Inside North Korea's bubble in Japan

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  • čas přidán 13. 05. 2024
  • Why North Korea has children’s schools in Japan
    Follow Johnny to stay up to date on Vox Borders:
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    My dispatch about Japan's rising right-wing nationalism: • Japan's rising right-w...
    Original Music by Rare Henderson: www.rarehenderson.com/audio
    Vox Borders Episodes:
    1. Haiti and the Dominican Republic ( • Divided island: How Ha... )
    2. The Arctic & Russia ( • It's time to draw bord... )
    3. Japan & North Korea ( • Inside North Korea's b... )
    4. Mexico & Guatemala ( • How the US outsourced ... )
    5. Nepal & The Himalaya ( • Building a border at 4... )
    6. Spain & Morocco ( • Europe’s most fortifie... )
    For this episode I found myself embeded with a small community in Japan. They were born there, they speak the language. But they're not Japanese citizens, or even ethnically Japanese - they're North Korean. There's about 150,000 of them living in Japan today, and they've been there for over a century.
    This community has close ties with the regime in Pyongyang, which supports them financially (and vice-versa). But more importantly, Pyongyang offers them an identity, a heritage, and cultural legitimacy - things that some elements of Japanese society work to deny them.
    Vox Borders Episodes:
    1. Haiti and the Dominican Republic ( • Divided island: How Ha... )
    2. The Arctic & Russia ( • It's time to draw bord... )
    3. Japan & North Korea ( • Inside North Korea's b... )

Komentáře • 13K

  • @Yungcumlord
    @Yungcumlord Před 4 lety +28055

    It's safe to say I'd rather be a North Korean in Japan then a North Korean in North Korea

    • @patriotcraftsboy1046
      @patriotcraftsboy1046 Před 4 lety +943

      sauce boy it’s safe to say I’d rather be an Uchiha in Konoha than a Amegakure shinobi living under Pain’s regime.

    • @Yungcumlord
      @Yungcumlord Před 4 lety +201

      @@patriotcraftsboy1046 whatever😂

    • @KingBoomBox
      @KingBoomBox Před 4 lety +613

      @@Yungcumlord I'd rather be a Canadian. Not so many problems as in America.

    • @danialxiv591
      @danialxiv591 Před 4 lety +359

      rather be Japanese in Japan

    • @kuniosaiki
      @kuniosaiki Před 4 lety +37

      DanTownLA
      A naruto fan, yes that is true

  • @vignettetsukinoseapril
    @vignettetsukinoseapril Před 5 lety +8246

    _"how if they build osama bin laden memorial school in the US?"_
    yo, thats hard

    • @weebshit1048
      @weebshit1048 Před 5 lety +126

      Vignette Tsukinose April coming from the nicest demon we know

    • @prancingpony2785
      @prancingpony2785 Před 5 lety +391

      But that is exactly what it was

    • @juusto7171
      @juusto7171 Před 5 lety +8

      Lmao

    • @AndiKola
      @AndiKola Před 5 lety +374

      Well that's not really the case here, since Osama Bin Laden lead a terrorist attack on US Soil killing innocent US Civilians. I fear that's not the case since however your opinion on the North Korean government, they haven't actively inflicted harm against the Japanese dominion.
      A more correct approach would be "How would you feel if they build a memorial for Lenin in the US".
      Sure someone might not like it, but would that make it wrong?

    • @Mar1s3z
      @Mar1s3z Před 5 lety +44

      Well if you say that's phrase is coming from demon, Wesley. It will not stop. It's just so to justify the cause to build a school that supports North Korea regime like, 'Oh you take our citizens to be a sex slave in WW2. So you have to accept our school in your country to keep our regime alive'? It's just like keep tossing hot grenades waiting for the day it blows up. Some side has to stop and throw it down the trash. Getting public executed because you watched movies from Hollywood or Bollywood is not something we want to see it got supported in the 21st century.

  • @gnochhuos645
    @gnochhuos645 Před 3 lety +5638

    Never thought I would heard the term “ultra-nationalist kindergartens”

    • @kakalimukherjee3297
      @kakalimukherjee3297 Před 3 lety +231

      Army babies

    • @chicken6969
      @chicken6969 Před 3 lety +12

      sammme

    • @veneering4128
      @veneering4128 Před 3 lety +84

      Have you ever heard of american kindergartens?

    • @lostonearth7856
      @lostonearth7856 Před 3 lety +119

      @@veneering4128 Ah yes, America.
      A country where even babies are born with handguns because it...
      Patriotic I guess...

    • @farzanamughal5933
      @farzanamughal5933 Před 3 lety +20

      And they were not talking about North Korea, they were talking about Japan

  • @helgageraldine513
    @helgageraldine513 Před rokem +679

    I remember watching a documentary about an American eye surgeon and his team who visited N. Korea for a medical mission and operated on citizens with cataract. The people, after they regained there vision, thanked and praised Kim Jong-il and never even thanked the medical team. The documentarist then wondered if they were doing that out of sincere gratitude or extreme fear of the regime.

    • @dasiro
      @dasiro Před rokem +50

      the regime allowed the doctors to come. Just about any doctor could do the surgery, but only 1 regime can allow it. They're raised with the idea that their leader provides for them despite harsh hostilities from almost every other country, so they put the defense of the country above their own health. If they don't abide the rules they know for sure they and their entire families will suffer even more so this is the best situation they can think of and therefor be grateful to the regime, how counterintuitive it might seem from an external point of view like ours.

    • @edit7x227
      @edit7x227 Před rokem +9

      It's Dr Sanduk Ruit from Nepal. He is one the finest eye surgeon in the world

    • @franciscojunqueira8327
      @franciscojunqueira8327 Před rokem +7

      ​@@dasiro It's not like that. Korean War never ended, they're in an armistice. When a socialist country, literaly surrounded by US millitary bases, it is unsafe for the country allow any one in the coutry without supervision. That's why North Korea only allow tourists with professional guides.
      When the person praises Kim Jong-Il, it's because there is in North Korea a huge personality cult to the Kim family, beacause they kind of saved Korea from a terrifying war against the USA, that bombed almost a third of the country.
      This personality cult isn't exclusive to North Korea at all. In the UK, for instance, Queen Elizabeth II is extremely praised., even in the national Anthen.

    • @larshofler8298
      @larshofler8298 Před rokem

      They were sincere. They believed the help was given to them by their Leader.

    • @krishnakhatri2427
      @krishnakhatri2427 Před rokem

      @@dasiro it is nepali eye surgeon

  • @bcnicholas123
    @bcnicholas123 Před 5 lety +5061

    11:37 “Ultra-nationalist” and “kindergarten” are two words I never thought I’d hear in the same sentence

  • @piyushmate3837
    @piyushmate3837 Před 3 lety +6959

    Protecting their culture, language is right.
    Worshipping a dangerous ideology is i don't support.

    • @piyushmate3837
      @piyushmate3837 Před 3 lety +4

      @@dog6376 what copycat?

    • @piyushmate3837
      @piyushmate3837 Před 3 lety

      @RobloxThingx i don't know about that. What is it?

    • @piyushmate3837
      @piyushmate3837 Před 3 lety +4

      @@dog6376 then its your fault, you judged quickly & show me from whom i copied.

    • @gustavo6948
      @gustavo6948 Před 3 lety +7

      i agree... but you must be talking about the japanese and capitalism right?🙈

    • @goathicsgoathics5390
      @goathicsgoathics5390 Před 3 lety +34

      @RobloxThingx I knew there was a cult/nationalistic grups problem in japan, but I didn't knew about the worship of Hiroshito in schools, do you have any article/video talking more about it?

  • @rishwhoo7258
    @rishwhoo7258 Před 2 lety +1721

    "If they love North Korea so much then they should return back there" , saying this sounds racist but no matter what you say it's true. Enjoying the freedom and privileges of living in Japan but staying faithful to a country like NK and turning a blind eye to the atrocities committed by it is pure sedition.

    • @NoName-hg6cc
      @NoName-hg6cc Před 2 lety +40

      The fact is, they cannot. They know too much about Japan landscape etc..etc..

    • @M-Soares
      @M-Soares Před 2 lety +48

      They can't, they are stateless people. Japan forcibly brought their forefathers from a united Korea at the time, now their descendants will never be accepted as Japanese, nor they will be accepted in either Korea, NK sees them as foreign by this point, SK won't accept their allegiance to the north and while they're now japanese citizens, they will never be seen as Japanese. It's a Limbo.

    • @iswitchedsidesforthiscat
      @iswitchedsidesforthiscat Před 2 lety +5

      Hard to enjoy freedom when there’s nationalist threatning your freedom

    • @charliemilroy6497
      @charliemilroy6497 Před 2 lety +165

      That's not at all racist to say. Even if you are American and hate America, it's a fair question to ask why you live there if you are free to go. It's very interesting that in this mini documentary he didn't ask this basic question himself. Clearly the children are free to visit and there doesn't seem to be any way for an open country like Japan to stop people leaving. The other thing that he doesn't answer at all is why are the Japanese government giving any funding to a non-Japanese school. You could set up a foreign school in many European countries, but you wouldn't expect the local taxpayers to fund cultural indoctrination. If the cultural values are so strong and important they can find them themselves. It was a really interesting topic that was really poorly handled.

    • @FuckTheWorld95c
      @FuckTheWorld95c Před 2 lety +14

      @@NoName-hg6cc You do realise that google maps is a thing, right?

  • @1leon000
    @1leon000 Před 2 lety +731

    Kids celebrating their Korean ancestry, culture and identity: *I support*
    Kids celebrating a harmful regime and its creator: *I don't support*

    • @icyr0bin-794
      @icyr0bin-794 Před 2 lety +72

      this is the stance i take. i think protecting the korean minority in japan is important but the state of north korea should not be celebrated.

