Inside Japan's Mini North Korea | Unreported World

2023 ж. 29 Сәу.
1 817 150 Рет қаралды

For Unreported World, Secunder Kermani meets a curious community of Koreans who live in Japan but feel a close bond with one the world’s most repressive states, North Korea.
Their community is centred around the Chongryon, a powerful residents association with strong links to the North Korean regime.
Unreported World has been given rare access to try to understand what lies behind their beliefs.
Born and raised in Japan, this community has their own unique schooling system, complete with portraits of North Korean leaders in every classroom.
Secunder meets a volatile ultranationalist activist targeting the schools and a former Chongryon member suing the North Korean government.
Producer/Director: Liam O’Hare
Series Producer: Andy Lee
Executive Producer: Ed Fraser
Production Company: Channel 4 News
Subscribe to our channel for more Unreported World episodes / unreportedworld .

Пікірлер
  • It makes me so sad to think about how excited that lady must of been when she boarded the boat to North Korea. She grew up getting told it was a paradise and she was finally getting to go to this paradise, only to find the opposite. She had no idea the 40 years of pain that was waiting for her when she boarded that boat. She must of felt so betrayed when she arrived and found the truth.

    @rachelcookie321@rachelcookie321 Жыл бұрын
    • If you're interested, track down and read a copy of The Aquariums of Pyongyang by Kang Chol-hwan.

      @THEBIRDISWATCHING@THEBIRDISWATCHING Жыл бұрын
    • It's like in Interstellar when they got tricked into thinking they were going to a good planet only find out it was totally barren..

      @kenkozawa9810@kenkozawa9810 Жыл бұрын
    • Truth shall unbearable, Truth shall enlighten the unsawful lots, Claimed true not from the outside but within you.

      @vortolex@vortolex Жыл бұрын
    • yes, this is probably the saddest thing about this whole story..

      @elizabeth4689@elizabeth468911 ай бұрын
    • *must have felt

      @iCro63@iCro6311 ай бұрын
  • I found it quite interesting that every time the reporter asked about human rights abuses in North Korea, nobody denied his accusation - they all just pointed the finger elsewhere saying "what about XYZ?" as if it's somehow okay to violate human rights as long as you're not the only one doing it.

    @Isolanporzellator@Isolanporzellator Жыл бұрын
    • This was the most interesting part to me, it was the same misdirect non answer to every question, even by the far right nationalist. Delusion clearly present in all.

      @benjaminallison4973@benjaminallison497311 ай бұрын
    • I have the same feeling... They didn't answer directly to those questions, just ignore and try to move to other topics. Somehow they are also in the trap in their minds...

      @VanLe-bh9cc@VanLe-bh9cc11 ай бұрын
    • "Whataboutism" en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Whataboutism

      @poesnacks7273@poesnacks727311 ай бұрын
    • they are funded by NK so they do not actually support NK, they just need money

      @zenkygeorgecleanton8139@zenkygeorgecleanton813911 ай бұрын
    • cant blame them tho. we basically do it all the time but directly idolisng the culture around it is a bit weird

      @niqqaplz9648@niqqaplz964811 ай бұрын
  • Although I am Japanese, I have always wondered about issues related to Korean schools. In Korean schools, the Kim family is worshipped and North Korea is taught as the best Korea. However, they live in Japan and have free access to all kinds of information. Of course, they can use the Internet without censorship. Under these circumstances, how can they believe that North Korea is a wonderful country?

    @konosaki@konosaki7 ай бұрын
    • 韓国学校X 朝鮮学校O 違うで

      @domodomo7160@domodomo71607 ай бұрын
    • 逆にSNSなどどんあ情報でもアクセスできちゃうと危ないと思いますね。自分が見聞きしたい情報しか受け入れない人も多いし、変なアカウント、沢山あるでしょ!北朝鮮人学校に通う生徒だけに限らず、「こいつ一体どこから情報とってんねん?!」って言う輩、沢山いますよね。

      @hailstar007@hailstar0076 ай бұрын
    • @@domodomo7160Koreaは朝鮮 韓国はsouth Koreaね

      @VIVY1818@VIVY18185 ай бұрын
    • I think it's more nuanced than that. They love where they are from (which is legitimate) but that clouds their judgement on the dictatorship and state of Korean society. One thing I noticed was that there was no picture of Kim Jong Un. The principal said the previous dictators helped the schools so they are grateful... The true reason the pictures are still there may be that the relation with the Japanese government being tense, they don't feel like seeming to "give in" to pressure? Also, according to Wikipedia, some Japanese textbooks only briefly mention Japan's war crimes during Showa...

      @zukofire6424@zukofire64243 ай бұрын
    • Indoctrination, the beliefs they grew up with, coupled with school trips to pyongyang, cement their idealistic view of North Korea within their bubble. I can throw that question back to the Japanese, you don't learn much about Japan's actions during WWII, the textbooks are censored but you have the internet no? Is it willful ignorance or lazy disinterest? For every one person who finds out the truth, there are ten others that are blindsided, you can't expect everyone to rise to understand.

      @willzheng9269@willzheng92693 ай бұрын
  • This video makes me so sad and angry at the same time. As a person who is living under the other big dictatorship, it baffles me how people cannot look past the propaganda, but at the same time it makes me so sad that these people believe this propaganda and are taking the freedom they have in Japan for granted. So many people from their homeland die every year just attempting to have half of their freedom.

    @mitraleo4169@mitraleo41699 ай бұрын
    • The less they know about their home country the more they yarn it................

      @hailstar007@hailstar0076 ай бұрын
    • They're likely still under threat from the NK government in Japan. Not trying to excuse anything, just a reminder that NK defectors aren't completely safe and Japan is not that far away. You know what I mean? Also, if you grew up with that level of brainwashing, you'd likely struggle to see past it too. It's admitting that their entire lives and understanding of the world is a lie. This is definitely possible and people do it, but it's far from easy. Even people that have left cults can struggle with remnants of the brainwashing they learned within them after years because it's just that hard to shake.

      @sourgreendolly7685@sourgreendolly76856 ай бұрын
    • When you realize that most of the world is only half as smart as yourself, it all starts to make sense. Most humans are borderline retarded.

      @Slow_Rogan@Slow_Rogan6 ай бұрын
    • What dictatorship are you currently living under?

      @GodSaveTheUnitedStates@GodSaveTheUnitedStates5 ай бұрын
    • @@GodSaveTheUnitedStates prob China.

      @hoodatdondar2664@hoodatdondar26645 ай бұрын
  • I don't understand why you're seeking funds from the Japanese government while still teaching about Korea and refusing to take down the Kim photo. The simple solution is for you to leave Japan, as it's normal anywhere else that if you want funding, you need to follow the standards and rules set by the country's government. No country will fund schools that treat the land they're standing on as an enemy and a dictator's country as their homeland, as it would be a waste of funds and resources

    @dannyding9311@dannyding9311 Жыл бұрын
    • you're assuming a lot of things sweetie.

      @kimcheezy3433@kimcheezy3433 Жыл бұрын
    • @@kimcheezy3433 tell us what part of what she said was wrong

      @AlCatSplat@AlCatSplat Жыл бұрын
    • I don't get why it's the state's obligation to fund private schools. Can't they not just fund it themselves? Same issues with Muslims demanding that the states in Europe build and fund mosques and Islamic schools for them. Why can't they just fund it themselves? It's they who want it. The state won't fund me money to start a company, I either got to save up money or take out a loan for that to happen.

      @fredrikstein2377@fredrikstein2377 Жыл бұрын
    • Let's not forget this school used to be a base of operation for North korean spies back in the day

      @masterkent1@masterkent1 Жыл бұрын
    • 2:35 then go back... *Why* *stay* *in* *unknow* *country?*

      @tiefblau2780@tiefblau2780 Жыл бұрын
  • As a South Korean, I am only surprised by Japan govt's 'generosity' toward such organization. I wonder more about how the government can allow such schools to exist. If schools in South Korea teach such content, everyone who cooperates with it will face criminal charges and the school will be closed.

    @yoosanglee@yoosanglee Жыл бұрын
    • If the Japanese government tries to intervene in the communities that foreigners are creating, the foreigners and their sympathizers will cry racism, and the government will give in to them. People lack insight. Put another way, Japan is a freer society than Korea lol.

      @abc0to1@abc0to1 Жыл бұрын
    • That’s because your government is at war dummy

      @hargydon@hargydon Жыл бұрын
    • Because of the obvious historical context, I think a lot of politicians are afraid to push back against it too hard. Despite the discrimination they face in public, the government itself is uneasy with the backlash involved in denying Koreans rights because of the optics, even if the rights in question are "The right to use propaganda to brainwash young people". Which is pretty crazy, because God knows the LDP has no problem with anti-Korean sentiment on the whole, but Japanese government tends to be very slow moving and beauracratic so getting anything actually done, especially something with clear downsides, is difficult.

      @Tinil0@Tinil0 Жыл бұрын
    • @@takanara7 No, no it doesn't. Freedom doesn't mean absolute freedom. You aren't allowed to violently threaten someone or the classic "Yell fire in a crowded theater". That doesn't mean you live in an unfree country, only a small mind would be that limited in conception. Now, if you argue that "Supporting North Korea" isn't the same thing as causing imminent harm that may be an argument, but it relies heavily on what "Support" means. Talk is one thing, but materially supporting a hostile nation is completely different.

