Title: Aquariums in Pyongyang
Author: Kang Chol-Hwan and Pierre Rigoulot
Genre: Biography
Year Published: 2001
Rating: 7 / 10
Everyone believes that concentration camps cannot exist anymore. How could a person be so cruel to another? Especially to ones country man? In this book the story takes place in North Korea under the rule of Kim Jong-il between 1970 to 1992. A rich Japanese family originally from Korea decide to make their way to North Korea during the 70's to become good Communists. After living there for a number of years in relative luxury, they get accused of some crime and sent to prison. As the custom is, your whole family is sent off, parents, children, grandparents. The grandmother is the one who convinced the whole family to go, even though the grandfather had several very successful casinos and they were very well of in Japan. They gave up their entire fortune to the North Korean government and integrated themselves into their new life. Most of the story takes place in a concentration camp called Yodok, where the family is imprisoned for the next 10 years. The accounts of their time there are hair raising and chilling. One keeps asking “How can anyone do this to another person? Children? Whole families?” Their life consists of trying to survive, not get beaten to death and meet work quotas so that they can live another day. They are constantly reminded how fortunate they are to be given another chance, that the great Kim Jong-il has given them a second chance, the redeem themselves and maybe one day be given the honour of rejoining society.
This book is scary mainly for the parallels between it and George Orwell's 1984. It seems like the North Korean government is using those political ideologies as their doctrine. From people spying on each other, to worshiping Kim Jong-il as a god. In a country where the government over exaggerates their factories outputs, to total control of the media. One should read 1984 before this book, to truly understand how frightening Kangs account is. Another frightening parallel is of this and Stalins Gulags and Hitlers Concentration Camps. Both places housed the undesirables. In Yodok, it was divided up into two different categories, the redeemable and not. The non-redeemable would never be allowed to leave, as their fate was sealed. Everyone there become an unperson, no one in the outside world knew what happened to them, not even the family or friends that got spared their fate. "Abandon all hope, ye who enter here" would have been an appropriates camp title, or as Hitlers Auschwitz's had "Arbeit Macht Frei" or "Work Will Make You Free".
A third of the population is in danger of starving right now, people disappear and are never seen again, the economy is crumbling. So the real question is, does the world help this country? If the UN sends food does that not only keep the problem going? Should the world not eliminate the problem and work from there? But once again we are faced with the issue of trying to re-educate an entire population who believe that Kim-Jong-il is the god, and the rest of the world are to blame for the problems they are seeing right now. Every ounce of blame is passed onto the rest of the world while the tyrannical government becomes the saviors and the defender of the free.
This book is a very easy read. It's not a long book and it's written in a way that should appeal to anyone. I would highly recommend this book as an insight into North Korea, a government which has absolute control and to get a glimpse of what it must have been like in Russian gulags and Germany's concentration camps.