    • @1leon000
      @1leon000 Před 2 lety +7

      @@icyr0bin-794 me too

    • @Zero_Is_Stopping_Time
      @Zero_Is_Stopping_Time Před 2 lety +6

      I agree, the culture must be taught

    • @baoquoc3710
      @baoquoc3710 Před 2 lety +3

      Never been in my life I actually 100% support this

    • @charliemilroy6497
      @charliemilroy6497 Před 2 lety +6

      I support the principle, but I'm not going to support them monetarily and the Japanese taxpayers should not be forced to fund the preservation of Korean culture.

  • @mistergarabaldi4845
    @mistergarabaldi4845 Před 4 lety +14612

    North Korea is like the really cool dad growing up, but you later find out that he did drugs and killed people
    Edit: Over a full year later, I’m making this edit just to say that this remains my greatest accomplishment.

  • @prakashrawat8734
    @prakashrawat8734 Před 3 lety +5353

    It's much easier to love North Korea when you live in Japan.

    • @suleyman8696
      @suleyman8696 Před 3 lety +313

      @@yeoj_ Well, they have to.

    • @jmanaa9969
      @jmanaa9969 Před 3 lety +226

      @@yeoj_ They don't have any other option. It is that or death.

    • @awkwardbound569
      @awkwardbound569 Před 2 lety +10

      @@jmanaa9969 lol

    • @mathskafunda4383
      @mathskafunda4383 Před 2 lety +17

      @@jmanaa9969 worse than death.

    • @SeriousCupOfTea
      @SeriousCupOfTea Před 2 lety +3

      The people who love the most in Japan are not the Koreans living in Japan, but the pro-American politicians who are affiliated with the Liberal Democratic Party (自由民主党, jiyūminshutō) who get easy votes every time North Korea announces something sensitive.
      Japan's parliamentary elections generally rely on North Korea to do something.

  • @haruyoshimatsu
    @haruyoshimatsu Před rokem +80

    as a Japanese the problem is the education both Japanese and North Korean receive and media that constantly promotes the hate towards each other. I understand there’s a dark history and it’s never easy for anyone to get over everything completely but we’ve got something better to do than just hating and blaming on every single thing one or the other..

    • @hithere748
      @hithere748 Před rokem

      Aw... The media promotes the hatred. Is there any benefits the media gets from it?

    • @piano_beginner
      @piano_beginner Před 5 měsíci

      せやな、拉致被害者を救える議員を国会に送り出そう。

  • @giovannirafael5351
    @giovannirafael5351 Před 2 lety +207

    The museum is kind of amazing, you have to admit that. Imagine if every country had something similar, a place to remember everything about the country.

  • @madtrain8515
    @madtrain8515 Před 3 lety +4036

    That guy in the bar is right.
    At least Japan is not trying to destroy Korean schools.
    Japan is just not willing to waste the taxpayers' money on an organization that worships a dangerous ideology.

    • @warwickeng5491
      @warwickeng5491 Před 3 lety +371

      It's bonkers that these people think the Japanese tax payer should fund their brainwashing centres *ahem* schools I mean

    • @deadlybeastusar9471
      @deadlybeastusar9471 Před 3 lety +22

      Well said

    • @Peace4Leisure91
      @Peace4Leisure91 Před 3 lety +199

      He’s not tho. Japan brought these people over, now they’re here, part of your people, you gotta take care of them. Consequences of their own actions.

    • @Curvatorta
      @Curvatorta Před 3 lety +1

      Stateless Koreans.
      Chosen-jin

    • @michaelk4896
      @michaelk4896 Před 3 lety +131

      @@Peace4Leisure91 They always present Japan as the ultimate evil of the time. Thousands of Koreans also have voluntarily moved to Japan before and during WWII to be educated (whether in universities or military academies) or to work because Japan was far more industrialised than Korea was at the time.

  • @lillyie
    @lillyie Před 3 lety +5061

    I get the schools trying to preserve their Korean culture and identity.
    But to support a dangerous regime is unacceptable

    • @BeakNFeathers
      @BeakNFeathers Před 3 lety +137

      The Korean identity is safe here in South Korea, as well as the North, if it were ever to be a unique culture in itself.
      Those schools aren't preserving some culture that will be gone without.

    • @jinx4447
      @jinx4447 Před 3 lety +38

      I'm Korean and i agree with you

    • @hermes112
      @hermes112 Před 3 lety +70

      they probably simply don't know about the terrible things the government has done, or if they do, they probably just deny it (well for the kids, at least)

    • @OfficialRibbitNixon
      @OfficialRibbitNixon Před 3 lety +28

      These aren’t the majority of Koreans in Japan. This is just a section of them.

    • @Londonmapper
      @Londonmapper Před 3 lety +2

      @@jinx4447 with a name called Alexander righttttt...

  • @joshuaholmes6005
    @joshuaholmes6005 Před 3 lety +198

    “What about American and Japanese human rights issues”
    “Many of these are even more serious”
    “Deal with your problems first before you criticize North Korea”
    No. Your argument is false. Open the borders, allow freedom of speech, end labor camps, end generational punishments, and stop shooting nukes near your neighbors...
    Also I’ll criticize America too! You know why??? because criticizing America is the most American thing you can do.
    Note* I’m not saying America and Japan don’t have problems.

    • @hmm7458
      @hmm7458 Před 2 lety +7

      that's literally the the whataboutism ppl don't even realise how often they do it

    • @keepcoolgames5896
      @keepcoolgames5896 Před 2 lety

      End general punishment ? What is ?

    • @kaheis4566
      @kaheis4566 Před 2 lety +12

      @@keepcoolgames5896 generational punishments, when someone commits a crime in north korea, their entire family can be punished for their own crime. this is meant to dissuade people from trying to escape for fear that their family will suffer as well

    • @keepcoolgames5896
      @keepcoolgames5896 Před 2 lety +2

      @@kaheis4566 thank you for enlightening me

    • @DrHydra47
      @DrHydra47 Před 2 lety +1

      I mean Americas immigrant detention centres are like a dog pound
      But were talking about a country that still uses labor camps

  • @NiNGalaxU2
    @NiNGalaxU2 Před 3 lety +34

    During their school trip they will probably see the good parts of N.Korea. When they move there, they will probably understand what this country really is like.

  • @rollcakecookie7189
    @rollcakecookie7189 Před 3 lety +7826

    I’m sure those kids would be REALLY disappointed if they found out the truth about a country they never lived in but are supposed to praise...

    • @yeshuaeich9350
      @yeshuaeich9350 Před 3 lety +254

      North Korea is divided in 3 social groups. They would fit in 'Loyal' group. So They would live as rich people. Just 'hostile' people live in misery and fear

    • @KiRa-fy6uq
      @KiRa-fy6uq Před 3 lety +177

      They already spoke about it. They all say "fix your own issues before you come at North Korea"

    • @pontusborg7642
      @pontusborg7642 Před 3 lety +170

      Reminds me of those pro Erdogan turks living in Germany, whilst praising his anti EU attitude and nationalism(the extreme version)

    • @sp-ox7oz
      @sp-ox7oz Před 3 lety +14

      @@pontusborg7642 well said!!

    • @fisnikramadani5962
      @fisnikramadani5962 Před 3 lety +47

      You would be REALLY disappointed if you found out the truth about the US, a country you're supposed to praise...

  • @majourvelencianna5810
    @majourvelencianna5810 Před 4 lety +5016

    So they 'visited' NK. And already felt kinship, I'm amazed that they have so much empathy but, 'visiting' and 'living' in NK are two very, very different things.

    • @stee.5039
      @stee.5039 Před 3 lety +397

      Especially since those visits are very much choreographed to make North Korea look great!

    • @dgpfproducoes6467
      @dgpfproducoes6467 Před 3 lety +155

      Leigh Tory well they say in the video they are choreographed, if they spent a week in the real North Korea they would integrate into Japanese society faster than those right wing nationalist ever could

    • @thunder23JOE
      @thunder23JOE Před 3 lety +36

      Maybe the solution would be to send the NKs back to really live in their cherished homeland for at least 5 years before giving em the option to return. (Edit) Who knows they would even become the right wing Japanese nationalists. Problem solved!

    • @icephonex
      @icephonex Před 3 lety +32

      Especially when you only visit Pyongyang (and only the good parts of it)

    • @fumikasawada6935
      @fumikasawada6935 Před 3 lety +34

      As said in the video, it made them that way since Japanese were hostile to them. But you're right. I just hope they would think for themselves and stop being influenced.

  • @matthewtopping2061
    @matthewtopping2061 Před 2 lety +17

    It's a tiny nitpick, but at 0:48, the caption reads 東京市 Tōkyō-shi or "City of Tokyo". This municipality doesn't exist, and it's technically 東京都 Tōkyō-to, the "Tokyo Metropolis".

    • @icyr0bin-794
      @icyr0bin-794 Před 2 lety

      in official documents it is simply “都” i hear ww

    • @matthewtopping2061
      @matthewtopping2061 Před 2 lety +2

      @@icyr0bin-794 Eh maybe. After all, there is only one in the country. When talking about all Japanese prefectures together, they say 都道府県 todōfuken, because there are actually four kinds.

  • @m.i7211
    @m.i7211 Před 3 lety +240

    “Old men have to stand on the streets to protect the children.” Ok but every Japanese elementary school does that.

    • @benilt1
      @benilt1 Před 2 lety +9

      Exactly

    • @kalebkurian6001
      @kalebkurian6001 Před 2 lety

      but they clearly need it because Japanese people go bananas when they see a korean, just ask any korean grandma

    • @deedeedan8681
      @deedeedan8681 Před rokem +15

      Theyre not protecting them for the same reasons and you know that.

  • @kj55
    @kj55 Před 6 lety +12842

    Let them live in NK for a month, they will change their thinking quickly

    • @Dina-ug8jy
      @Dina-ug8jy Před 6 lety +1416

      Yeah like seriously if you cried when you left north korea because you were sad why not stay there forever and be executed when you try to leave and get caught

    • @Lenno94
      @Lenno94 Před 6 lety +1081

      Killstorm55 I know right? And then Vox try to make Japan citizens and officials look like bad guys.. please..Stop normalizing North Korea like its any other country.