      @Tinil0@Tinil0 Жыл бұрын
    • @@augusth8212 in what textbook was japan colonized during those years? I legit want to know because the textbook i had told me that japan was colonizing countries including Indonesia (where i’m from) in the 40s till the bombing of hiroshima and nagasaki

      @happuhelon@happuhelon Жыл бұрын
  • Imagine living in Japan and being loyal to N Korea while prospering in a capitalist country. How blind do you have to be.

    @1234kingconan@1234kingconan8 ай бұрын
    • The video looks like it was recorded at a basically secluded rural area. Japan does have a lot of those :l

      @mynamesplatinum@mynamesplatinum3 ай бұрын
    • They have the best of both worlds-believing in communism’s virtues while living a comfortable capitalist nation life.

      @jilianemorales2074@jilianemorales207419 күн бұрын
    • @@mynamesplatinum ? that was Kyoto

      @akaRyuka@akaRyuka4 сағат бұрын
    • @@akaRyuka and Kyoto is not a big metropolis like Tokyo 😄

      @mynamesplatinum@mynamesplatinum4 сағат бұрын
  • They seem to be more comfortable speaking Japanese than Korean. And as a native Korean speaker, I can't help but notice that even the teachers in the Korean school seem to be speaking a distorted variant of Korean, which sounds very foreign and sometimes incomprehensible to Korean ears. At one point, when the young girls were answering in Korean, I had to look at the subtitles to understand what they were saying, because their pronunciation was all over the place. The students also generally had a poor command of it. I feel sad for them, honestly. North Koreans, who strongly value racial purity, will never accept them as true Koreans. If they actually decide to move to North Korea for some reason, they'll probably face discriminations worse than they did in Japan. They don't consider Japan their home. Yet they are blissfully unaware of the fact that North Korea definitely does not want them, and that they are already more Japanese than Korean.

    @ogc3748@ogc37486 ай бұрын
  • 학교에 김씨 일가 사진 걸려있는거 역겹네! 북한이 그렇게 좋으면 북한으로 돌아가라 일본에서 안정되고 부유한 생활을 즐기면서 가난한 북한을 찬양하는게 정말 이해가 안되고 혐오스럽다

    @st.constantinus8140@st.constantinus8140 Жыл бұрын
    • ​@𝐊𝐢𝐦 𝐉𝐨𝐧𝐠 𝐔𝐧 Bro think he funny 😹😹

      @dagdnoob@dagdnoob Жыл бұрын
    • Throw them back to north korea!!!

      @arlene8938@arlene8938 Жыл бұрын
    • その通りです

      @user-wo8st2pr4c@user-wo8st2pr4c Жыл бұрын
    • Exactly!間違いない☝️

      @lacity8701@lacity8701 Жыл бұрын
    • 더욱 웃기는건, 대다수의 재일교포들이, 2차대전때 일본으로 강제로 끌려간 사람들과 그들의 후손들이 아니라는 사실. 일본에 강제로 끌려가 막노동하던 조선인들은, 해방 직후 죄다 한국으로 돌아왔고, 또 일제시대 일본에 돈벌러 자발적으로 들어간 조선인들도 많았는데, 이들은 일본에 머물고 싶어했는데도 일본이 강제로 쫒차내던 시절이었씀. 대표적인 예가 이명박 가족. 그러면 재일들은 뭐냐고? 그들 대다수는 해방이후, 일본이 경제가 부흥하니까, 돈벌려고 밀항 밀입국한 사람들. 특히 제주도 출신이 많았고, 김정은 애미가 그 대표적 케이스. 이렇게 제주도에서 사라진 사람들이 또 4.3 사건때 학살당해서 없어졌다고 우기고 있고. 일본에서는 자기들이 해방이전에 일본에 끌려왔다고 거짓말로 우기고 있고. 완전 복마전임. 제주도 에서 4.3 사건이 발생한것도, 제주도에 빨갱이들이 많았기 때문이고, 그들이 일본에가서도 빨갱이짓 하고 조총련에 가입하고, 북송사업때 적극적으로 북조선으로 넘어간거지.

      @davidjacobs8558@davidjacobs855811 ай бұрын
  • I, as a Japanese, am all against the racism in Japan towards Korean people living in Japan. I'm all for living together and creating a community, which unite us to form a new community. But, although I don't hate people of North Korea, I can not get behind what they are doing in those communities. I do not hate them as people but I can not get behind on their beliefs. Praising a regime that has kidnapped so many children and has constantly been shooting missles over Japan while expecting us to like them as what they believe is nearly impossible. They obviously know that the propaganda there is fake, otherwise they would've gone back already like many people in the past did and suffered as a result. I don't mind them living as Koreans, in fact I think it's beautiful that we can have diversity like that, but I can't get behind the fact they worship the ruthless leader of the North and expect us to not have negative feelings about them.

    @re-yoda@re-yoda Жыл бұрын
    • Sadly many of them don't know or don't wish to know the reality of North Korea. It's like a cult for them. They have internalized their mistreatment in Japan and see North Korea as a sort of promise land. It's similar to how the kids of Muslim immigrants who not once ever lived in a Muslim nation becoming radicalized into terrorists.

      @Epsilonsama@Epsilonsama10 ай бұрын
    • THIS!!!!❤

      @catherinehanson1106@catherinehanson110610 ай бұрын
    • 全くもってその通りです より多くの人が笑顔になれることを望みます。自分の笑顔のために倫理観、他者の笑顔を犠牲にすることは許されない

      @mitarashi002@mitarashi00210 ай бұрын
    • I think the issue is down to the fact that Japanese mainstream media have a rather west-leaning reporting tendency, and to 朝鮮-sympathizers this definitely feel like a smear campaign and being discriminated systemically. I am not saying the Japanese news media are totally blind to the corruption of the Japanese politicians with corporations, but it requires a huge scandal like Abe's assassination for the mainstream media to really care about the local corruptions.

      @ultracapitalistutopia3550@ultracapitalistutopia355010 ай бұрын
    • it's exactly as you say, it's the fact that they believe north korea is a true paradise and worship a regime that is killing thousands day by day. Funny thing is, there is not a single South Korean who would claim these 'North Koreans' as Koreans. So in fact, it's sad but the truth is, they don't belong to any country. They don't have a chance in surviving the real North Korea, they are not Japanese by heritage and they can never be South Korean by mentality. It's clear they have been taken advantage by people who receive funding from the north Korean government to continuously brainwash these malleable young people into thinking they have something in common .

      @MariaPhillipa@MariaPhillipa10 ай бұрын
  • 在日を完全な外国人とは思わないし、人柄的に何か違うとも思わんけど、日本を否定したり日本に対して反体制的な教育をするのにお金を出してくれというのは、少なくとも民主主義国家では難しい

    @user-rj6rk4od5w@user-rj6rk4od5w7 ай бұрын
    • でもそのおかげで日本人は彼等の様な存在があると学べる。今みたいに表で晒し続けるために放置してるんだと思うよ。

      @user-pk1qe5yl7v@user-pk1qe5yl7v3 ай бұрын
    • What are your thoughts as a Japanese on Japan not accepting and not teaching any of it's war crimes committed against the Chinese and Korean people during the WW2 era in schools?

      @falcon_224@falcon_2242 ай бұрын
    • @@falcon_224日本が帝国時代に行っているとされた数々の問題は、未だ情報が曖昧なもの、真偽が不明なものが多く、中立的な立場で物事を教える必要のある学校教育においてはあまり掘り下げることができないというのが現状だと思います。

      @Dolimp_@Dolimp_2 ай бұрын
    • @@Dolimp_ Don't act so innocent, Japanese war crimes during the WW2 are well documented it's present all over the internet, Wikipedia has a huge article on this. From Rape, Chemical weapons use, starving civilians to events like Nanking massacre and even cannibalism none of this is taught about in Japanese schools is it? While Germany accepts it's war crimes Japan does not. Why do you think it's so? Is it because unlike the Nuremberg trials were the Nazis were trialed, Hirohito and rest of the Japanese imperial army were never tried for their crimes?

      @falcon_224@falcon_2242 ай бұрын
    • @@falcon_224 ドイツと日本は当時置かれていた状況が違いますから、その後の道が異なるのは当然です。ドイツは世界の中心であったヨーロッパで戦火を拡大させ、日本はそこから離れた植民地、発展途上国が多くを占めるアジアで戦火を拡大させました。ドイツはユダヤ人という“欧州人”を大量に殺害したため、第二次世界大戦の戦勝国の中心は西欧諸国、ソ連で、当時はまだ人種差別的な考えもあったでしょうから、アジア人を殺したとされる日本よりも厳しく裁かれ、その後も厳しい責任を追及されるはずです。もしアジアの中国や韓国がその当時の列強のような存在、世界の中心であったら、今、日本はドイツのような思想教育がなされていると思いますが、日本は西欧的な国であるアメリカに占領され、教育もGHQにより統制されていたために、そのような教育がされず、尚且つ日本は超保守的な国民性、国家ですから、現在まで変化もしないわけです。戦争犯罪について私はある程度真実だと思っており、申し訳なく思っていますが、日本の対中、対韓感情は良いとは言えないため、それらに欺瞞が含まれていると感じてしまうのも現状です。

      @Dolimp_@Dolimp_2 ай бұрын
  • They should return to their beautiful homeland of North Korea. Why do they stubbornly continue to live in Japan? That's the biggest contradiction.

