The World’s Worst Place for Christians: North Korean Concentration Camps

StriperAddict

Senior Member
What standing for the gospel means to North Korean Christians

<HEADER class=site-header role=banner>LetterOfConfession.com
The Voice of the Martyrs

</HEADER><SECTION class="feature feature--home">This man, Kim Jong Un, leader of North Korea, is guilty of the imprisonment and torture of 30,000 of your brothers and sisters in Christ.
He demands their confession.
What would you confess to him?


Reuters/KCNA
</SECTION>

Our Letter of Confession

“A witness saw a young woman who folded her hands in a praying fashion when the SSD [State Security Department] interrogated her. The SSD suspected therefore that she was a Christian. They took her to another room and beat her until she confessed.”
<FOOTER class=quote__author>—Testimony before the United Nations Human Rights Council</FOOTER>​
Now is the time to make our confession to Kim Jong Un.

We declare that we will remain loyal to the one true God and continue to stand with our persecuted family members in North Korea.

We know what is happening in North Korea. We commit to telling the world about the crimes of its leader and to do everything in our power to assist our persecuted family there.
We invite you to add your voice in support of North Korean Christians by digitally signing the Letter of Confession. We will deliver these letters to North Korea’s representatives to the United Nations.

Action Step:
share the letter:

Facebook Twitter




Read more about the plight of Christians in North Korea...
The World’s Worst Place for Christians: North Korean Concentration Camps

Every day in North Korea’s prison camps, 30,000 Christians rise in the predawn hours, eat a few mouthfuls of corn porridge and cabbage, and trudge to an assigned workplace. They then spend about 15 hours toiling in coal mines, cleaning and maintaining the camp, or doing farm work or construction work. In late evening, they return to housing units or apartments above their workplace to eat the same meager meal before falling to sleep on concrete floors.

Other Christians are not so fortunate. Instead of laboring for hours at backbreaking work under the eye of cruel guards, they’re locked in torture chambers and underground prisons. Survivors of North Korean prison camps have described being locked in cages like animals, forced to stand for hours in tortuous positions and beaten until they vomited blood.

About 200,000 North Koreans are thought to be detained in prison camps that aren’t even acknowledged by the communist government to exist. Authorities are very careful to conceal details about the camps from the outside world. The camps are disguised as military or farming facilities, and only officials with special security clearance are permitted to visit. During a United Nations investigation that culminated in an incriminatory report earlier this year, North Korean authorities repeatedly denied investigators entrance to the camps.

North Koreans found guilty of lesser infractions are sent to the kyohwaso, or ordinary labor camps, from which they might one day be released. But those found guilty of serious “crimes,” such as practicing Christianity, are sent to the kwanliso, controlled areas for political prisoners. The regime often arrests entire families, punishing three generations of a family for the crime of one member.

Most political prisoners sent to the kwanliso are incarcerated for life, if they aren’t executed immediately. Inmates are denied contact with the outside world, and not even their closest family members receive information on their whereabouts. Very few people have ever been released from a kwanliso.

There are four known kwanliso prison camps. Camp 14 holds about 15,000 prisoners, who work in mines, and only one person is known to have ever escaped. Camp 15, which holds about 30,000 prisoners, is unique in that it has separate areas for those imprisoned for life (Total Control Zones) and those considered redeemable through labor (Revolutionary Zones). Camp 16, which is located near a nuclear test site in the north, is thought to hold 20,000 prisoners. And Camp 25, which is more like a maximum security prison, holds only a few thousand prisoners but has doubled in size since 2006.

Conditions in the camps are so bad that nearly 40 percent of inmates die of starvation, while others commonly lose up to half their body weight. Prisoners tell of eating grass and rats to survive and of fighting over a single kernel of corn. One escapee, Shin Dong-hyuk, said his own mother began to compete with him for food. Survivors of these camps are often permanently disfigured from torture and from being chained to walls for days or weeks at a time.

Most of those who have disappeared into kwanliso in recent years have been found guilty of one of three crimes: they tried to flee North Korea, they had unauthorized contact with citizens of South Korea, or they were revealed as Christians. According to testimony before the United Nations, Christianity in North Korea “has been compared to a drug, narcotics, a sin and a tool of Western and capitalist invasion.” The work of Christian missionaries is “akin to vampirism.”

While Christianity is not explicitly illegal and a few show churches are even allowed in Pyongyang, in practice, authorities consider adherence to the Christian faith a political crime. State security makes concerted efforts to identify Christians. Agents are trained to suppress religious activities and to systematically interrogate repatriated citizens about their contact with churches and missionaries while outside North Korea. Those found to have engaged in such conduct face harsher punishment.

The 30,000 believers in these concentration camps are prisoners of a war being waged on Christians in North Korea. It’s a war that began in 1948, when North Korea was established as a state. North Koreans, who share the gospel, as Mrs. Park did, pay a high personal price. Secret Christians there have known and accepted this for years. They fully expect their faith to result in their imprisonment. However, a Christian who works closely with North Korean defectors said they do not regard imprisonment with surprise or outrage; on the contrary, they regard the prison camps as their mission field and view everything leading to their imprisonment as training.
 

StriperAddict

Senior Member
Please stand with your brothers and sisters in the faith. Sign the letter from the link ...
=======================================


Thank you for standing with your persecuted family in North Korea.

Your signed Letter of Confession has been received by The Voice of the Martyrs. As signed letters are gathered we will present them to the North Korea representative to the United Nations.
Please share this opportunity with your Christian friends and family members. Together we can let our brothers and sisters of North Korea know they do not suffer in silence and we will do everything we can to stand with them.

Come back often to www.LetterOfConfession.com to watch the number of signed letters increase each day. You can also follow news updates about North Korea at www.Persecution.com.

To learn more about the ministry of The Voice of the Martyrs and how you can help support persecuted Christians worldwide visit: www.Persecution.com.
</ARTICLE></SECTION><!-- <footer role="contentinfo" class="site-footer"> © <script type="text/javascript">var theDate=new Date(); document.write(theDate.getFullYear());</script> The Voice of the Martyrs. Site Solution by MTI. Powered by NCOLInternet.
</footer> -->
 

Latest posts

Top