    • @athoughtfulape
      @athoughtfulape Před 6 lety +994

      Is that really what you got from this video? - That Vox is normalizing NK? lol

    • @wemakeasiansurveys4U
      @wemakeasiansurveys4U Před 6 lety +529

      It would be heavily choreographed and they would almost live in luxury. There is no way they would allow them to see the conditions of what many of us consider the real North Korea. Imagine it being set up similarly to the tourism in the country they would never allow us to see first hand the terrible conditions in which they live.

    • @whydoikeepchangingmenameit6472
      @whydoikeepchangingmenameit6472 Před 6 lety +86

      Lennon Talbot they did the same thing with the Palestinian Israeli conflict. Palestine was CLEARLY in the wrong (yes I did my research). But they try to make it look like they're not biased. Except YOU CAN'T DO THAT WITH NORTH KOREA AND JAPAN! Also they are clearly democratic.

  • @nale5257
    @nale5257 Před 4 lety +2726

    As controversial and sensitive this topic might be, the approach of the video should be appreciated.

  • @txquartz
    @txquartz Před rokem +11

    It would be helpful for context and to see how Japan really treats people to compare to Southern-identifying Japanese-Korean experiences. Chongryon are a small subset even among the Zainichi community.

  • @amemooress6291
    @amemooress6291 Před rokem +19

    The idea that no country can criticize another unless they themselves are flawless just creates a world where no one can speak up for the victims of human rights violations. We all must hold each other AND our own governments accountable.

    • @matheusvillela9150
      @matheusvillela9150 Před rokem

      When the world's most powerful Empire who has killed tens of millions around the world, started dozens of wars, military dictatorships and commits war crimes all the time, and tries to use supposed human right abuse so they can embargo and starve a tiny nation that has been bombed to the stone age by them 70 years, that might be a little hypocritical and disgusting, don't you think

  • @digitalsoju
    @digitalsoju Před 6 lety +2995

    The irony is these North Korean nationalists are all speaking in Japanese because their Korean isn't fluent enough.

    • @leoslml
      @leoslml Před 6 lety +345

      If I were a hard-liner Korean. I would request that I must be interviewed in Korean. Symbolism matters.

    • @dayla8634
      @dayla8634 Před 6 lety +134

      I have a friend who had to go North Korean school in Japan. She can speak fluent Korean and Japanese. She said she had to spend 2 weeks in NK for school. Don't think she cared for it. Too me though she was 100% Japanese.

    • @Hunderworld
      @Hunderworld Před 6 lety +56

      I believe to survive in Japan they had to blend in with fluent Kanji

    • @iamsodonewiththesetheories6254
      @iamsodonewiththesetheories6254 Před 6 lety +12

      Waw sounds you know everything

    • @EnhancedNightmare
      @EnhancedNightmare Před 6 lety +3

      Always lossless lol

  • @danhayek
    @danhayek Před 4 lety +2680

    Seems like the smartest move for these schools would be to build a relationship with the South Korean government to secure funding apart from the north while still remaining Korean.

    • @muhammadabadi6410
      @muhammadabadi6410 Před 4 lety +138

      Daniel Hayek first of South Koreans hate North Koreans even more than japan second the school should be shut down there is a difference between teaching a culture and indoctrination

    • @dontsubscribetome3262
      @dontsubscribetome3262 Před 4 lety +424

      Tye Tass no south koreans hate the north korean regime not its ppl
      South korea accepts all north korean refugees and sees them as oppressed brothers

    • @muhammadabadi6410
      @muhammadabadi6410 Před 4 lety +17

      Article 69 bruh no they don’t

    • @Hadesfirst
      @Hadesfirst Před 4 lety +32

      or you know, just integrate since they have absolutley 0 in common with actual north korea. they living in fantasy world. Can't they just open den internet??

    • @Miles_Korea
      @Miles_Korea Před 4 lety +54

      I'm south korean, in politic, north korean are enemy. So we prepare the war and war is not over in Korea.

  • @hdk4049
    @hdk4049 Před 2 lety +19

    I think the Japanese government should sanction Joseon schools. As a Korean I think that school is abnormal, too.

  • @TravelChannelOne
    @TravelChannelOne Před 2 měsíci

    Love how these start with the title and then devolve into a historical lesson, context......then geopolitics....amazing piece

  • @YuGiOhGXSATAN
    @YuGiOhGXSATAN Před 4 lety +5159

    North Koreans: /tests missiles close to Japan borders and kidnaps Japanese citizens/
    Japanese: /cuts education funding to North Korean school/
    North Koreans: /surprised Pikachu face/

    • @jvbble
      @jvbble Před 4 lety +361

      North Korean children living in Japan:
      /gets discriminated/ huh north korea is pretty cool
      Japanese nationalists: /surprised pikachu face/
      Its not all black and white

    • @jlivb
      @jlivb Před 4 lety +158

      JuBBle And they were the ones that occupied and ravished Korea before the Korean War. They are not innocent in this either

    • @jlivb
      @jlivb Před 4 lety +20

      JuBBle And they were the ones that occupied and ravished Korea before the Korean War. They are not innocent in this either

    • @anoopgec4818
      @anoopgec4818 Před 4 lety +149

      From a neutral point of view
      This all happened because of Japan. They should have integrated this NK people to their culture shouldnt have allowed those school that taught NK history. This NK people that live in japan should change their attitude shouldnt live in a country and support another that threatens with nuclear war with the country you are staying with and enjoy all the freedom. Technically you are all from south Korea as per video so because NK send you money now you have obligation to them.
      NK people understand this fact Japan allowed you to have your own schools allowed you to have your culture gave you all the rights
      Dont think it as Japan's weakness

    • @user-zp8wr8gm4c
      @user-zp8wr8gm4c Před 4 lety +34

      Lol what Japan did to NK was much worse

  • @pigamer4416
    @pigamer4416 Před 4 lety +3771

    Japenese person: exists
    North Korean kidnapper: hippity hoppity you're now kim's property

  • @SirLouisX
    @SirLouisX Před 2 lety +17

    North Koreans: “Imma praise you my leader”
    Kim Something: “Here in Korea?”
    North Koreans: “No, there in Japan. Laterr…”

  • @ar5846
    @ar5846 Před rokem +16

    how can we be nice to them when these people actively insult Japan, refuse to cooperate with us and doesn't blend into the society? We always tell them to go back to north korea if they love kim so much but they just go silent and don't say anything. I guess they do realise that they have to rely on Japan.

    • @Svea_LifeGuards
      @Svea_LifeGuards Před rokem

      我は官軍我(わが)敵は  1
      天地容れざる朝敵ぞ
      敵の大將たる者は 
      古今無雙(双)の英雄で
      之に從ふ兵(つわもの)は  
      共に慓悍(ひょうかん)決死の士
      鬼神(きしん)に恥(はじ)ぬ勇あるも 
      天の許さぬ叛逆を
      起しゝ者は昔より 
      榮えし例(ためし)あらざるぞ
      敵の亡ぶる夫迄(それまで)は  
      進めや進め諸共に
      玉ちる劔(つるぎ)拔き連れて  
      死ぬる覺悟で進むべし
      皇國(みくに)の風(ふう)と武士(もののふ)の  
      其身(そのみ)を護る靈(たましい)の
      維新このかた廢(すた)れたる 
      日本刀(やまとがたな)の今更に
      又(また)世に出づる身の譽(ほまれ)
      敵も身方も諸共に
      刄(やいば)の下に死ぬべきぞ 
      大和魂ある者の
      死ぬべき時は今なるぞ 
      人に後(おく)れて恥かくな
      敵の亡ぶる夫迄(それまで)は  
      進めや進め諸共に
      玉ちる劔(つるぎ)拔き連れて  
      死ぬる覺悟で進むべ 
      Do you miss your glorious Empire do you Miss emperor Hirohito and minister of War Hideki Tojo..

  • @backatchalol
    @backatchalol Před 4 lety +1194

    My mom is a South Korean citizen.. she was born in Japan but went to a North Korean school in Japan because my grand parents wanted her to keep her Korean traditions. From what she told me they taught Korean history instead of North Korean history. The only reason she didn’t go to a South Korean school was because it was too expensive and she grew up poor.

    • @a224kkk
      @a224kkk Před rokem +48

      this comment should receive more attention

    • @Ncloud
      @Ncloud Před rokem +20

      Extremely interesting

    • @MikaelaKMajorHistory
      @MikaelaKMajorHistory Před rokem +19

      The lack of likes on your comment shows how many people want to turn a blind eye to another perspective of these schools

    • @gauravhupadhyay
      @gauravhupadhyay Před rokem +8

      My mum is an Indian citizen. She was born in Karachi Pakistan but went to a Hindi language school in India because she was Hindu. Her family fled Pakistan to escape persecution and due to the school being destroyed by locals. My neighbor who is Muslim was taught Indian history rather than Pakistani history. I live in the UK now.

    • @vasilisakrasa
      @vasilisakrasa Před rokem +4

      I assume she lives in South Korea now? The problem is the discrimination of Koreans because of these schools.

  • @varghen0
    @varghen0 Před 5 lety +3525

    The solution for me is obvious: South Korea needs to start funding these schools

    • @tacklemin
      @tacklemin Před 5 lety +141

      Henrique Vargas actually there are already some schools supported by rok government in japan, but the number is very limited. The north is much stronger than the south in brainwashing.

    • @MekareP
      @MekareP Před 5 lety +47

      That's kind of actually brilliant.