    @emeraldbreeze5204@emeraldbreeze52043 ай бұрын
    • Totally agree! If the people truly believe in the grand leaders of North Korea, they should be with them :D

      @mynamesplatinum@mynamesplatinum3 ай бұрын
    • 彼等は「特別」になりたいだけだからだよ。彼等は日本での生活を手放すつもりはないが、周りの人間と違って自分たちは特別な存在であると思い込みたいんだ。

      @user-pk1qe5yl7v@user-pk1qe5yl7v3 ай бұрын
    • Same as Communist Latinos who like Cuba

      @siliciumxsez4983@siliciumxsez49833 ай бұрын
    • @@SH-vh1tsthat’s a bs excuse. It still stands. If you love it so much go there and don’t live in Japan. It’s really that simple. If you hate Japan so much cuz if “discrimination” and all this. Go back to your ppl in North Korea and see how you fare. The older woman who escaped knows this from personal experience. You and these NK lovers should listen to her more closely.

      @Ballerboithaone1@Ballerboithaone13 ай бұрын
    • They Zainichi Koreans, some of their generations have never stepped foot in North or South Korea they call Japan their home, back then the Japanese government helped open up these schools to get the Koreans outta of Japan and North Korea was willing to take them

      @santospaul8103@santospaul81033 ай бұрын
  • One aspect that raises questions for me is the fact that a group of North Korean people in Japan openly support North Korea's ideology and dictatorship without facing any consequences. They can enjoy a secure and materially rich life in a democratic country, demand voting rights without obtaining Japanese citizenship, and proudly express loyalty to the North Korean government. Meanwhile, the people who truly suffer the consequences of the regime are those living in North Korea. However, I can somewhat understand that these individuals may feel alienated in Japan and might need some sort of illusion to tell themselves they are not disconnected from everything, as they seek a sense of belonging and connection to their homeland.

    @misandmis23@misandmis23 Жыл бұрын
    • They technically have voting rights by birth, as well as citizenship but through mental gymnastics claim North Korea is their home and refuse the rights given by birth, but than decide that they need them at a later point to push their agendas against Japan itself. Weird things. They also ignore all the open information of North Korea as well as fail to level with other issues that they push that harm the local and international image of Japan. I do feel for them being minorities but that only goes so far.

      @Oyashiro_Chama@Oyashiro_Chama Жыл бұрын
    • Right. It felt absurd for them to demand financial support and voting right when they openly show loyalty to another country. I guess it is complicated since they are discriminated but still wants to preserve their unique identity as Korean ethnicity.

      @d11d77@d11d77 Жыл бұрын
    • @d11d77 i think it's a right to do all these things as an American, and Japan was forced to have most of these ideas. It doesn't mean they still haven't grown past racism and isolationist ideas yet. Even though the US has issues, it's much more willing. I wonder what the future really holds for NK , as an American working in Japan, watching the constant shitshow.

      @Oyashiro_Chama@Oyashiro_Chama Жыл бұрын
    • They support Kim. And Kim launches missiles targeting Japan. This is why some of Japanese get mad at them. Actually these people have money and influence on some Japanese politicians. So this weird situation remain to be changed…. Why they have money? Because during occupation of Japan by the US, Japanese police officers cannot arrest them.😂😂😂 Some of my family’s estate was robbed by them after WW2.

      @user-cp3tz9yj1z@user-cp3tz9yj1z Жыл бұрын
    • Funny thing is that 97% of Japanese Koreans have their roots in modern day South Korea. Also alot of them have relatives that migrated to North Korea from Japan in the 1960s and are probably suffering.

      @travelleryu@travelleryu Жыл бұрын
  • 일본의 안정되고 안락한 생활은 즐기고 싶은데 북한의 사상을 찬양하는 모순 ㅋㅋㅋㅋㅋㅋ 그리고 설령 한민족에 대한 염원이 있다면 남한으로 망명하거나 하면 될 일….정 북한을 따르고 싶으면 북한 가서 살아야 하지 않나?? 이것도 아니고 저것도 아니고 일본 입장에선 싫어하는게 너무나 당연함

    @jakekim2104@jakekim2104 Жыл бұрын
    • 더욱 웃기는건, 대다수의 재일교포들이, 2차대전때 일본으로 강제로 끌려간 사람들과 그들의 후손들이 아니라는 사실. 일본에 강제로 끌려가 막노동하던 조선인들은, 해방 직후 죄다 한국으로 돌아왔고, 또 일제시대 일본에 돈벌러 자발적으로 들어간 조선인들도 많았는데, 이들은 일본에 머물고 싶어했는데도 일본이 강제로 쫒차내던 시절이었씀. 대표적인 예가 이명박 가족. 그러면 재일들은 뭐냐고? 그들 대다수는 해방이후, 일본이 경제가 부흥하니까, 돈벌려고 밀항 밀입국한 사람들. 특히 제주도 출신이 많았고, 김정은 애미가 그 대표적 케이스. 이렇게 제주도에서 사라진 사람들이 또 4.3 사건때 학살당해서 없어졌다고 우기고 있고. 일본에서는 자기들이 해방이전에 일본에 끌려왔다고 거짓말로 우기고 있고. 완전 복마전임. 제주도 에서 4.3 사건이 발생한것도, 제주도에 빨갱이들이 많았기 때문이고, 그들이 일본에가서도 빨갱이짓 하고 조총련에 가입하고, 북송사업때 적극적으로 북조선으로 넘어간거지.

      @davidjacobs8558@davidjacobs855811 ай бұрын
  • 私日本に住んでいるインド人ですが、この動画見てすごくびっくりしてるんですよ。 こんなに北朝鮮が好きやったら、もうずっとそこに住めばいいと思うんだけどね。 レポーターさんは何回も人権のことを聞こうとしたんだけど、それに答えず他のところを言い出したりして、そして日本のことも言ったりして完全に嫌ってるでしょ日本を、、、それでも住み続けてるっていうのはわけ分からない

    @Nikhil_Tripathi_Japan@Nikhil_Tripathi_Japan6 ай бұрын
    • When India was colonized by the British, the British placed the Anglo-Indian half-breeds and Sikhs as administrators of the society and let them rule over the majority Hindu population. The same thing is happening in postwar Japan. The US is using these Koreans to have them rule Japanese society. This is because they are hostile to Japan, and once they hold the center of Japanese society, they can easily pass the demands of their suzerain country, the US. In fact, many members of the Japanese Diet are rumored to be Koreans, and they still reign over Japan as a troublesome and privileged class.

      @PochiKSD@PochiKSD5 ай бұрын
    • 日本語ウマスギ〜

      @user-vx2gp5tt7i@user-vx2gp5tt7i3 ай бұрын
    • 静かに人気者になってるタイプの人が書く様な文章だ…親友3人くらいいそう。

      @user-pk1qe5yl7v@user-pk1qe5yl7v3 ай бұрын
    • @@SH-vh1tsIf they like North Korea so much, they should move from Japan. Same thing happens here in Latin America with communist Latinos who like Cuba.

      @siliciumxsez4983@siliciumxsez49833 ай бұрын
    • ありがとう、真実を言ってくれて… 日本人も彼らから差別を受けてますし、こんな平和な日本という国に住むことができているのに、文句があるなら北朝鮮へ帰ればいい。 北朝鮮は今も日本へミサイルを撃ってくる。

      @deo7320@deo73203 ай бұрын
  • I worked in one of these schools about 21 years ago, for just a couple of months. The thing I remember more than anything is the amount of cigarettes the teachers smoked in the staff room and the amount of shouting they did at the kids. Strangely, they didn't even seem to be shouting out of anger. It was as though it was just the way they communicated. They were friendly enough with me, and the kids were friendly, if somewhat reticent to speak, but that was likely due to the kids having too little confidence in their English (and my having only beginner's Japanese at the time). Don't often think about that time nowadays, but this was a nice reminder.

    @staninjapan07@staninjapan078 ай бұрын
    • The Japanese earnestly desire that all Koreans in Japan return to the Korean peninsula.

      @azurecliff8709@azurecliff87093 ай бұрын
    • All Koreans? All North Koreans? I have no reason to believe that the former is true, though the latter may be. @@azurecliff8709

      @staninjapan07@staninjapan073 ай бұрын
  • This is so weird. Being brainwashed while living in North Korea where you have no access to information is totally understandable. But being brainwashed while living in Japan, one of the most developed countries in the world is just shocking.

    @katerinafeiglova7886@katerinafeiglova788611 ай бұрын
    • I think that about the white british kid (18yrs old or something) that was converted to an extremesit islamic ideology throughout covid. The kid was born and bred here, his parents werent islamic followers, but they got to him just through the web. He's now been charged with terror offences and sentenced to prison.

      @laf5537@laf553711 ай бұрын
    • also why are they teaching north korean culture and not south korean? if they really wanted that funding, they should teach the south korean culture where people actually have FREEDOM.

      @eshaybah5581@eshaybah558111 ай бұрын
    • You can also say because Japan is the most developed countries, they have the freedom to teach children whatever they want.

      @FreshsoCleanYep@FreshsoCleanYep11 ай бұрын
    • ​@@eshaybah5581 South Korean government doesn't fund organizations. That's why they teach North Korean things. But there's a rival organization called 'Korean Residents Union in Japan' a.k.a 'Mindan' a similar organization but pro-South Korea. The problem with Mindan is that they were somewhat affiliated with Yakuza (organized crime gangs).

