A Concentration of North Korean Refugees in London
Communities
of Korean immigrants can be found across the world, but few of them
from North Korea because it's hard to escape from that country-sized
prison.
About 20,000 Korean immigrants live in New Malden, a
suburb of London. Approximately 600 are from North Korea, which is among
the highest concentrations of North Korean refugees anywhere in the
world. In Europe, New Malden is the closest thing to a "Little
Pyongyang."
Roxy Rezvany of Vice visited New Malden and interviewed several of the North Korean residents.
One
of the more interesting parts of Rezvany's article was about the Korean
languages--plural. Since the country was divided after World War II,
North Korean has become noticeably different from South Korean. She
quotes Joong Wha:
“In North Korea we used a lot of
foreign words from Russia, Japan, and China,” he said. “But there was a
[regime] movement called the ‘Making Our Own Language Alive’ movement.
Through that we got rid of all the foreign-influenced words. All the
words [North Koreans] use now are ‘pure Korean,’ so my generation
learned these pure words. Therefore, when I converse with South Koreans
and they use these words influenced by English, I sometimes don’t
understand what they mean.”
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