    • @crimea2513
      @crimea2513 Před 5 lety +136

      Japanese government must takeover these schools and give them to South Korea. We can't side on the north Koreans in Japan. If they love it North Korean dictatorship they can move it

    • @APEX-qv7rm
      @APEX-qv7rm Před 5 lety +95

      @@crimea2513I am Canadian, I think
      Canada must take over the world
      Canada will become the Great Empire
      You will become a Canadian
      I will be the Great Leader

    • @a...i...
      @a...i... Před 5 lety +20

      @@APEX-qv7rm I don't think anybody would be that mad if y'all door 😂😂😂

  • @furlycee
    @furlycee Před 3 lety +33

    kind of feels like they're able to be nostalgic about the "great leader" because they've never lived under him or had to deal with the consequences of his leadership

  • @jaymeme4811
    @jaymeme4811 Před 3 lety +41

    Maybe if they all move back to N. Korea, they will realise how lucky they are to be free in Japan?

  • @ludgy7278
    @ludgy7278 Před 5 lety +1687

    wow i never know mixed feeling until i saw this video.

    • @xxdarkknight420xx2
      @xxdarkknight420xx2 Před 5 lety +5

      Same though

    • @seaweed6668
      @seaweed6668 Před 4 lety +1

      Bruhhh

    • @ruekiakiya1074
      @ruekiakiya1074 Před 4 lety +76

      @Ian Gilliam i don't think you watch the video truly. these kids see North Korea as heaven. their mindset is already different from us. this backward mindset is not being helped by the Japanese hate for them, so they sought refugee to North Korea. idolizing them. and again, telling these children to go back to North Korea. would you tell an African-American to go back to Africa so they wouldn't feel discriminated?

    • @ruekiakiya1074
      @ruekiakiya1074 Před 4 lety +17

      @Ian Gilliam how is it incomparable. they're human being too are they not?

    • @jdoe3006
      @jdoe3006 Před 4 lety +5

      You probably support the Kim regime right?

  • @Arttective
    @Arttective Před 4 lety +2734

    "Look at your problems first before criticizing NK"
    A classic dialog to dodge difficult questions

    • @laabitres
      @laabitres Před 4 lety +101

      well considering the US still has tons of racism and disparity within their society, the statement is valid, but it is a deflection tactic.

    • @youngmasterzhi
      @youngmasterzhi Před 4 lety +20

      Didn't Benjamin Franklin said something similar like that before?
      "Wipe your finger before you point out their spots"

    • @jasewrangler1980
      @jasewrangler1980 Před 4 lety +30

      Whataboutism; not surprising it's used by NK considering the Soviet Union/Russia really pioneered it, using it successfully against the US/West.

    • @d_y_n_a_m_o
      @d_y_n_a_m_o Před 4 lety +3

      Y'all really like NK

    • @helbent4
      @helbent4 Před 4 lety +3

      @bigricester Aspiring Marauder is literally using the correct political science terminology for how the Soviet Union deflected criticism during the Cold War.

  • @wengorande3969
    @wengorande3969 Před 3 lety +16

    If they feel unsafe in Japan, why can't they go back to North Korea instead? (Well, for me I think it would be very much harder for them if they live in North Korea huh)

  • @gamer1X12
    @gamer1X12 Před rokem +16

    Why don't they live there, if they're so wealthy and welcomed by NK? I understand where they're coming from to a degree, but these people are completely delusional.

    • @christinemoon3053
      @christinemoon3053 Před rokem

      Because their great grandparents were forced to move go japan during colonization. These people probably identify themselves as Japanese since they were born there and their parents were born there. It’s like asking you to pick up and move to a different country if you were born from immigrant parents. Or maybe you aren’t so you will never really understand

    • @neosj3003
      @neosj3003 Před rokem +3

      I live in Japan and I can tell you this. Many Japanese do not like Korean in general. This is what makes their live miserable, with constant discrimination and polarization in Japan. These people have no choice but to rely the NK organization who is willing to provide an actual safe place and sanctuary for them, where at least they can feel safe without any discrimination.
      I am not an expert on social behavior, but when one is in a less favorable environment, they will tend to rely on things that can make them safe, or in this case, protect their identity. This can be seen in why many gang members have a broken family or childhood, they have no choice but to choose to join gang because it is the only place that can make them feel important and free to express theirselves.
      I am not necessarily support the regime, but these kids and NK regime are 2 different issues. 1 is trying to expand their sphere of influence, and 1 is trying to find a sanctuary that can make them secure.

  • @gent9358
    @gent9358 Před 4 lety +2539

    It's like if USSR established a Stalin Memorial School in Washington DC.

    • @lillyie
      @lillyie Před 4 lety +360

      as the japanese guy in the video said: What if they tried to install an Osama Bin Laden Memorial school in the US

    • @FirstNameLastName-qt2hz
      @FirstNameLastName-qt2hz Před 4 lety +61

      let's do that!

    • @ayszhang
      @ayszhang Před 4 lety +92

      The USA never dislocated Soviet population to Mainland or Off shores US. It's more like if the Chechens built a Chechen school in Moscow with the funding of a Chechen leader whom everyone hates.

    • @deirse2068
      @deirse2068 Před 4 lety +12

      杨健 the internet ignores things it doesn’t like

    • @tinfoil4688
      @tinfoil4688 Před 4 lety +80

      Or if they established an "Adolf Hitler Memorial School and Learning Facility" in Poland or Israel.

  • @objectionsir8005
    @objectionsir8005 Před 4 lety +2470

    "The US and Japan also have human rights issues, fix those before you critisize NK"
    This is called leveling, very common defense from an abusive person when called out...

    • @deirse2068
      @deirse2068 Před 4 lety +114

      I just wanna know the amount of crimes that the us and uk committed that you are aware of, I’d rather have a nation which is publicly known for its crime then one that hides it and people celebrate it

    • @nictheperson6709
      @nictheperson6709 Před 4 lety +168

      @@deirse2068 There aren't any countries that hide their past crimes anymore, it just isn't possible in the 21st century.

    • @theprettypetard2524
      @theprettypetard2524 Před 4 lety +196

      @@nictheperson6709 china is trying it's best though. just look how much they censor stuff and how much they try to spin thing to make them seem nicer.

    • @_gamepoint_
      @_gamepoint_ Před 4 lety +25

      @@deirse2068 what are you talking about? While it is not talked enough about for a lot of our likings you learn about all the atrocities that happened on north American soil if your're a us kid.
      The only way you wouldn't learn of something is if it was done not too long ago and the history wasn't done being written up on it.

    • @_gamepoint_
      @_gamepoint_ Před 4 lety +17

      @@nictheperson6709 Germany blocks hitler related vids. I do believe japan does the same when it comes to their history around ww2.

  • @imaginetuhin1
    @imaginetuhin1 Před 3 lety +3

    I don't know how many times I have watched this, wonderful work, wonderful

  • @davevanfunk8917
    @davevanfunk8917 Před 3 lety +6

    Back in the 70s I lived in Japan for a few years. I well aware of the Chinese citizens, as well as the Koreans living there. I got to know a young Korean woman in a calligraphy class. As I got to know her I figured out that she was not from S. Korea, but the North. She wanted me to come and teach at her local school. I declined. She was also really interested in a trip I was going to take to South Korea with some friends. In hindsight, I'm sure she took that class to be able to contact me.

  • @bogusdingus6634
    @bogusdingus6634 Před 3 lety +1303

    Real sad seeing kids getting involved in things like this

    • @atc5412
      @atc5412 Před 3 lety +47

      They're caught between a battle of two countries.

    • @yasminelucman4827
      @yasminelucman4827 Před 3 lety +5

      @@atc5412 how unfortunate

    • @porkypine602
      @porkypine602 Před 3 lety +11

      For real kids shouldn't have to grow up like this

    • @diabl2master
      @diabl2master Před 3 lety +8

      Like the kids are making any choices..... it's indoctrination at its finest

    • @ismth
      @ismth Před 2 lety

      Agreed

  • @thehorsesnamewasfriday8695
    @thehorsesnamewasfriday8695 Před 3 lety +1777

    Poor kids, they don’t know any better.

    • @tobygeorge1100
      @tobygeorge1100 Před 3 lety +41

      just imagine if there was a Osama bin laden high school in your city

    • @krart8401
      @krart8401 Před 3 lety +31

      for a second i thought this was my comment😂great pfp

    • @Londonmapper
      @Londonmapper Před 3 lety +1

      Don’t get kids involved with the North Korean politics in North Korea they would be rich since they would be classified as loyal and loyal North Koreans are rich but the “hostile” are poor but anyways don’t involve them with politics there just children

    • @fenrirr22
      @fenrirr22 Před 3 lety +29

      They are living in Japan without censored internet and media. They can literally search the sins of North Korean regime and the oppression of the citizens, in 5 minutes. They could know any better, they are just ignorant, and they are 100% at fault.

    • @0xD1CE
      @0xD1CE Před 3 lety +5

      @@fenrirr22 ...You're calling these students ignorant but I think you're in a similar case. How often do you purposely try to search about atrocities your own country has committed? No one likes to do that, especially at their age....

  • @pri.sci.lla.
    @pri.sci.lla. Před 3 lety +6

    Their response is very telling “worry about yourself” like we can do that ad worry about y’all at the same time

  • @hanadeflour
    @hanadeflour Před rokem +4

    Vox really did a good job making this documentary
    I would've never imagined there is 'a state inside of a stade' like this exist in japan
    Ngl that museum is better than any museum I have ever visited in my country (even better than the national museum 😩)

  • @iwrestledafeloniousoysteronce
    @iwrestledafeloniousoysteronce Před 5 lety +3468

    It's really a difficult issue. As a Japanese, I feel remorse for our imperialist history, which caused this problem at first, and I wish Korean people could find a place to preserve their cultural identity. On the other hand, it's true that Chongryon indoctrinates Korean people to worship the North Korean Dictatorship. Although I will disagree about most of the things with him, that right-wing activist was right at least partly in saying "what if they built an Osama Bin Laden Memorial School in the US?" I wish Korean people could find an alternative way to preserve their cultural identity. I learned a lot from this video, thank you Vox.