      @Isl33p@Isl33p10 ай бұрын
    • They are pushed to it by the society. psychologically it makes sense. You are ostracized or made less than because of your identity then have a country who not only speaks your language and has your culture but also has someone who is considered essentially godlike, and can therefore be made to feel superior or at the very least equal to their Japanese counterparts.

      @arianah8842@arianah884210 ай бұрын
  • What I'm getting is these are some very privileged Japan-born North Koreans who feel like outsiders in Japan. And when they visit their "homeland", they were provided with a very comfortable and welcoming visit, so that they were not exposed to the hardships of regular N Korean people. This makes them cling to their tight-knit community and defend it as well as their leaders, even if it means turning a blind eye to the human rights abuse in their "homeland".

    @iwastubed96@iwastubed96 Жыл бұрын
    • It's a delicious irony that the country they hate so much still treats them better than their homeland considering most North koreans cant even afford to live

      @masterkent1@masterkent1 Жыл бұрын
    • Some of them are Japanese this shouldn’t be allowed at all

      @shinobione2575@shinobione2575 Жыл бұрын
    • I agree, I had a co-worker years ago who fled to China from N. Korea and now immigrated to the US. If it really was this paradise then so many people wouldn't be risking their lives leaving. These Japan-born N. Koreans "going back" to N. Korea for a visit would obviously be shown the sunshines and rainbows, not the hardships. It's like visiting a country for a few days/weeks and visiting a country for extended periods of time. (Though some YTers that have visited N. Korea might have been given some hospitality, it was still pretty doom and gloom.)

      @echung168@echung168 Жыл бұрын
    • @@echung168 lol you eat propaganda like free candy

      @redpipola@redpipola Жыл бұрын
    • You are so right, totally exposing the hypocrisy of these people

      @adaddypig2002@adaddypig2002 Жыл бұрын
  • for people who are interested in this subject, I recommend this video for a deeper dive into the historical reasons that led to the existence of this kind of school: kzhead.info/sun/lLaag6uKqZqaZ5s/bejne.html

    @yujaw95@yujaw95Ай бұрын
  • This is an insult to the countless people who have risked their lives to make it out of North Korea, or those that died trying.

    @inoscopedjfk8207@inoscopedjfk82075 ай бұрын
    • The Japanese earnestly desire that all Koreans in Japan return to the Korean peninsula.

      @azurecliff8709@azurecliff87093 ай бұрын
    • @@azurecliff8709 why do you keep on saying that o-o Some Japanese love Korean and Korean culture! Foreign diplomacy just makes it difficult for Japanese and Korean people to see eye to eye in politics is all I literally have plenty-o' Korean kids at my school! No qualms here at least :)

      @mynamesplatinum@mynamesplatinum3 ай бұрын
    • @@azurecliff8709 Your country will die without immigration.

      @inoscopedjfk8207@inoscopedjfk82073 ай бұрын
    • It's kind of like that "not hate, heritage" argument.

      @jesseleeward2359@jesseleeward23592 ай бұрын
    • Millions of people try to imigrate from Central America to USA every year. Many of them die. Why would it be an insult?

      @StekTM1@StekTM12 ай бұрын
  • "What we saw in North Korea is quite different from what is reported, so it's not correct to call it brainwashing" This is about as narrow-minded as one can get. Every trip to North Korea is carefully planned by the regime to not show people the horrors that are going on there. Have they ever wondered why they're not allowed to roam freely around the country?

    @jorgossergeivich6088@jorgossergeivich6088 Жыл бұрын
    • Because they are at war? Why do you act like things are a mystery. Use the internet. Jesus Christ

      @derek123wil0@derek123wil0 Жыл бұрын
    • Even more ironic is why they speak this while they are living in comfortable Japan or other country? Why don't they live in North Korea? 😂 clearly he is a spy

      @Etendard1708@Etendard1708 Жыл бұрын
    • @@derek123wil0 Well, at least we are allowed to view the internet....

      @ourpersonalonlinejournal5198@ourpersonalonlinejournal5198 Жыл бұрын
    • @@derek123wil0 “war”

      @4eignr@4eignr Жыл бұрын
    • @@4eignrwhy say it like that? They lost 20% of their population, had the bubonic plague dropped on them & every building flattened by the US & its allies in the 1950s & only an armistice was signed. All of this after decades of colonial rule from Japan. The US practices war games with south Korea & Japan on the border of North Korea annually, the US illegally invades their airspace all the time & has placed the world’s biggest sanctions package on the nation that caused it to starve in the 1990s & is the reason it cannot trade with the outside world, did you know that? How do you expect a country to act when this is their current reality & history?

      @hargydon@hargydon Жыл бұрын
  • 差別って便利な言葉だね! 不都合なことがあればすべて差別で自分のことを省みたことがないからこんな他責的な大人になったんだよ

    @dtpbg25@dtpbg25 Жыл бұрын
    • 이제는 일본에서 김정은 김정일 우상화 교육을 하는 조총련 계열 학교를 폐쇄시켜야한다 북한의 간첩을 양성하는곳이다

      @TheJinNK@TheJinNK11 ай бұрын
    • と、レイシストが申しております

      @ag7404@ag740411 ай бұрын
    • などと、他責的なことを言ってる自分w

      @user-vk3ko3ud3l@user-vk3ko3ud3l11 ай бұрын
    • @@ag7404ミサイルを何度も日本に売ってることはなんとも思わない? 日本人の命に関わることだけど?

      @deo7320@deo73203 ай бұрын
  • 한국어 자막이 있으면 좋겠네요 ㅠㅠㅠ혹시 한글로 간단하게라도 요약해주실 분 있을까요?

    @user-ml4dg6zp2v@user-ml4dg6zp2v4 ай бұрын
  • 拉致した国のトップが飾られている学校に補助金を出すわけないでしょ、、

    @user-yp4tr3cz8e@user-yp4tr3cz8e7 ай бұрын
    • そりゃ出てけってなるわな。ふざけんな

      @user-vf8cj1qe1i@user-vf8cj1qe1i3 ай бұрын
    • Japan kidnapped half a million North Koreans. Get out a proper history book that's not taught in Japanese schools.

      @Steveinthailand@Steveinthailand2 ай бұрын
    • What are your thoughts as a Japanese on Japan not accepting and not teaching any of it's war crimes committed against the Chinese and Korean people during the WW2 era in schools? and then you try to force this version of history on those who are teaching what actually happened?

      @falcon_224@falcon_2242 ай бұрын
    • @nileshmishra6518 Absolutely. Japanese have been brainwashed more than any North Korean.

      @Steveinthailand@Steveinthailand2 ай бұрын
    • @@falcon_224 what is related to this comment? He is talking about the problem of "now". Don't change the subject.

      @brokenfeatherman@brokenfeatherman2 ай бұрын
  • 本題と全く関係ないけど、学校で先生が授業してる時の言葉が関西弁のイントネーションにしか聞こえんかった。 よく聞いたら日本語じゃなくてびっくりしたわ。 そんなとこまで関西訛り強くなるんか… あと右派のおっちゃんも輩みたいでなかなか怖かったけど、ユンギさん達の考えもある種怖い。 差別と思われたくないけど、祖国が北朝鮮であることに誇りを持って、北朝鮮の方が温かいというならそっちに住めば良いと思うわ。 日本で高校の無償化なんて訴えてないでさ。 無理して住みづらい日本に住むことなんてないのに。 めちゃくちゃ利己的やん。

    @gamo888@gamo888 Жыл бұрын
  • 옛날 조선학교 관계자가 일본인 납치에 관여하거나 조선학교 전 교장이 각성제 밀수에 관여한 사건이 있었습니다. 지금 일본 바다에 미사일 발사하는 북한을 찬양하는 학교가 일본에 있는 의미를 이해할 수 없다.

    @coconut3248@coconut3248 Жыл бұрын
    • I'm very surprised that Japan hasn't done more to control this community.. It seems dangerous to national security and very uncharacteristic to Japanese culture (where uniformity is a strong value.). I have two guesses why Joseon school and this commujities'ties to Pyongyang are allowed to continue: - Japanese national shame about imperial Japan's atrocities in Korea makes it politically difficult to even talk about this community. As you know, this habit of avoiding the shame of the Japanese past is a VERY string part of their culture. They would rather show the world how modern and peaceful they are instead. - it's also possible that this community is kept as a resource for indirect communications to North Korea, including espionage. Getting just one good spy out of the Joseon school every few years could be worthwhile. I am sure you know how crucial spies have been to get information about what's happening inside North Korea.

