[KS] War cemeteries in North Korea
Chris Springer
springer at hiddenhistory.info
Thu Jun 29 21:53:23 EDT 2006
Dear Heonik Kwon -
North Korean sources maintain a deafening silence on Korean War
cemeteries. The DPRK does not like to commemorate its war losses,
military or civilian. Doing so would remind the population how
costly the Korean War was and make them more reluctant to fight
another war. The regime encourages anger at the enemy but not
tears for the departed.
Fallen soldiers of the Korean People's Army were initially buried
close to where they fell. In the 1960s the remains from their
scattered graves were collected and reburied in larger cemeteries.
One of these stands on a mountain on the outskirts of Pyongyang.
Chinese casualties of the war are buried in separate cemeteries.
(The military museum in Beijing displays a photo of one such
site.) DPRK sources are a tiny bit more forthcoming about these
places.
Information about burial places for civilians - war casualties
or otherwise - is likewise hard to come by. If memory serves,
in "North Korea under Communism," diplomat Erik Cornell asked
a North Korean where the cemeteries were. She replied that she
didn't know because, in the DPRK, not that many people die.
Chris Springer
www.hiddenhistory.info
More information about the Koreanstudies
mailing list