    • @APEX-qv7rm
      @APEX-qv7rm Před 5 lety +106

      All people in the world
      Have ancestors who did evil
      War ...torture ...rape ...slaughter
      Not because Evil Leaders tell Lies
      But because the People believe the Lies
      Lies have no power
      Belief gives power to lies
      Belief makes slaves
      Logic breaks the chains
      Ok ?

    • @APEX-qv7rm
      @APEX-qv7rm Před 5 lety +51

      Culture is a Big Cult
      If only 100 people
      Believed those things
      We would call them a Cult
      If 100 Million people believe same things
      We call it Culture
      No ?

    • @Shanaoh
      @Shanaoh Před 5 lety +46

      @@APEX-qv7rm that's why it's called "cult"ure

    • @kirolloshalim1533
      @kirolloshalim1533 Před 5 lety +34

      @@APEX-qv7rm hold on, so you're telling me culture is a bad thing? I just don't understand what's going on

    • @ryanjapan3113
      @ryanjapan3113 Před 5 lety +13

      ガッツイチモツ The Republic of Korea could own the schools instead

  • @yuetang5604
    @yuetang5604 Před 4 lety +686

    What's interesting is that they were interviewed in Japanese not korean

    • @kayk6330
      @kayk6330 Před 4 lety +38

      Yeah! You'd think they're taught in school to speak their mother language? Especially if they're relatives and friends are mostly korean.

    • @goldcherries
      @goldcherries Před 4 lety +150

      @@kayk6330 Guys, they probably do speak Korean, but the translators only know Japanese, so that's what their speaking in.n

    • @vpb7746
      @vpb7746 Před 4 lety +9

      Finally... someone said THAT!

    • @mexicotaco0913
      @mexicotaco0913 Před 4 lety +38

      I'm sure they have a pretty good command in Korean, with all their textbooks in Korean and everything. But since these people were born and raised in Japan, I'm guessing they felt more comfortable speaking in Japanese when talking about touchy subject like this

    • @antal4s
      @antal4s Před 4 lety +10

      @@Chris-zz9wm They probably speak the North dialect of Korean which is not the same as the south actually, so finding a translator might indeed be hard.

  • @angelamaximo1241
    @angelamaximo1241 Před 2 lety +10

    Olhando pelo lado positivo, é mais fácil ser um norte coreano no Japão que o contrário.

  • @_soyaa_boon_5208
    @_soyaa_boon_5208 Před 3 lety +33

    I just feel bad for the children, they are caught up in this mess and are innocent.

  • @GotTM87
    @GotTM87 Před 4 lety +2820

    Send those kids to North Korea, their tune will change quickly.

    • @omarkharnivall2439
      @omarkharnivall2439 Před 4 lety +137

      By the 2008 crisis the japanese goverment gave brazilians almost 3k usd to come back to Brazil. I see how they could do the same to these so patriotic NK.

    • @rizgarghaf4758
      @rizgarghaf4758 Před 4 lety +29

      Let’s send you please. I heard North Korea is a great place for the blacks son.

    • @GotTM87
      @GotTM87 Před 4 lety +130

      Rizgar Ghaf ( ͡° ͜ʖ ͡°) yeah how about no.

    • @lukejposadas
      @lukejposadas Před 4 lety +81

      @@rizgarghaf4758 loser

    • @yeeyeehaircut796
      @yeeyeehaircut796 Před 4 lety +131

      @@rizgarghaf4758 who hurt your feelings kid?

  • @yeesh2
    @yeesh2 Před 5 lety +1616

    Vox, I think this is an excellent documentary explaining the complex and hidden issue of Koreans in Japan. Well done and I appreciate it!
    But there is an important fact you missed mention why all this happen.
    Do you know why Korean community in Japan received money from the North Korea, not from the South Korea, after Japanese Empire fell. And that was the start of this awkward situation and tragedy for the Koreans in Japan. I was curious about it and people who watched this video might have the same question.
    During the Japanese rule of Korean peninsula 1910 - 1945, Japan built most of the industrial complex in the northern Korea where there are plenty of natural resources such as hydro power generation, coal, etc. In addition having industrial and military base close to Chinese border made more sense for the Japan in the goal of expanding the empire into China. On the other hand southern Korea was used as an agricultural basis producing mainly rice.
    So when the 2nd World War ended, South Korea was much poorer than North Korea up until 1970, thus no extra resources to share with Koreans living abroad for the struggling government of South Korea.
    There is one more thing that I would like to mention. Do you know why Koreans in Japan(North Korean citizens) still support and loyal to North Korea?
    It's because they have many family members and relatives who lives in North Korea now. During 1955 -1970, many Koreans in Japan emigrated to North Korea lured by the communist propaganda of free education, medical service, and communist Utopia.
    The North Korean community in Japan already knows that North Korea is the worst country in the world run by the horrible dictatorship of Kim's family. But when they stop supporting the regime and stop sending money to their brothers and sisters in North Korea, it will definitely make their families and relatives hard to survive.
    Following link is a testimony of two Koreans. One male, born in Japan, emigrated to North Korea, escaped to South Korea via China, and the other female, born and lived as North Korean in Japan, living in South Korea now but her brothers living in North Korea.
    Sorry the interview is in Korean.
    czcams.com/video/pMC2G7akiiM/video.html

    • @abdurrahmanf.a.5624
      @abdurrahmanf.a.5624 Před 5 lety +63

      sean yee
      thanks, you deserve more likes

    • @vvvvvv675
      @vvvvvv675 Před 5 lety +136

      Thank you for the insightful comment. It's nice to see someone actually contribute with valuable information on the issue, as opposed to the hateful and reductionist one-liners that comprise most of this video's comment section...

    • @MrYondaime705
      @MrYondaime705 Před 5 lety +13

      Thanks alot for this info. Answered alot of my questions

    • @hemanthchalla4833
      @hemanthchalla4833 Před 5 lety +73

      I thought they were still supporting North Korea because North Korean government was providing them money and culture they never had. Man, after reading your comment it absolutely makes sense. Thank you very much.

    • @33sheih
      @33sheih Před 5 lety +48

      this information is indeed very important to understand this story, thanks for shading some more light on the background. a shame it was not a part of the video..

  • @adityadube3324
    @adityadube3324 Před 3 lety +16

    In this matter I totally support Japan...👌👍

  • @casuallyuncalm9488
    @casuallyuncalm9488 Před 3 lety +9

    I think the real statement that should be made is:
    That's the wrong half of Korea to associate with

  • @KAML-wk2gw
    @KAML-wk2gw Před 4 lety +585

    I don't know what to say man,
    How innocent their minds are ,they're thinking North Korea is like a paradise by looking at maps, culture , visiting on school trips, (tbh their teachers and community are portraying these children false image) & Japanese discriminating them on the other side, both sides there's fault, but i stand slightly towards Japanese. One day they'll realise the reality

    • @mayu2727
      @mayu2727 Před 4 lety +9

      I think that those North Koreans(including children) know their countries state of affairs because Japan is a liberal country where all citizens can get information easily. Knowing that, It’s not a bad thing to be proud of their own homeland because the reason why North Korea is in a bad situation is all on Kim Jong un, and denying North Korea’s culture and history is not right. They know about their own country far more than us foreigners.
      (I’m sorry. I don’t know if you could understand my bad English💦)

    • @neelparmar6690
      @neelparmar6690 Před 4 lety +4

      There’s no simple answer to this but I would say both sides are guilty. Though their actions, Japan discriminates which encourages North Koreans to manipulate their young into thinking North Korea is a safeguard while North Koreans remain ignorant to their country’s plight and recent history, enraging the Japanese

  • @baddaysyt3249
    @baddaysyt3249 Před 5 lety +1856

    North Korean Girl: Her crime? Watching a Hollywood movie
    US: *Hold my Flag*

    • @justarandomf-4gphantom170
      @justarandomf-4gphantom170 Před 4 lety +69

      @SwagetLeFaget don't feel too much sympathy for black people, cuz I'm black and I get discriminated against all the time because I ended up being lighter than almost all of them. I can't help that I almost look white and yet I've been threatened time and time again. Now I know the prejudice against black people is terrible my family has been in this situation pretty much forever as a as well as most black families,,, but I am experiencing something called colorism where people of your own race hate and discriminate you because you happen to be either lighter or darker than them

    • @mirkovukoslavovic2636
      @mirkovukoslavovic2636 Před 4 lety +16

      @@justarandomf-4gphantom170 this world is sick

    • @kotenoklelu3471
      @kotenoklelu3471 Před 4 lety +5

      @@justarandomf-4gphantom170 I heard such story from one guy. No one group like him no other. He was kind of lonely wolf

    • @yohanbenoy1527
      @yohanbenoy1527 Před 4 lety +4

      I know how to take down north Korea ask China and the US will join with China and assasinata the Kim family

    • @calaisbeetle5782
      @calaisbeetle5782 Před 4 lety +2

      @@justarandomf-4gphantom170 Yeah, if we could see others as just people and not colours it would go a long way towards helping, but then you still have the LBGTQ etc etc............... prejudice is a mind set :(

  • @joey8033
    @joey8033 Před rokem +28

    That man that "explained it in a way an american would understand" is completely right 🤞 and the moment he made that example all my empathy died. It's true you can't be experiencing and benefitting from the privilege of a country and still be for the country that's tried to destroy it

  • @pierregutierrez9372
    @pierregutierrez9372 Před 3 lety +17

    North Korea: *'sorta' hates Japan*
    Also North Korea: Let's create our own bubble in Japan for fun.

  • @raphaelmanarpz721
    @raphaelmanarpz721 Před 3 lety +1041

    Imagine an Adolf Hitler University built in the heart of Jerusalem.

  • @luissanchez723
    @luissanchez723 Před 6 lety +1326

    *Having pride from where you came from is one thing, but this is a whole different ball park*

    • @vitas75
      @vitas75 Před 5 lety +10

      Luis Sanchez youre very bold.