      @ems4884@ems4884 Жыл бұрын
    • in the past , japan ciolonize korea and need atonement

      @juanandreas97@juanandreas97 Жыл бұрын
    • 더욱 웃기는건, 대다수의 재일교포들이, 2차대전때 일본으로 강제로 끌려간 사람들과 그들의 후손들이 아니라는 사실. 일본에 강제로 끌려가 막노동하던 조선인들은, 해방 직후 죄다 한국으로 돌아왔고, 또 일제시대 일본에 돈벌러 자발적으로 들어간 조선인들도 많았는데, 이들은 일본에 머물고 싶어했는데도 일본이 강제로 쫒차내던 시절이었씀. 대표적인 예가 이명박 가족. 그러면 재일들은 뭐냐고? 그들 대다수는 해방이후, 일본이 경제가 부흥하니까, 돈벌려고 밀항 밀입국한 사람들. 특히 제주도 출신이 많았고, 김정은 애미가 그 대표적 케이스. 이렇게 제주도에서 사라진 사람들이 또 4.3 사건때 학살당해서 없어졌다고 우기고 있고. 일본에서는 자기들이 해방이전에 일본에 끌려왔다고 거짓말로 우기고 있고. 완전 복마전임. 제주도 에서 4.3 사건이 발생한것도, 제주도에 빨갱이들이 많았기 때문이고, 그들이 일본에가서도 빨갱이짓 하고 조총련에 가입하고, 북송사업때 적극적으로 북조선으로 넘어간거지.

      @davidjacobs8558@davidjacobs855811 ай бұрын
    • Why were they kidnapping Japanese though? Just random people?

      @Roadent1241@Roadent124118 күн бұрын
    • @@Roadent1241日本人から日本語を学んでスパイ育成をしていました。日本人以外にもイタリア人や韓国人も拉致をされました。

      @user-vx5nh7qp6f@user-vx5nh7qp6f13 күн бұрын
  • I'm Japanese living in Europe, and I'm not a racist. However, I'm totally against for subsidizing North Korean schools being existed in Japan which are close to North Korea. The city where I used to live has a North Korean school, and I made a femal friend who went to the school. We met in an afterschool activity school, and she said if students talk Japanese inside the North Korean school, teachers are mad at them and scold them because Japan is a hostile country. I still remember that I was totally shocked to hear about it. She also visited North Korea because of her school activity. If North Korens really like their country, please move to North Korea.

    @user-ug8fu3rg3g@user-ug8fu3rg3g7 ай бұрын
    • Your last statement is the definition of Racist tho...

      @xudongtang2763@xudongtang27637 ай бұрын
    • ​@@xudongtang2763 You are right in the sense that people who say that phrase are often racists, but I think from the context provided here it's not racist. It's just being said that people who see the country they live in as the enemy while worshipping their home, should just leave. Of course it's not as black and white in reality but I don't think the commenter or the statement inherently is racist.

      @sirphantoon6731@sirphantoon67317 ай бұрын
    • I think this is a question of freedom of speech and thought. Is it lawful to live in Japan while "hating" Japan? Or only people who love Japan can live in Japan? You don't need to ask the reason why they should hate Japan while living there but not move to NK, they at least have a right to exist and that is just what a democracy is. You don't tell people how they should think and feel.

      @jasmo961@jasmo9617 ай бұрын
    • @@jasmo961 Here in the US, we don't grant them visas and let them live here unless they pretend to like it and fool immigration services. Often if they're found out, we dummy up some reason to arrest and deport them or try to use them as counterintelligence spies. The way around this is to be born here. Which is not an option for foreigners in Japan.

      @ronbintscatco@ronbintscatco6 ай бұрын
    • @@xudongtang2763 It's not as a country is not a race.

      @tams805@tams8056 ай бұрын
  • I'm very confused, if they love North Korea so much, why don't they just leave Japan and move back to their motherland? I'm neither Japanese nor Korean, so I think I'm unbiased on this topic. I can kind of understand why some of the Japanese people are against these schools, because they are teaching radical views, or even anti-Japanese propaganda to their students. North Korea is an enemy of the state, why should Japanese people tolerate such a school existing on their soil?

    @Bohemian0522@Bohemian05228 ай бұрын
    • I absolutely did not watch whole documentary but it is definitely possible for a person to have a fondly emotion onto something and yet also logically know it's not good in reality and willingly not to take into action

      @user-ns2dt3le1e@user-ns2dt3le1eАй бұрын
  • It seems pretty simple, if they are so unhappy they can pack their bags and go to North Korea. I guarantee you that they would be crying and begging to go back to Japan after a few months.

    @pizzaslob7039@pizzaslob7039 Жыл бұрын
    • As we all know, there is no such thing as immigration laws and anyone can just move where ever they please on a whim

      @randomuser3481@randomuser3481 Жыл бұрын
    • Exactly

      @xOgawa@xOgawa Жыл бұрын
    • @@xOgawa Ever heard of this thing called a residency permit? It is quite hard to get one there

      @randomuser3481@randomuser3481 Жыл бұрын
    • @@randomuser3481 Never heard of it, I don’t give a shit about North Korea

      @xOgawa@xOgawa Жыл бұрын
    • Make that week or two, hahahahah. I doubt these chumps would last even a full month there.

      @chriswiddajonathan8941@chriswiddajonathan8941 Жыл бұрын
  • ユンギさんは勘違いしているようですね。日本国内での立場を理解すべきです。朝鮮学校で教育を受けるということは、日本の教育を受けるということではありません。だから無償化されないのは当然のことであり、実現性の低いことです。北朝鮮の教育を受けたければ、その学校に在籍するのは自由ですが、それを日本に求めるのは違うと思います。北朝鮮を愛すのであれば、北朝鮮で教育を受けたらいいのではないでしょうか。何か理由があって北朝鮮には行けないんですよね。ご両親も望んで朝鮮学校に入れているというのに。私は大学で教育について学び、教育実習を経験し学校教員を目指しています。日本には教育を保障する公立学校があり、外国人の子どもたちも多く在籍しています。現在、その子どもたちにとって、自分自身のルーツを知ることが大切とされるので、一人一人の教育的ニーズに合わせた教育を受ける動きが広がっています。日本の公教育は無償化されて、アフタースクールとして朝鮮学校で民族教育を受ければいいのではないでしょうか。無償化は不可能ですが…。いくら訴えても無駄なことだと思います。

    @user-cr1ob6df8g@user-cr1ob6df8g Жыл бұрын
    • STRONGLY AGREE with you. I want to say it in front of glasses guy’s face

      @nickdwayne7117@nickdwayne7117 Жыл бұрын
    • 조총련계열 학교는 북한과 김정은 김정일 추종자들을 양성하는곳이기 때문에 일본에서 폐쇄시켜야 한다

      @TheJinNK@TheJinNK11 ай бұрын
    • 立場を理解すべきって、あなたは何様のつもりかな・・

      @oc-ek3mlpguft@oc-ek3mlpguft11 ай бұрын
    • やかましいワレェ💢早く門を開けなさい

      @user-ev8fn7fd1s@user-ev8fn7fd1s11 ай бұрын
  • Why don't they return to their own homeland of North Korea❓ Though all the Japanese very strongly hope it.

    @DynamicMoment-dl2xx@DynamicMoment-dl2xx3 ай бұрын
    • You need to look into history. Their ancestors were brought into Japan for slave labours.

      @donparky1812@donparky18123 ай бұрын
    • it's basically a hellhole there

      @sosotik@sosotik3 ай бұрын
    • @@sosotik They blindly believe that North Korea is a paradise. Then they should go back to North Korea.

      @DynamicMoment-dl2xx@DynamicMoment-dl2xx3 ай бұрын
    • @@DynamicMoment-dl2xxthis. I completely agree. Clearly they all think it’s so great so why haven’t they moved back yet?🤔. Seems it may do them some good and seriously open their eyes

      @ATLPtrk@ATLPtrk3 ай бұрын
    • because they are entitled leeches and needs someone to blame other their own. look at the "yongi" or whatever his name is, if he goes back to homecountry, he will not be able to buy coach and other designer clothes.. these people are nothing for leeches playing victimhood

      @roblox21242@roblox212423 ай бұрын
  • It's really ironic that everytime the interviewer ask about North Korea's human rights violations, these people just point fingers at other places in the world instead of denying or actually giving an answer. Like "what about this country, what about XYZ", they're also doing the same thing", as if it's ok to do it when you're not the only one. Even more ironic that they have a chance to go to South Korea or North Korea yet stay in Japan and continue to say these things.

    @raibyo@raibyo6 ай бұрын
  • Omg, this kid didn't experience anything like the average poor north Korean citizen did, like so many independent reporters have been told about from the few that managed to escape and live to tell. This kid is either dreaming or he grew up privileged and has no idea what he's defending 😮

    @carynmartin6053@carynmartin6053 Жыл бұрын
    • Thats why they should be allowed to go to the place where they wud wanna go.

      @anoobiscooking1193@anoobiscooking1193 Жыл бұрын
    • The power of communism!

      @vitess@vitess Жыл бұрын
    • He is defending no more than an imagined place to call home.

      @leechengsiang@leechengsiang Жыл бұрын
    • Says the pasty white woman who has probably never been to Asia, much less Korea, MUCH less North Korea. You know how it is and definitely know more than this descendant of North Koreans over the topic of North Korea.

      @crazysquriel@crazysquriel Жыл бұрын
    • North Korea vast body of evidence on human rights abuses and oppression is pretty undeniable at this point. That kid knows exactly whats going on. He's on the payroll. Thats his job. I guess there are no limits to the depths of one can reach for money.

      @DouglasZanini@DouglasZanini Жыл бұрын
  • This whole situation is unfortunate. The school is not teaching the reality behind North Korea. Meanwhile, the understandable anger towards these schools are misdirected with discrimination, which likely reinforces the misguided beliefs through alienation. Nobody is at peace here. But after hearing the woman's 40 yr nightmarish tale, I think the "let people choose where they want to live" is too simplistic and lacking the compassion needed to enable change. These people should be educated, not ridiculed.

