Chosen Soren schools face image problem

According to Park Ju-Min writing in the Los Angeles Times:

The portraits of North Korean leader Kim Jong Il have been taken down from the classrooms in the run-down Tokyo Chosen No. 2 Elementary School.

But a quick look into the teachers lounge reveals the Dear Leader in all his glory.

The school for ethnic Koreans in Japan, one of about 60 in the country that are funded by North Korea, faces a delicate balancing act as money from the reclusive regime has decreased amid economic turmoil there.

Since the 1950s, the schools have been run by the General Assn. of Korean Residents in Japan, or Chosen Soren, whose Tokyo headquarters acts as North Korea’s unofficial embassy.

At Chosen No. 2, the eight teachers and 54 students face a life of political isolation as they try to preserve their ethnic identity in Japan, a country many people believe is in the sights of North Korea’s nuclear missiles.

Former Principal Song Hyon-jin knows the school spreads what many Japanese consider communist propaganda. Activists have surrounded the school with megaphones shouting for students and teachers to leave the country, threats that increased after North Korea tested a nuclear device last year. A student at another Chosen school was accosted on the subway, her traditional hanbok robe, worn by many North Koreans, ripped by her attacker.

“Even though the Korean community has changed much in the past 20 years, it’s still tough to live as a Korean in Japan,” said Song, a longtime Chosen member.

The schools get no funding from the Japanese government, which doesn’t officially recognize them.

….

Because there are no diplomatic ties between Tokyo and Pyongyang, the ethnic Koreans cannot apply for North Korean passports. They must be content to send their children to Chosen schools.

Since the 1970s, enrollment in the schools has fallen to less than 12,000 from 40,000, and fees have risen dramatically. In an effort to improve the schools’ image, administrators removed portraits of Kim Jong Il and his father, Kim Il Sung, from classrooms. They also added South Korean history to the curriculum, along with Japanese language and history.

Another change was softening the emphasis on North Korean propaganda, relying instead on a more straightforward history. To avoid undue attention, middle and high school students were ordered not to wear traditional Korean school uniforms after class.

“Schools have to be more open and acceptable for non-Chosen Soren affiliates for the sake of their existence,” said Han Young-hae, an associate professor at the Graduate School of International Studies at Seoul National University. “They need to reestablish their historical views and educational direction.”

As a result, the atmosphere here has lightened. South Korea also has begun taking up the financial slack, donating computers.

“I hope to teach here forever,” said Lee Young-sim, a 25-year-old art teacher who is a product of Chosen schools.

Song is heading a fundraising drive to build a new wing at the school, in hopes of stemming the defection of ethnic Koreans to Japanese schools.

“It is difficult to protect the school when many Korean kids are going to Japanese schools,” said Song, whose two children attend Chosen schools. “But I will do my best until the good day comes.”

Read the full article here:
North Korea-funded schools in Japan have an image problem
Los Angeles Times
Park Ju-Min
2/23/2010

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2 Responses to “Chosen Soren schools face image problem”

  1. david says:

    “Because there are no diplomatic ties between Tokyo and Pyongyang, the ethnic Koreans cannot apply for North Korean passports.”

    This sounds strange. Many so called “Zainichi” (ethnic koreans living in Japan since generations) have North Korean or South Korean citizenship. Maybe the author is referring to the fact that those who naturalize must give up NK citizenship (dual citizenship for adults is not allowed in Japan).

  2. Kevin says:

    The schools used to get some funding, but it is now apparently at risk- which might be related to the removal of KJI pics from public eyesight…

    As per IFES Monthly Recap:

    SUBSIDIES FOR KOREAN SCHOOLS IN JAPAN AT RISK
    On February 22, it was reported that Japan’s minister in charge of abduction issues, Hiroshi Nakai, asked Minister of Education Tatsuo Kawabata not to provide tuition subsidies to schools that cater to children with ethnic ties to North Korea. He stated, “If the government decided to designate Korean schools as beneficiaries of the subsidy program . . . it would be tantamount to providing effective economic aid to North Korea.” Prime Minister Yukio Hatoyama supported the move, stating, “I see Nakai’s idea as one that merits consideration.”
    It was also reported, on February 23, that portraits of Kim Jong Il had been removed from classrooms at the Tokyo Chosen No. 2 Elementary School, a school run by the pro-North Korean General Association of Korean Residents in Japan. Kim’s picture still hangs in the school’s teachers’ lounge.