    • @shreyaputhran7646
      @shreyaputhran7646 Před 5 lety +8

      Crispy Terone What u said is true......but in this case North Korea doesn’t allow people from different nationalities to settle there.......even tho they are non residential Koreans

    • @harryobyrne2806
      @harryobyrne2806 Před 5 lety +10

      Crispy Terone some patriotism is good, but there is a line where it goes to far

    • @davidroberts7282
      @davidroberts7282 Před 5 lety +1

      I'm proud of my family's German heritage and Ich can speak Deutsche reasonably well, but I don't family pride in our heritage or genealogy to a Central European country would necessarily gain me entry into a exclusive German-speaking school in Alabama much less there being any support for any such schools existing. Why would the current German government support any specific German-language schools in the USA and we reciprocated by giving our hard-earned money to them. That makes no logical sense, but then again Germany isn't a totalitarian dictatorship, despite its militaristic past, and the evil, unforgivable crimes committed by the Third Reich in the death and concentration camps and a calculated wars of aggression that nearly led to an extinction event. Then there's the crimes and authoritarian secret espionage state of East Germany and the StaatSecurityService, State Security Service, or the Stack, probably one of the diabolical, clever, evil, ruthless secret polices ever to exist. These guys at their best made the KGB, CIA's Cointellpro, NSA look like choir boys during the Cold War and that's saying something.

    • @ZacharyAlexanderGoh
      @ZacharyAlexanderGoh Před 5 lety

      @Crispy Terone yup

  • @user-kq5jz9oi2n
    @user-kq5jz9oi2n Před 2 lety +1

    I am just curious what was Johnny's answer to the Bin Laden Memorial School question

  • @user-xf1hh8td8y
    @user-xf1hh8td8y Před 2 lety +5

    "what if they built an Osama Bin Laden Memorial School in the US?"
    this example is just so clever

  • @tanvikejriwal1
    @tanvikejriwal1 Před 6 lety +380

    While I do believe that harassing these children is wrong, I won't blame the Japanese government if they completely cut off funding to these schools and asked these kids to attend regular Japanese schools instead.

    • @sagichdirdochnicht4653
      @sagichdirdochnicht4653 Před 5 lety +10

      I wouldn't fund a shool, that heavily honors a family of dictators, that threat the very country those shools are standing with nuclear attacs. Nah, defenetly wouldn't do that either.

    • @sinnopal1
      @sinnopal1 Před 5 lety +2

      Fundings from japanese government is insignificant. these nk residents in japan are wealthy, controlling some big companies. They fund themselves

    • @0fficialdregs
      @0fficialdregs Před 5 lety +1

      @EuroFight 38 i wouldn't allow those korean children in a japanese schools since the japanese has a high conviction rate because they beat people to confess to crimes they 99% didn't commit. I rather see those kids in the korean schools where they are SAFE and not harass or mocked

    • @ZachRegoreo
      @ZachRegoreo Před 5 lety

      I do agree but that goes into a possible loss of culture

    • @lindsayschutz
      @lindsayschutz Před 5 lety

      They'd have to be granted Japanese citizenship first...

  • @solahcoreyp1ece83
    @solahcoreyp1ece83 Před 3 lety +735

    south korea should seize the opportunity to save them. give them more fundings than the north korean government gave them.

    • @nguyengirl7684
      @nguyengirl7684 Před 3 lety +130

      i was thinking about this too, but i don’t think sk would want to undermine NK as the current sk prime minister really really wants unification and is rather soft on nk for these reasons. maybe one way to do things is for the japanese government to show more cooperation with the south korean government, to show that they aren’t anti korean but they refuse to support a harmful regime. problem is jpn prime minister is very nationalistic

    • @anonanonym9872
      @anonanonym9872 Před 3 lety +31

      the Pro-SK organization(simply called Mindan) has their own schools already. Embracing Chongryon's schools is beyond the imagination in the history of their own confrontation.

    • @kmch7286
      @kmch7286 Před 3 lety +21

      They refuse any kind of south korea government intervention. South korea government is enemy to them.

    • @rrocc
      @rrocc Před 3 lety +3

      That's not....how...

    • @deviantd.6740
      @deviantd.6740 Před 3 lety

      @@rrocc How what?

  • @dannyzero692
    @dannyzero692 Před 2 lety +6

    Feels bad, these kid speak Japanese, lived in Japan but they're forced to love North Korea that wasn't their homeland, they're born in Japan and even their parents are born there too after all.

  • @Monokuma-1
    @Monokuma-1 Před rokem +6

    クォーター日本人(別名ハーフ)として、日本の人々が日本本土の海岸沿いで北朝鮮のスパイ船に誘拐されていると聞いて腹立たしい.私には、彼らが国内に住む北朝鮮の人々に対して怒ったり、差別的でさえある理由が理解できます。

  • @NemesisChan
    @NemesisChan Před 4 lety +699

    7:23 _What if they built an Osama Bin Laden Memorial School in the US? How would you fell?_ that's so accurate it hurts

    • @aquafinner1505
      @aquafinner1505 Před 4 lety

      @@yuchenzhoujack2708 doesn't this alr happen lol

    • @angel_aki
      @angel_aki Před 4 lety +114

      @@yuchenzhoujack2708 with all due respect many Muslims love america; im one of them :) please don't spread Islamophobia

    • @olthdorimirth6055
      @olthdorimirth6055 Před 4 lety +8

      @@angel_aki there's a small difference... I don't feel any resentment, I'm extremely neutral as a minority also.
      Atleast you don't have muslim schools who teach basically anti American and Japanese culture.
      You have people who had a view against the majority of the people who had views different from their hive mind. Or hive mind they don't even know that exists...

    • @YellowSpaceMarine
      @YellowSpaceMarine Před 4 lety +13

      They pray to the Kims who kidnapped those people and are starving and torturing their citizens

    • @KAXSH
      @KAXSH Před 4 lety +5

      @@angel_aki maybe Muslims love America, but a lot of Americans don't like Muslims. I'm Muslim too, for the record (not trying to spread hate).

  • @biteme9486
    @biteme9486 Před 5 lety +429

    I wonder what they would say if they ever met North Korean defectors

    • @APEX-qv7rm
      @APEX-qv7rm Před 5 lety +16

      They would say, Hello Kitty !

    • @dylanburton3740
      @dylanburton3740 Před 5 lety +13

      The defectors who get paid tons of money by US based capitalist think tanks?

    • @ryanjapan3113
      @ryanjapan3113 Před 5 lety +26

      Dylan Burton since when was huff post a capitalist think tank?

    • @jaybee27D
      @jaybee27D Před 5 lety +58

      Dylan Burton if you’re implying that all North Korean human rights violations are actually a US conspiracy to make NK look bad for some reason then why does the United Nations officially recognize the violations as incomparable to any other human rights violation

    • @blek6708
      @blek6708 Před 5 lety +2

      JayBe because they’re capitalists who ignore the crimes the USA has been committing for YEARS

  • @yui6588
    @yui6588 Před 3 lety +1

    when my mom was a kid (1980s)
    she remembers passing by the North Korean school in her neighborhood

  • @Racoonma392
    @Racoonma392 Před 2 lety +5

    I find it interesting that the people they interviewed chose to speak Japanese in this video

  • @greekvvedge
    @greekvvedge Před 6 lety +180

    One very important point that Vox fails to express clearly is that there are two Korean organizations in Japan, one representing the South Korean government, and the other the North. In fact, over the decades since the de-legitimization of North Korea and the Eastern Bloc, the Chongryon (North Korean) organization has dwindled and the South Korean organization (Mindan) has nearly doubled.(they were once nearly equal, with the North being somewhat dominant) These people for some reason, though speaking Japanese as their first language and living in Japan have chosen, for complex reasons, to remain affiliated with North Korea. Some of these correlated with discrimination they have received in Japan, and some requiring a more nuanced analysis.

    • @KalanTheDrummer
      @KalanTheDrummer Před 6 lety +5

      thanks for the info

    • @izar4911
      @izar4911 Před 6 lety +17

      I was about to explain that. The South Korean organization (Mindan) is composed of Koreans who wanted to be affiliated with South Korea instead of the north. And as of now they clearly outnumbered the Koreans who claim to be affiliated with North Korea.

    • @HeatherSpoonheim
      @HeatherSpoonheim Před 6 lety +8

      Thanks for that explanation. I had a hard time wrapping my mind around the idea that all these Korean descendants would remain loyal to North Korea. Now this makes a lot more sense.

    • @JanjayTrollface
      @JanjayTrollface Před 6 lety +1

      I thought they briefly explained the split in Korean expats.

    • @metalfingers6913
      @metalfingers6913 Před 6 lety +2

      One of the few Westerners who understands what's going on

  • @VioletVagabond272
    @VioletVagabond272 Před 4 lety +429

    "it's like taking these kids hostage to play diplomacy" 6:26
    weren't we just talking about how that's exactly what north korea did????

    • @melli7193
      @melli7193 Před 4 lety +20

      That doesn't make it right for Japan to do it to the koreans kids who don't know any better.

    • @VioletVagabond272
      @VioletVagabond272 Před 4 lety +50

      @@melli7193 I kinda agree with you but there is a massive difference between kidnapping and defunding schools. Yes you could argue that but these children have family's they got to live yes they dont deserve the hate. But as north Korean missile attacks increase there is so much genuine fear in the hearts of the japanese

    • @pedroalbuquerque4740
      @pedroalbuquerque4740 Před 3 lety +9

      I kind of understand what you mean, 'cause I thought the same, however, discrimination against children who were raised to believe in NK as a safe space isn't right. The violation of human rights in NK, including the ones of the japanese taken there, doesn't justify using children for diplomatic purposes. I mean, they are children, their world view is mostly the one they're taught, as said in the video, Japan's hate only increases the love those ppl have for NK.

    • @paxbizzle
      @paxbizzle Před 3 lety

      They didnt kidnap for diplomacy though...