    @purgatorysystem2126@purgatorysystem2126 Жыл бұрын
    • Honestly, they should go back to North Korea and put their money where their mouths are. Supporting a regime that threatens the freedom that they enjoy is absurd

      @jesssc402@jesssc402 Жыл бұрын
    • During 1910-1945 Korea was not colonized but Japan was colonized. Authorites in Japan exploited people of Japan, and invested most of the money to develop/educate/modernize Korea (and Manchuria and Taiwan). Sequence (and covered facts) behind those goes back 400 years, 700 years or 1400 years...

      @augusth8212@augusth8212 Жыл бұрын
    • ​@@augusth8212 I thought, Japan was colonized since 46 till 53

      @slowcuber_aze@slowcuber_aze Жыл бұрын
    • You can’t help someone who doesn’t want to be helped.

      @Gnasheress@Gnasheress11 ай бұрын
    • If they go move to North Korea they'll get educated real quick

      @leeshybaby9541@leeshybaby954111 ай бұрын
  • My father knew a korean Japanese guy. He came to Japan to escape the compulsory military service. He used to degrade Japan and hated it. I wonder why people still live in a country they despise. I mean go back if you don't like it. I don't like people who complain all day and do not realise how lucky they are.

    @SaharshJeetSingh@SaharshJeetSinghАй бұрын
    • You know, the Japanese earnestly hope that the troublesome North Koreans living in Japan will return to North Korea as soon as possible. This is because North Koreans residing in Japan have repeatedly committed violent incidents in Japan.

      @emeraldbreeze5204@emeraldbreeze520420 күн бұрын
  • The fact that they remain in Japan is the clear indicator that things are horrible in North Korea.

    @211teitake@211teitake6 ай бұрын
    • She even said I would love to visit but not live lmao

      @YmirAsta@YmirAsta3 ай бұрын
    • ​@@YmirAsta Which funnily enough is also my view as a Brit on America, while my friends are there my hearing-aids I have to wear would be massively expensive nevermind trying to find housing there when I can't here, and that's with the govt here actively wanting us disabled dead right now so it seems.

      @Roadent1241@Roadent124118 күн бұрын
    • @@Roadent1241 you make no sense you’re not even American lol she’s from nk living in Japan t preaching how nice nk is ahahaha

      @YmirAsta@YmirAsta18 күн бұрын
    • @@YmirAsta Yes and at least America actually had cool things compared to here, like Disney and Universal and other theme Parks. But their healthcare costs a fortune while ours is free, so while I want to be able to see my friends and go to parks more often, my 'aids would be expensive as I said, and things are now bad here as I said. The govt there doesn't want my lot dead. What doesn't make sense?

      @Roadent1241@Roadent124118 күн бұрын
  • As a Japanese, I don't understand why they don't go back to their great homeland. After the war, the Japanese government carried out a large-scale repatriation project to repatriate Koreans living in Japan. They are the descendants of those who did not return at that time. People who live in Japan but reject Japan's obligations and demand rights such as the right to vote.

    @user-cv2hq4nx8r@user-cv2hq4nx8r Жыл бұрын
    • その通りです…

      @user-sk3ep2iz6i@user-sk3ep2iz6i Жыл бұрын
    • they know that they have better living in japan than in korea

      @funbeanniebunny963@funbeanniebunny963 Жыл бұрын
    • But they keep their nationality “Korea.” And when some say “Why don’t you choose to be Japanese?”, they got angry and say “it is discrimination!!” What the fuck? Some of them don’t hide hostility to Japan. “If you hate Japan, please go to your motherland”, I want to say.

      @user-cp3tz9yj1z@user-cp3tz9yj1z Жыл бұрын
    • @@user-cp3tz9yj1z If I came to Japan, I could learn the language, get a job, blend in as much as I can, but I could no more claim to be Japanese than I could claim to be a unicorn. It isn't because I hate Japan, it's because claiming to be something I am not is just retarded.

      @rorychivers8769@rorychivers8769 Жыл бұрын
    • I agree with you one hundred percent they don't like it then Japan go back to North Korea to me it looks like spies. They trying to destroy the Japanese... very careful enemies live inside a wall.. You can see a little especially when they drink a little too much. And they blaming the Japanese for bringing them nobody is holding them there

      @emmanuelechevarria9851@emmanuelechevarria9851 Жыл бұрын
  • If they don’t like japan anymore, I don’t see what stops them from leaving. If they want to go to South Korea or diffract north, no one is stopping them. As far as I see it, you live in japan, so you must abide by Japanese law. Sovereign citizens don’t exist there, or really anywhere anymore. Therefor if you don’t like what’s being preached in your country, don’t let the door hit you on the way out

    @buckybarns5984@buckybarns5984 Жыл бұрын
    • If you watch the whole video, you will hear the answers to your questions.

      @iamnotaunicorn6285@iamnotaunicorn6285 Жыл бұрын
    • When in Rome, do as the Romans do. Please observe the customs and lows of Japan.

      @user-vf7cn3oy8g@user-vf7cn3oy8g Жыл бұрын
    • @@user-vf7cn3oy8g If you kidnap a people and erase their hometown from the face of the earth, you don't get to fucking act surprised when they don't return to their non-existent homes.

      @granfalloon9848@granfalloon9848 Жыл бұрын
    • Based

      @moaianface@moaianface Жыл бұрын
    • Are you dumb? They aren't Japanese citizens because Japan is a xenophobic country and revoked any Japanese nationality and citizenship rights to anyone Japanese Korea born in the country. Even though they were born there, speak Japanese and blend into society the government won't give them citizenship.

      @kimcheezy3433@kimcheezy3433 Жыл бұрын
  • can anyone tell me ,what the name of the outro music is pls?

    @mortalic2835@mortalic28355 ай бұрын
  • Cannot blame japan actually, they are so generous even allowed this school to operate

    @calvingunarto7865@calvingunarto78658 ай бұрын
  • I am surprised by how generous Japanese government is for letting this kind of school exist on Japanese soil, that is really weird

    @user-eb9ij5dj9o@user-eb9ij5dj9o11 ай бұрын
    • Tokyo is being too generous. The South Korean government would never tolerate this.

      @kevinluh5086@kevinluh508611 ай бұрын
    • @@kevinluh5086 America and UK would censor these schools as well.

      @downtomars6268@downtomars626811 ай бұрын
    • @@kevinluh5086well no shit they are still at war

      @aspart2842@aspart284211 ай бұрын
    • ​@@downtomars6268The US absolutely wouldn't.

      @hashish2020@hashish202011 ай бұрын
    • @@downtomars6268 American government actually can't censor them. 1st amendment is America's thing. but America will ABSOLUTELY not fund them. America has plenty of Russian and Chinese schools, but the only ones with Putin or Xi's face on the wall will be hosted in someone's basement.

      @holeeshi9959@holeeshi995911 ай бұрын
  • I think it's pretty ridiculous to ask for funding and not give in to their demands. Negotiation is a give and take thing. You can't be demanding everything and expecting the other party give in to your every demand. I think it is a good compromise to funding given if what they want is to teach extra "Korean" curricular on top of the regular curriculum of Japanese schools. Then they should be given all right to funding. However what they are asking for is funding for a curriculum not approved and they are unwilling to even bulge.

    @ClarenceTan92@ClarenceTan92 Жыл бұрын
    • THIS. They could just make extra classes about North Korea

      @ManachanJapan@ManachanJapan Жыл бұрын
    • Tokyo really should deport all of them back to North Korea.

      @kevinluh5086@kevinluh508611 ай бұрын
    • I'm Japanese and I agree with your suggestion. If it is based on the Japanese curriculum, I have no complaints.

      @sixseven350@sixseven35010 ай бұрын
    • if Japan would give in to their demands, they might praise the Kims for their success..

      @bertr6741@bertr674110 ай бұрын
    • You don't get the gist of the problem here. If it was just the matter of teaching North Korean propaganda or not, I'd agree with you. However, Japan denies its colonial crimes and teaches a version of history that is 'convenient' for them. So when the Japanese government is demanding that the school conform to Japanese curriculum, it is basically saying that the school teach their version of history, the one that covers up how atrocious Japanese colonization was. That is not a possible compromisation to any Korean.

      @HK-nm4pk@HK-nm4pk9 ай бұрын
  • It's ironic that the North Korean school is teaching about 酒池肉林 (as seen on the blackboard). It translates to "lakes of wine and forests of meat", some very extravagant thing an ancient Chinese emperor made when his people were probably starving. Does that remind us of some Kim... um...

    @FrozenBusChannel@FrozenBusChannel5 ай бұрын
  • 이해할 수 없는 것 두 가지 1 어떻게 일본에 살면서 저렇게 세뇌될 수가 있지? 2. 일본 정부는 저걸 왜 허가해준거?

    @cn-xp5lr@cn-xp5lr7 ай бұрын
    • I cannot complain because my ancestors killed their ancestors.

      @pormaccck2968@pormaccck29687 ай бұрын
    • 1. 일본애들이랑 어울리지 못하고 소외당하니까 반발심 + 가보지 않은 고향에 대한 막연한 애정? 2. 일본 현행법상 딱히 범법적인 요소가 없으니까?

