Updated 07:54 am.EST, Mon November 23, 2009

Missions|Fri, Feb. 13 2009 11:57 AM EST

'Underground' Project to Deploy Defectors Back to N. Korea

By Ethan Cole|Christian Post Reporter

It’s hard to imagine why someone would want to go back to North Korea – described by some defectors as “hell on earth” - after escaping the totalitarian regime that has the world’s worst human rights record. But some North Koreans are doing just that – volunteering to risk their lives to return to a hostile country in order to spread the Gospel.

Underground University is a new project by Colorado Springs-based ministry Seoul USA that will train and equip North Korean defectors with tools they need to return to their homeland for ministry.

For 12 months, the North Korean Christians will undergo an intensive training process in Seoul, South Korea. Afterwards, they will go to North Korea and China, where North Korean defectors flee to, as well as other countries where North Korean diplomats and students live.

"Many Americans have heard about the tens of thousands who are active in the underground North Korean Church, but an equally amazing trend is the growing number of North Korean exiles who are eager to return to China and North Korea to reach their countrymen," said H.S. Foley, the CEO of Seoul USA.

"The fact that North Koreans are eager to risk their lives by returning to North Korea to spread the Christian message makes us want to equip them with the comprehensive training they'll need to survive,” she added.

For the past seven years, North Korea has been ranked No. 1 on Open Doors USA’s World Watch List – a list that ranks countries based on the degree of persecution of Christians. Testimonies from North Korean defectors and investigative human rights reports have revealed that the government carries out brutal attacks on Christians and dissidents.

Anyone found a Christian in North Korea is imprisoned, tortured and sometimes even publicly executed to warn others to not follow the faith.

In North Korea, citizens are forced to adhere to a personality cult that revolves around worshipping the current dictator and his deceased father. There is absolutely no religious freedom in North Korea, nor freedom of speech.

But despite the intense dangers, North Korea defectors still want to return to their homeland to share the Word of God with their countrymen.

Estimates place the number of underground Christian believers in North Korea at around 400,000 to 500,000, but the figure could be higher, according to Open Doors sources in the country.

Meanwhile, there is an estimated 200,000 Christians currently in prison labor camps because of their faith.

Seoul USA, in an effort to raise awareness about the “modern-day holocaust” in North Korea, is hosting a banquet on April 2 at Cheyenne Mountain Resort in Colorado Springs. The banquet is free for anyone who wants to attend, with dinner costs already covered by Seoul USA supporters.

The banquet will feature speaker Kim Sung Min, a North Korean defector and dean of Underground University. He has twice been invited to the White House to share about the plight of North Koreans.

Kim will share his own personal story of how he escaped North Korea, as well as his hopes for the Underground University project.

"This banquet is a unique opportunity for the people of Colorado to hear the life-changing story of Mr. Kim, learn about the suffering of North Korean Christians, and get involved in a radical underground movement designed to change North Korea from the inside out," Foley said. "Everyone is invited to attend and bring family and friends."

On the Web: www.undergroundu.org

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  • Sat Feb 28, 2009 9:19 pm Agree: 1   Disagree: 2

    Eric Foley here, co-founder of Seoul USA.

    Thanks for your comments, pvlman and zooch. What you've shared makes sense. In truth, however, our motivation is quite different.

    Many well-meaning organizations do ministry in NK. As they share with supporters, they sometimes say, "The NK government has no idea that we are running this orphanage/smuggling these Bibles/doing this discipleship program." Would that that were true!

    The sad reality is that NK is very threatened by Christian activity. As a result, they deploy a harrowing amount of resources to track Christian organizations.

    Each NK governor is required to raise a certain amount of money by bilking Christian ministries. They are counseled on how to deceive ministries into believing that they are engaged in secret projects.

    The NK government deploys its own team of fake orphanage operators, imitation underground church cells, and even pseudo-seekers whose job it is to make skillful and strategic contact with the West.

    So Bible smugglers bring Bibles into NK. The NK government watches it happen. They let the smuggler go...and then they round up and execute the Bible recipients and their families, while the smugglers returns to the West with news of their "successful" missions.

    When Franklin Graham visited Pyongyang last year, NK officials permitted him to preach in one of NK's imitation churches. They manipulated the event to convince the world that there really are free Christians in NK. (There most assuredly are not.)

    In September 2007, nine NK evangelists were executed, along with more than 20 family members. The NK government convinced foreign governments that these evangelists were spies. As a result, NK managed to get away with murder.

    So when a ministry starts with the idea that they are operating secretly, they begin with a false and dangerous premise. Sometimes, the best way to keep workers safe is to strategically share details of the work publicly.

    That is why, when necessary, we share as MUCH as we can with the public and relevant governments--NOT for the sake of raising support but because the NK government is less likely to be ruthless towards specific people when the world is watching.

    This doesn't mean we send the NK government a telegram about our every move. (Interestingly, we do send a weekly fax to NK government offices. We send from a different number and country each week. The faxes detail atrocities against NK Christians, along with the Gospel and an invitation to repent, believe, and share the truth.)

    When UU students graduate, they enter a world where NK authorities are already watching their every step. We need to use that to their advantage. The sharing of this information with the public is part of that effort.

    Feel free to contact us via the website to talk further. Thanks in advance for your prayers for all who minister to and in NK.

  • Sat Feb 14, 2009 5:34 am Agree: 0   Disagree: 0

    While certainly don't know much about it, but its a N. Korean Christian operation I have to assume what they know what they are doing. After visiting the provided link, my guess they have to risk exposure to get monetary and other assistance. A safe journey and a long life to the volunteers.

  • Sat Feb 14, 2009 12:20 am Agree: 2   Disagree: 0

    Having worked in the old Soviet Union from 1972 to the present time during the worst of the cold war, I am amazed that you are so free with the information and the details of this project in North Korea, we were involved in some mission work that I still do not speak of today because at the time peoples lives were in danger and people could lose there lives, North Korea is worse that the old Soviet Union, and have to ask what do you think you are doing by making this so public????

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