    • @pepesylvia848
      @pepesylvia848 Před 3 lety +1

      @@VioletVagabond272 Has Japan paid reparations to these people?
      They were literally all brought over as conscripts and slaves. I'll bet you most of their lost funding comes from taxes they pay.
      Japanese-Koreans didn't take those kids.
      While Japan definitely took all 600,000 of them from Korea.
      Japan is in the wrong here. Nobody supports NK for no reason, unless the alternative is worse.

  • @kalzangwoeser
    @kalzangwoeser Před 3 lety

    @vox u should really do a story on Tibetan children’s village school based in India .. it will be worth your time🙏🙏

  • @mtahra2722
    @mtahra2722 Před 3 lety +41

    Some years ago, I read that a naturalized Japanese citizen said somewhere that NK organization? in Japan took a survey of their people to see how they came to Japan, and most of them answered that they escaped to Japan because of the Korean War. I have also heard that their parents told them that they were embarrassed to have fled their own country, so they have been saying that they were forced to be brought there by the Japanese. There are some good people who question their origins, and realize the oddness of that, and are willing to bring their inside information out to the public. I wish there were more people like that. In any given situation, someone somewhere is working behind the scenes. And they keep us living in the dark for their own benefit. They are the cancer.

  • @sasasa22_15
    @sasasa22_15 Před 4 lety +717

    Assaulting young student is not moral or civil. But this school shouldnt be allowed.

    • @elton7425
      @elton7425 Před 4 lety +11

      @@Bobspineable more evil than the US government?

    • @tashajoykin5192
      @tashajoykin5192 Před 4 lety +36

      @@elton7425 at least you're able to speak out and many organizations will stand behind you

    • @joshpark5454
      @joshpark5454 Před 4 lety +35

      @@elton7425 Yes, more evil than the US government you dunce

    • @elton7425
      @elton7425 Před 4 lety +8

      @@joshpark5454 That's bs. No government on the face of the earth is more evil than the US government.

    • @CrafterboeyMiner
      @CrafterboeyMiner Před 4 lety +24

      @@elton7425 Sorry to bust your bubble, but it is.
      It's not opinion based but based on factual evidence throughout history and current standings. Do actual research you dolt.

  • @jamesdad6516
    @jamesdad6516 Před 4 lety +1108

    I don't see any reasons the Japnese governent should financially support pro-North Korean schools. They're not Japanese in the first place.

    • @schneal4942
      @schneal4942 Před 4 lety +39

      James Dad buuuuuuut daaaaaaaaaad

    • @nathofmann8169
      @nathofmann8169 Před 4 lety +136

      They're half Japanese and have the right to manifest their culture. But I understand the Government should not help them because of the NK government

    • @latenightthinker4737
      @latenightthinker4737 Před 4 lety +53

      @@nathofmann8169 lol, to that I'd ask would the North Korean gov support Japanese schools in North Korea?

    • @skytrexz3714
      @skytrexz3714 Před 4 lety +40

      That’s kinda racist, just because you don’t come from the same country...

    • @lamnguyen7551
      @lamnguyen7551 Před 4 lety +92

      Sky TrexZ Let’s have an example, shall we? If I’m Turkish and you’re Syrian, and apparently Turkey is invading Syria, would it be ideal that the Syrian Government financially support Turkish schools in Syria? That certainly wouldn’t be okay. You said that just because they’re not from the same country doesn’t mean the government shouldn’t help them, but let’s be realistic, those schools are against Japanese education in the first place. In addition, those two countries, Japan and North Korea, don’t have such an amazing relationship and there are no rules that said the Japanese Government must financially support North Korean schools. It’s not all sunshine and rainbows, because if those North Koreans didn’t want to live in Japan, why don’t they return to North Korea? From what I’ve heard, they’re pretending that they’re the victims even though they’re not.

  • @vasilisakrasa
    @vasilisakrasa Před rokem

    It is an amazing documentary, so insightful, thank you very much! I witnessed a lot of animosity and discrimination against Koreans in Japan but could never quite understand. It finally makes sense.

  • @daan772
    @daan772 Před 7 měsíci +2

    Why is Japan even allowing these kind of school in their own country?

  • @spelunkerd
    @spelunkerd Před 6 lety +1494

    Although allowing a separate North Korean school on Japanese soil may seem like the right thing to do, it is a divisive policy that ensures ongoing separation for generations to come. Consider what happened in Singapore when cultural integration was mandated by a series of public housing initiatives. Generations ago, people of different cultures were required to live together in apartment buildings, requiring multicultural cooperation and at least an element of understanding and respect for neighbors. There was no effort to enforce language bans, though most citizens ended up bilingual. Instead of sliding into chaos, Singapore has risen to be considered the least corrupt and most successful city state in the world. Multiculturalism only works when there is a foundation of mutual respect. Often that begins in schools, so children raised in a homogeneous monoculture start out with a major disadvantage. It should never be about 'us' vs 'them'.

    • @hayek218
      @hayek218 Před 6 lety +17

      Ell Lee
      ?????????
      You are so naive. You can talk about any fantasy you want if you do not have to back up.
      It is Koreans who chose to be Koreans. There is no reason for Japan to make neutralization easy for illegal migrants, yakuzas, people who do not obey Japanese Law and criminals.
      It is Koreans that disguise themselves as Japanese using Japanese name and lie that the Japan took names away. It is very hard to change surname in Japan.
      Just think why only Koreans are hated in Japan. It is because they engage in illegal activities and behave so badly in Japan. And when they are accused, they play victims. They are the biggest liars and professional victims.
      If you want to stay in other country, then respect the culture and tradition, follow the laws and rules of society. If you cannot do that, then just leave.
      Simple as that with any other country. It is NOT your country but it is a Japanese country.
      Koreans should be deported as the original agreement said. Their permanent residence was for two generations, and they should go home as such.

    • @hayek218
      @hayek218 Před 6 lety +13

      BELLOBLOCK
      Because they want to stay as Korean.

    • @hayek218
      @hayek218 Před 6 lety +17

      BELLOBLOCK
      They want all the goodies in Japan but do not want to take responsibility.
      The answer is NO.

    • @ierka5875
      @ierka5875 Před 6 lety +64

      I stay in singapore and we learn to respect others from school, having racial harmony day celebrated every year in school, teaching us about how the racial riot was started and ended in the 1960s.

    • @huitinglee9622
      @huitinglee9622 Před 6 lety +57

      Singapore has been independent only for the past 50+ years. And before that, it was a British Colony, where people of different races and religions had arrived from different parts of the world to work, from countries like Malaysia, India, China, and even as far as Holland.
      We have 4 official languages (English, Melayu, Tamil and Mandarin) so, we so our best to integrate each others' culture and beliefs. Not saying that we have a perfect system, every system definitely has its pros and cons.

  • @ItsSaurabhRaut
    @ItsSaurabhRaut Před 6 lety +126

    Those smooth animations are dope.

    • @sorenkair
      @sorenkair Před 6 lety +2

      easy ease. everything.

    • @sorenkair
      @sorenkair Před 6 lety +1

      what? im talking about easy ease in after effects.

  • @tykep1009
    @tykep1009 Před 3 lety +17

    Sure! Discrimination is terrible than kidnapping and targetting nuke missiles on you. What an ultra-nationalist country, isn't it?
    Joke aside, I wonder why he so eagerly supports north-Korea.

    • @eren7350
      @eren7350 Před 2 lety +1

      Bro, did you watch the video?

  • @arturomoroyoqui
    @arturomoroyoqui Před rokem +6

    Not to be THAT person but if they love North Korea so much, why don’t they just move there?

  • @someone_has_found_the_trea2734

    8:39 He has no idea about lack of human rights in north korea.

    • @hellopewson7756
      @hellopewson7756 Před 4 lety +79

      Their attitude reminds me of my mother, when we were learning about how bad Mao was my mom refused to hear it, saying that the deaths would happen anyway. I realize that it is not to the same level but it did remind me of her. (p.s she is from china)

    • @alexs1640
      @alexs1640 Před 4 lety +32

      Exactly. Even though the US and Japan do have history of human rights violations, #1 the human rights violations aren't comparable. It's like comparing shoplifting to bank robbery. And #2, that doesn't make their human rights violations ok because others have them. I wish the guy interviewing him had followed up with admitting the US does have rights violations and we as citizens fight against them all the time, what does he do against the NK violations...

    • @catfishyt9925
      @catfishyt9925 Před 4 lety +1

      Anushka Sati
      IKR our (US) human rights violations. Everyone had rights freedom of relglion peace. We have welfare programs. We really dont have human rights violations

    • @arsfra
      @arsfra Před 4 lety +8

      U have no idea what USA is doing right now.

    • @someone_has_found_the_trea2734
      @someone_has_found_the_trea2734 Před 4 lety +1

      @@arsfra i do.

  • @deb0815
    @deb0815 Před 3 lety +433

    I don't understand how it's even acceptable to teach kids to pledge allegiance to some other country while they and their parents were born and raised in Japan. Teaching them Korean language and culture is great but I don't get why they even have the pictures of the NK leaders in the school, neither why do they have to respect them.

    • @user-is3yn7xr4c
      @user-is3yn7xr4c Před 2 lety +3

      History is as valuable into shaping the future.
      Just because it happened in the past, it doesn't mean it's not going to happen in the future.

    • @zippyparakeet1074
      @zippyparakeet1074 Před 2 lety +25

      Because that's what makes a democracy superior to an autocracy- the freedom of choice. You can't punish people for believing in something that you find unsavoury long as they aren't doing anyone any harm. They keep to themselves and don't encourage kids to revolt against the Japanese government. They're just a cult.

    • @aleksyaghjyan2382
      @aleksyaghjyan2382 Před 2 lety

      @@zippyparakeet1074 exactly 💯 👏

    • @zippyparakeet1074
      @zippyparakeet1074 Před rokem +1

      @I have an interest in North Korea I wouldn't agree with it, no. But they do have a right to freedom of speech long as they don't call for violence.