      @user-ns2dt3le1e@user-ns2dt3le1eАй бұрын
  • ワタシの高校は北朝鮮学校の近くの高校で良くむこうの生徒とすれ違いましたけど、何もしてない(私自身は若くて違いがわからなかった)のに睨まれたり舌打ちされてましたよ。卒業してからそういえばあの制服学校は北朝鮮学校だったなと思いだして、あとあと気がつきましたけど向こうから喧嘩ふっかけた可能性もあるよね?

    @unagisan9110@unagisan9110 Жыл бұрын
  • As an immigrant myself I understand loving your homeland. I love my homeland too but I know that there's a dictator there that I could never support. This is a really bizarre situation happening and I feel like if they really hate Japan and feel that North Korea is the best place to be then they should try to just go there. I feel like most of them would regret it though, but sometimes a hard dose of reality is needed.

    @pqfire0950@pqfire0950 Жыл бұрын
    • its like building schools of taliban or ISIS in the middle of NYC.

      @dark6c159@dark6c15910 ай бұрын
    • are you from russia? cuz i'm from here too and currently living in it (sadly) and i do NOT support the current president

      @heymayday8761@heymayday87619 ай бұрын
    • @@heymayday8761 Not russia haha, central america. Im sorry you are in a bad situation, hopefully things get better.

      @pqfire0950@pqfire09509 ай бұрын
    • There is nothing wrong about seeking to preserve your own cultural roots, but why it has to be so politisized? They speak about 'corean' culture, what about South Corea then? And what about all that history and cultural heritage of dynasties etc Before the dectatorship, why focusing on that one figure?

      @justsaying9006@justsaying90069 ай бұрын
    • They definitly shoudn't go for North Korea. Heck, I don't wish even for my enemies this suffering.

      @htsaul1569@htsaul15699 ай бұрын
  • although i do not completely understand the intricacies and complexity of the history between korea and japan, i can kinda understand the koreans in japan who have convinced themselves that north korea is a nice place. being in a country where you know your not necessarily welcome and your discriminated against because of that can play a major role in how you view the world. it builds this love hate relationship where you wouldn’t consider the country you currently reside in as paradise and you would love to be where you think you belong but at the same time “home” is not really home either 🤷🏾‍♀️. i would love to look at this through a black and white lens but i just don’t think it’s that simple.

    @portiarose6914@portiarose69149 ай бұрын
    • I think Koreans convincing themselves that Korea is a fine place makes sense-- North Korea is a different story though. People have apt exposure (through the internet and such) to educate themselves outside of environments like schools. Censorship is rather low in Japan, so I am positive that most people residing in Japan would have had the time and opportunity to take a look into North Korea as a place. Korean culture and Korean people shouldn't be dismissed, and Zainichi-Korean students should have a place to call home. (Places like Okubo, where there's a lot of Korean culture) However this form of school shown in the video here seems to be more about indoctrinating new generations. This in turn causes more discrimination down the line. As North Korea is a major enemy of the west, states like Japan and South Korea shouldn't be obligated to tolerate North Korean propaganda in their soil. Asking for donations is downright cynical ;-;

      @mynamesplatinum@mynamesplatinum3 ай бұрын
  • Very insightful.

    @gardengalsu@gardengalsu8 ай бұрын
  • I love that you took the full advantage of the gaijin card. I can imagine it'd be difficult for local reporters to investigate this far without getting labeled socially.

    @Yutaro-Yoshii@Yutaro-Yoshii Жыл бұрын
    • Gaijin is not a good word.

      @newsdigest375@newsdigest375 Жыл бұрын
    • @@newsdigest375 I'm fully aware that some people use this word with bad intention. But this phrase "gaijin card" comes from my friends who live in Japan as foreigners. It is used to express the situation when foreigners sneakily take advantage of their social labeling as gaijin. For example, you can use your gaijin card to avoid NHK subscription fee collectors, or avoid unwanted social contact by pretending to not be able to speak Japanese.

      @Yutaro-Yoshii@Yutaro-Yoshii Жыл бұрын
    • @@purplesage993 Gringo just means white man lmao, nothing that bad.

      @ubcroel4022@ubcroel402211 ай бұрын
    • @@ubcroel4022 When South Americans use the word Gringo it can be used in a negative way. It's stupid when people jump to conclusions by focusing on a word the way they think they know and ignoring context. Obviously OP isn't using 'gaijin' in a negative way, but you can't stop sensitive people playing the race card, twisting the words and blowing things out of proportion. This is a common tactic used by mainland Chinese trolls or the lesser educated trolls(not just mainlanders) to create hatred on the internet, because they don't know or have limited info/rl experience(can't blame them), they are conditioned this way since young so they can't really help it. It's pointless to confront them because they are narrow minded/stubborn and won't take another answer. The only hope is for them to one day have an epiphany on their own, there's no forcing it no matter how many truths or logic or reasonable counterargument you throw at them.

      @virousgen5838@virousgen583811 ай бұрын
    • @@ubcroel4022 depends where you are in the world. The term is suggestive to foreigner or strictly a USA citizen.

      @bl33p-bl0rp5@bl33p-bl0rp511 ай бұрын
  • People who just visited PyongYang for a few days don't know whole NK at all. PyongYang is a huge showcase for visitors. In this video, the lady Kawasaki who was born as a 2nd generation Korean in Japan and moved to NK and lived for over 40years, she is the only one who knows REAL North Korea.

    @ajiken123@ajiken123 Жыл бұрын
    • Exactly, if they really wanted to see NK they should visit the countryside and see what they have to endure.

      @zak6877@zak6877 Жыл бұрын
    • Imagine getting a relative of an innocent black person who was killed by police brutality to talk about america and american police and using that as your only source and thinking you have a wholistic and unbiased view of america and police in america

      @user-nj9ru4ef2w@user-nj9ru4ef2w10 ай бұрын
    • @@user-nj9ru4ef2w There are high ranking government officials that have escaped North Korea as well. Their attitudes are the same: the Kims are exploiting the country out of their own greed and fear for the survival of their regime.

      @mekko902@mekko90210 ай бұрын
    • @@user-nj9ru4ef2w Except this isn't an isolated incident and there have been many such reports from people in Black communities.

      @shadowmaydawn@shadowmaydawn15 күн бұрын
  • This video was interesting. I hope I could hear the person's unclipped interview though

    @krp_618@krp_6185 ай бұрын
  • 영어를 몰라서 무슨 내용인지는 자세히 모르겠다만 일본에 있는 북한 학교 말하는거같은데 아니 근데 교실에 김부자 면상 탁 박아논거보니 북한 체제 너무 사랑하는거같은데 탈북은 왜했누

    @uer8826@uer88269 ай бұрын
  • What I find interesting is that even though this school emphasizes that the students are North Koreans at heart, so many of these Zainichi Koreans speak in Japanese, and it's pretty clear to me that many of them speak better Japanese than Korean.

    @guyklc@guyklc Жыл бұрын
    • Well, as I understood, most were born and raised in Japan...

      @oliveryt7168@oliveryt7168 Жыл бұрын
    • @@oliveryt7168 Right. So they were born and raised in Japan, speak Japanese as their native tongue, etc. Yet, they insist they are Korean by nationality and culture. That's precisely what's ironic and messed up about the whole thing.

      @guyklc@guyklc Жыл бұрын
    • @@guyklc it's definitely a messed up situation. What Aramaki said about them being gaijin is unfortunately quite common even outside of right-wing circles. This leads to a lot discrimination, both subtle and overt. Because of this, Zainichi Koreans struggle to integrate. And then comes the North Korean regime to support them. It's basically like an abusive family member protecting you from bullies. They have to pick between bad choices.

      @macroxela@macroxela Жыл бұрын
    • @@macroxela unless they wake up their idea and choose to support South Korea, and hopefully the South can provide funding.

      @Melcor2304@Melcor2304 Жыл бұрын
    • ​@@Melcor2304 wake up their idea? Are you Singaporean? This phrase sounds Singaporean

      @yokelengleng@yokelengleng Жыл бұрын
  • なんで日本に住むの? 単純に気になるだけ 住むのが大変なら北に帰ればいい話だし、、、 辛い思いしてまで日本に住むことないと思うよ?

    @user-eo4ek5od7i@user-eo4ek5od7i Жыл бұрын
    • それは日本人なら誰でも抱く素朴な疑問。이것은 일본인이면 누구든지 품는 소박한 의문.

      @user-vf7cn3oy8g@user-vf7cn3oy8g Жыл бұрын
    • ほんとにそれ〜、日本を乗っ取ろうとしてるのかもねはは

      @Sheskuno@Sheskuno Жыл бұрын
    • I am Indian. I respect Japan.

      @rudranilghosh2187@rudranilghosh2187 Жыл бұрын
    • @@user-vf7cn3oy8g We have to fight the Communism.

      @rudranilghosh2187@rudranilghosh2187 Жыл бұрын
    • スパイとか密輸とかするのに必要なんじゃない?

      @user-bf5jh6rx6o@user-bf5jh6rx6o Жыл бұрын
  • excellent documentary!

    @johnkrummel2956@johnkrummel29566 ай бұрын
  • 08:00 - A Chongryon schoolgirl, born in Japan from a family that most likely has generationally been born and lived in Japan and benefitted from a Japanese society/infrastructure - identifies HER country as 'North Korea'. It would be interesting to know what are her loyalties to Japan?

    @mughug9616@mughug96168 ай бұрын
  • The craving for belonging is so strong that many don't see the bads as long as it means they feel welcome.

