the street for three hours just for wearing clothing with English writing on it, and was later summoned to the city’s Youth League office for over two hours of questioning.
North Korean authorities regard not wearing the Kim family badge, or wearing jeans or clothes with English writing—what they call “capitalist, decadent styles”—as indicators of ideological impurity. Those caught are summoned to political organizations, forced to write self-criticism letters, publicly shamed on local broadcasts, and in severe cases, sent to labor training camps. One source commented, “It’s suffocating to live in a society where everything becomes an issue of ideology.”
[March 27, 2025 / Daily NK – View Article: https://url.kr/dwmhq1]
▶ ▶ Prayer Points
“Because the poor are plundered and the needy groan, I will now arise,” says the Lord. “I will protect them from those who malign them.” (Psalm 12:5)
3. “While Kim Jong-un Uses It, North Korean Residents Endure a Reality Without ‘Light’”
A man unplugs a monitor cable. (RFA Graphic / Photo - Freepik)
▶ ▶ Article Summary
In a study guide distributed in March, North Korean authorities emphasized electricity conservation to boost production and instructed residents to “unplug TV cords from the wall socket.” Although the content is largely formal, the very fact that the Party is directing residents to conserve electricity highlights a deep contradiction.
In North Korea, electricity bills are uniformly set at 10,000 won per household per month, while the average worker’s monthly salary is around 30,000 won—meaning one-third of their income goes to electricity. Residents aren’t complaining about the high cost itself, but rather the fact that they pay such a large amount and still receive little to no electricity.
In South Korea, electricity usage is metered and billed accordingly, but in North Korea, everyone pays the same amount regardless of usage. Electric meters are not commonly used, and those that exist are mostly broken. This socialist system of uniform billing, unrelated to actual consumption, harms both individuals and society.
Though 80 years have passed since the founding of the North Korean regime, the electricity situation continues to worsen—evidence that Party policy is not centered on people’s livelihoods and that the leadership has reached its limits.
[March 27, 2025 / RFA – View Article: https://url.kr/8rvsjj]
▶ ▶ Prayer Points
“All my bones will say, ‘Lord, who is like you? You rescue the poor from those too strong for them, the poor and needy from those who rob them.’” (Psalm 35:10)
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