  • @ruller8901
    @ruller8901 Před rokem

    I can’t imagine the difficulty regarding the formation of their identity that comes with a situation like this. The world truly is an interesting place

  • @fredkrause4509
    @fredkrause4509 Před 2 lety +6

    the world is really a complicated place

  • @felixfaster
    @felixfaster Před 5 lety +657

    There is a gap in knowledge between the two sides; this video highlights that the Koreans in Japan go visit NK and see only a highly choreographed presentation on how "great" it is to live under that regime in that economy. If they actually had to live there, and felt the oppression and poverty, they would not love the regime so much.
    The proper solution, I think, would be for the Japanese to educate the Koreans living there on what North Korea is actually like, perhaps give them a graduation ceremony trip to South Korea and have them listen to the stories of those who have fled from NK. They would likely listen more to other Koreans than to Japanese. America did not win the Cold War simply by hating Russians; there were concerted efforts to show that Communism was different from Russians or Polish people etc. and unveiling the poverty and cruelty to those suffering under them was a key component in showing how different one system was from another. The Japanese Koreans here seem to lack that information because they exist only in their "bubble." Rather than simply hating and trying to undermine them, the Japanese should (and perhaps are) try to pierce the bubble with information.

    • @bp837
      @bp837 Před 4 lety +6

      @Joseph Daigo Peto Correction. Thanks to America. The same applies to Japan as well. Had the Americans not gotten actively involved in East Asia, you'd already be under the PRC's sphere of influence.

    • @mothman84
      @mothman84 Před 4 lety +19

      But they have the information. They reject it. You heard the guy: Think of your own problems, many of which are greater than any in North Korea, before you criticize. That's not a guy who doesn't know. That's a guy who knows it all, _and likes it better than Japan, and better than the West._ It's really important to listen to what people are saying, rather than second guess the reasons why they are saying it.

    • @corklleen2505
      @corklleen2505 Před 4 lety +6

      Would you let saudi arabia teach you and your kids on how hostile and bad the US is to the middle eastern countries ?
      Thats the case with north koreans.

    • @ernisupriani9270
      @ernisupriani9270 Před 4 lety +12

      Korea in Japan is hard to explain because there is 3 group of Korean in JP. 1st is the immigrant from South Korea who move to JP in early 1980 to get a better live in JP. 2nd is the Korean who pick North Korea as their identity for many reason for example like refugees from Jeju who fleed to Japan because the SK treatment of communism in post Korean war. 3rd is the Pre-Korean War Korean who not affiliated to south or north Korea or the Joseon people. So talking about Korean in Japan and their affiliated either to south or north or neither both is complicated because so many reason for them to choose

    • @y.y.4673
      @y.y.4673 Před 4 lety +12

      The problem is, Chongryong seniors will do any effort they can to prevent their children from accepting the reality of North Korea. Actually they themselves put their children in captivity, shutting out real information and common sense of outside world.

  • @shfnnghh
    @shfnnghh Před 4 lety +1149

    ‘I saw my friends mother publicly getting executed’
    Her crime: watching a hollywood movie

    • @iamaspaceman8533
      @iamaspaceman8533 Před 4 lety +39

      Which one?

    • @lamBETTERthanY0U
      @lamBETTERthanY0U Před 4 lety +74

      Fast and furious tokyo drift

    • @Morpheus-hz7xd
      @Morpheus-hz7xd Před 4 lety +3

      Yeah its sad that they hate USA thingy in North Korea

    • @hpsmash77
      @hpsmash77 Před 4 lety

      TedX

    • @maengah
      @maengah Před 4 lety +7

      @杨健 do you have any sources or something I can Google? I always felt a little sketchy about her so I wouldnt be surprised if she was really lying

  • @clovelly1606
    @clovelly1606 Před 2 lety

    Brilliantly made. Brilliant!!!!!

  • @bregidayubos3338
    @bregidayubos3338 Před 3 lety +1

    2:45 why is everyone is forgeting to mention that philippines join the korean war
    i need explanation

  • @akrybion
    @akrybion Před 6 lety +651

    This is probably the best episode of borders so far. I never heard about these issues, very interesting, but also seems like it's unlikely to be solved anytime soon.

    • @whydoievenbothertoputthish2199
      @whydoievenbothertoputthish2199 Před 6 lety +1

      Without alot of bloodshed NK will still be there till they have an nuke only then people will intervene they always come too late

    • @akrybion
      @akrybion Před 6 lety +4

      MrPoopyButthole69 Doesn't NK already have a number of nukes? I thought they just lack the ability to make them smaller to mount onto ICBMs.

    • @lookbruhiaintgonnalielastw2282
      @lookbruhiaintgonnalielastw2282 Před 6 lety

      P K incorrect, they have the abilities to makes icbm nukes, but can barely reach the us due to lack of modern technology

    • @Crashed131963
      @Crashed131963 Před 6 lety

      Also NK only has a few nukes so if they hit the States the retaliation would be NK turned into the moonscape. NK is dumb but not suicidal.

  • @SabrinaSelene
    @SabrinaSelene Před 3 lety +974

    I feel so much sympathy for these people. They were born in a country that didn't want them, and their homeland is a place that has no respect for human rights or freedom. What they understand of NK is a superficial benevolent image that is their benefactor. I have no doubt that if they started living there for a while, they would become disillusioned fast and realised how much better they had it in Japan ... but only if they lived as and pretended to be a Japanese citizen. Else, they'd get prosecuted. This is really heartbreaking.

    • @matildasaito9416
      @matildasaito9416 Před 3 lety +58

      Even the third and fourth generations born in Japan have not taken Japanese citizenship and are living as foreigners. That's the problem. There are many people who are living as Japanese, and it is not difficult for them to get Japanese citizenship, in fact they are given more privileges than other foreigners for doing so. No one is opposed to them preserving their culture and history. So why do they choose to live that way? This is because there is a system that is built using them, and there are people who would not like to see it go away. In the past, tens of billions of yen a year were sent to NK by them for years, and there were ships going back and forth to NK regularly. Since they can no longer do that freely, they have became more vocal about discrimination than ever before, not only in Japan but also overseas. This video is designed to make you feel sorry for them. A kind person like you should be careful not to let such things take advantage of your feelings.

    • @h8GW
      @h8GW Před rokem +7

      @@matildasaito9416 I try my best to be reasonably kind, be moderate, and try to see an issue from both sides. However, this does not mean I'm not careful around possible bad actors nor lack awareness of possible outside influence. It also does not mean my current philosophy can be easily changed.

    • @ghesus4852
      @ghesus4852 Před rokem +4

      @@matildasaito9416 where did you get the information at the top about third and fourth generation Koreans not having citizenship?

    • @greenerell484
      @greenerell484 Před 3 měsíci

      yea

  • @mathiaslist6705
    @mathiaslist6705 Před 2 lety

    7:26 said in a simple way which immediatly is understood .... however still those schools are there ... so what does that say about Japan?

  • @Gleifel
    @Gleifel Před rokem +2

    I've gone to school in and out of japan before, you just get smily old people by the crossings on roads in japan around and on the way to school lol that's not just a protection thing for North Korean schools Specifically. That being said I do agree with the general premise of the video. By the point of my generation I'm so disconnected I don't really count but my mum is a Zainichi Korean born in japan who speaks Korean and has been to Korea (although she is not of the North Korean community) so I imagine this would be more of a thing my mum would feel strongly about. For those who didn't guess going by the way I spell "mum" I'm also half British which is where the "have been to school in and out of japan before" part comes in, just presenting my credentials XD.

  • @Rin-le7cx
    @Rin-le7cx Před 4 lety +238

    They are supporting the regime. Did they expect Japanese to still be friendly with them? 🙄

    • @StrangerOnTheWeb
      @StrangerOnTheWeb Před 4 lety +16

      @Jacky Phantom I mean considering the amount of attrocities the Japanese committed during ww2 to China and Korea the hate is sort of justified

    • @Alice-cb7jg
      @Alice-cb7jg Před 4 lety +9

      Jacky Phantom so are koreans. Don’t push your hate for China onto us by elevating koreans and Japanese when you barely know anything

    • @somatia350
      @somatia350 Před 4 lety

      Also...kanji...

    • @flaviomolina7165
      @flaviomolina7165 Před 4 lety +1

      @Jacky Phantom you forget that ww2 is less than 100 years ago
      The koreans in the vid didnt just "come "to japsn, they were BROUGHT there during the Japanese emperium

    • @lukejposadas
      @lukejposadas Před 4 lety

      @Jacky Phantom two things, firstly "Koreans" are not more sensible, I believe you mean South Koreans. Secondly you should be breaking a sweat for the US as well. Considering if that we are heavily tied to Japan.

  • @user-ny1kx5kb6y
    @user-ny1kx5kb6y Před 5 lety +1282

    Interesting how none of the Koreans spoke Korean in the interviews.

    • @thefreethinkingboy9403
      @thefreethinkingboy9403 Před 5 lety +178

      Probably because they only had a Japanese translator

    • @franduarte2004
      @franduarte2004 Před 5 lety +152

      Or maybe because since some of them live in Japan they can speak Japanese

    • @poiuqwerty4283
      @poiuqwerty4283 Před 5 lety +83

      Yeah if you have lived in a country for enough time and went their when your young enough, you would be able to speak their national language.
      I'm korean and I can speak english and spanish fluently enough even though I have only lived abroad for 2 years.

    • @franduarte2004
      @franduarte2004 Před 5 lety +11

      @Mike Hunt actually Kim jong-un is a real Korean and he appeared on the video although he did not speak

    • @jdoe3006
      @jdoe3006 Před 4 lety +26

      They were born there, what's interesting about that???

  • @payomayo1371
    @payomayo1371 Před 2 lety +5

    Send them to Norht korea, they're going to love it over there ;)

  • @izumihanagata1148
    @izumihanagata1148 Před 2 lety +3

    Why South Korea didn't support them instead ?

    • @calvinscarvings.66
      @calvinscarvings.66 Před 2 lety

      Well I'm not sure why they didn't but nk had more reason to. Because that way they get loyal people in Japan but sk should have too.