    @wealthiness@wealthiness Жыл бұрын
    • That apply to everything

      @Ramses060784@Ramses060784 Жыл бұрын
    • We now consider the Medieval society brutal and unjust, but prolly back in those days people just thought it was just normal. Likewise, people in the future will be appalled at the utter injustice and cruelty our society takes for granted now.

      @deadby15@deadby15 Жыл бұрын
    • Wow, you managed to put one feature of human nature in words.

      @UnShredded@UnShredded Жыл бұрын
    • Ironically they stay in Japan rather than move into North Korea, lol

      @notamoonraker@notamoonraker Жыл бұрын
    • @@notamoonraker exactly!! Celebrating one's cultural roots is significant but why celebrate terrorists? And if they love their 'leaders' so much why do they live in a democratic country? This is similar to the islamic mindset. They don't want other religions thrive in their countries but brazenly impose their religion in western countries

      @parikhan6599@parikhan6599 Жыл бұрын
  • I watched a KZheadr who was born and raised in North Korea but escaped and now settle down in Japan. He talks how much freedom he gained when he live in South Korea and Japan, and how grateful life it is. As a Chinese in Japan I won’t say they are right or wrong, but I know that freedom is a precious thing, especially escaped from a brainwashed environment at once.

    @TheBlueFlaming0@TheBlueFlaming011 ай бұрын
    • And ppl who are from a brainwashed country but live in another country may have a kind of stereotype. They will think that the country where they are living is unkind, unfriendly place. So rather than saying pros and cons in this country, they tend to be more like a nationalist or something, living in a foreign country but still believing that brainwashing things are their faith. That’s why I can’t understand it.

      @TheBlueFlaming0@TheBlueFlaming011 ай бұрын
    • Chinese Communist Party rule is frightening. A Chinese friend of mine, who is fed up with China and has settled in Japan, says it is wonderful because Japan has freedom of speech and the right to know. In China, it is not unusual for people to go missing or be imprisoned if they criticize the regime.

      @wei10wei@wei10wei11 ай бұрын
    • ​@@wei10wei Bruh, stop faking that you're a foreigner. You literally have a username with pinyin in it.

      @R88ZY@R88ZY11 ай бұрын
    • @@R88ZY That's shallow. I am a Japanese who has lived in Shanghai for a long time. I can speak Chinese, too.

      @wei10wei@wei10wei11 ай бұрын
    • @@MM-gt9uy why😂FR I hope some day I can visit your country

      @TheBlueFlaming0@TheBlueFlaming011 ай бұрын
  • This school only admits students who are Korean or have Korean roots. Although this school is located in Japan, it intentionally discriminates against non-Korean children and does not allow them to enroll. I do not understand why a private school, let alone a Japanese school, would seek subsidies from the Japanese government when it does not admit Japanese students.

    @suzuki3yuya@suzuki3yuya4 ай бұрын
    • Ayoooooooo You got a good point

      @mynamesplatinum@mynamesplatinum3 ай бұрын
  • That preppy korean kid doesn't even know his cute little hairstyle would be forbidden in his homeland. Wonder how long he'd last in the camps.

    @realSethMeyers@realSethMeyersАй бұрын
  • As a Japanese, I don't want to take the side of Japan and agree on what we have done to Koreans in general but this time I have to say that this really is a selfish behavior of those, who practise it and believe in this ideology. If they are so much against Japan and want to resist the government, why don't they emigrate to (North) Korea but instead insist on coming back to Japan. Yes I am sorry that they have to experience such hardship and obstacles in their every day life but they brought a major part of it by themselfs by staying in the country/not adopting the local rules.

    @_lumbel_9094@_lumbel_9094 Жыл бұрын
    • Coming back? Babe. You realize they are desendends of slave laborers brought over by Japanese slavors? If you really were well informed you would know most Zainichi are not part of this group and instead live as a Japanese person.

      @kimcheezy3433@kimcheezy3433 Жыл бұрын
    • As a complete and utter outsider, I agree. If they aren't happy with Japan's government, but they do like North Korean government/leaders, they should go there instead of Japan. Its a logical conclusion from reasoning.

      @poplix2704@poplix2704 Жыл бұрын
    • Action speak louder then word, they prefer japan more then korea.

      @threezero4491@threezero4491 Жыл бұрын
    • Do you agree though that they’re not adopting the local rules and customs bc they are already persecuted and isolated by the majority population?

      @auroraborealis4878@auroraborealis4878 Жыл бұрын
    • Yeah, they like North Korea? Live there! You are right.

      @alembess9129@alembess9129 Жыл бұрын
  • How is this allowed to exist in Japan? That is shocking. This is like if there is a Al Qaeda high school in the US.

    @zheyuezhao456@zheyuezhao456 Жыл бұрын
    • I live in Japan but I didn’t even know there was a kind of brainwashing school existing here😂

      @sadfit5518@sadfit5518 Жыл бұрын
    • The students from the Korean school are not making bombs or killing other people, much unlike the Islamists. Comparing DPRK to those savages is a little silly.

      @atomic_bomba@atomic_bomba Жыл бұрын
    • Japan has it’s pros and cons but at the end of the day, Japan is a democracy and under the Japanese constitution, everyone has the right to free speech. While I don’t agree with what they’re teaching, I believe that it should not be in anyone’s power to take that right away from them.

      @Shanaoh@Shanaoh Жыл бұрын
    • Well by law every muslim is a terrorist by what they believe in, they are barded from having Non Muslim friends and are told to lie to them about actually being friends, and looking at the Quran with all the stuff about having to kill non believers, in book 8 Hadith 44 of the Quran it literally says Mohammed ( the man which the Muslims follow) was orders to fight the people as long as they don't submit to Allah, Something something Slaughter as we Slaughter pray as we pray. As long as they follow Mohammed they but be like him.

      @messyjessem.3108@messyjessem.3108 Жыл бұрын
    • @@sadfit5518same, i never thought these schools existed

      @okanelover@okanelover Жыл бұрын
  • Racism in any country should be stopped people educated. The North Korean children born in Japan are wearing rose tinted glasses. If it’s so wonderful in North Korea why haven’t the moved there.

    @Lilyandmoomin@Lilyandmoomin6 ай бұрын
  • Japanese rule in both Koreas came to an end after World War II and all those responsible are no longer living. The North Koreans living in Japan seem to be hell bent on keeping this hate alive which is extremely disturbing. If I was Japanese I would feel very uneasy about having schools in my country which were clearly sympathetic towards a country with the most brutal regime in the world. The Japanese lady who escaped from North Korea should speak to the students at these North Korean schools about the terrible experience she had. However they would probably say she was just quoting capitalist propaganda. If they think that North Korea is so fantastic then maybe they should go and live there.

    @franceskronenwett3539@franceskronenwett35399 ай бұрын
    • "If they think that North Korea is so fantastic then maybe they should go and live there." Yeah I'm sure the ultra strict border rules surrounding the North Korean DMZ would allow them to just waltz in unharmed especially after SK soldiers firing on them for afar.... lol Not to mention this has been their home for decades and they wouldn't like to see their forefathers' birthplace slandered by Japanese propaganda. Use your mind for once lol

      @PeppermintSwirl@PeppermintSwirl8 ай бұрын
    • I feel like their will also be resentment towards Japanese and Germans in their respected continents because of all of the horrendous war crimes committed during WWII

      @fazediscovery5@fazediscovery55 ай бұрын
  • I'm not entirely certain if translating 朝鮮 (cho-sen) to "Korea" is accurate, as many people in Japan may interpret it as referring specifically to North Korea in this case. I don't see any issues with having Korean schools in Japan; however, it is problematic if these schools teach North Korean national ideology, which goes against Japan's fundamental principles. If these schools are seeking financial support from the Japanese government, it becomes even more important for them to adhere to local systems and laws, similar to American schools in Japan.

    @misandmis23@misandmis23 Жыл бұрын
    • Yep. In Chinese 朝鲜 means North Korea too, and 韩国 South Korea.

      @brokelaowaiinchina@brokelaowaiinchina Жыл бұрын
    • It is a tricky situation, but if they were teaching korean kids with Japanese textbooks, I’m sure they would gloss over all the war crimes japan committed in Korea and other countries. While their own books might have their own flavor of propaganda (as every country), being able to show these kids exactly why their ancestors were brought to japan is very important imo. If Japan doesn’t want to support korean schools, maybe think twice before launching a colonialism campaign full of war crimes 🤡

      @felipechaves6100@felipechaves6100 Жыл бұрын
    • ​@@felipechaves6100 I argee KOREAN SHOOL IS FOR KOREAN kids. So they can learn their cultures, their roots, their language. BUT SHOULD BE PLUS CLASS ONLY. CLASS ABOUT KOREAN LAGUAGE, CLASS OF KOREAN CULTURES & TRADIONAL DANCE!! But in daily they should HAVE TO LEARN BY JAPAN LANGUAGE. Because theyre born & raise in JAPAN AS THIRD & FOUR GENERATION ALREADY!! AND THEYRE SURE LIVING HERE, NOT GO BACK TO NORTH KOREA. Theyre holding JAPAN NATIONAL CARD. No one say they cant have KOREAN SCHOOL FOR KOREAN KIDS. But their should study & learn by Japan language because it NATION LANGUAGE. KOREAN CLASS SHOULD BE PLUS CLASS FOR STUDENT. Example, study by JAPAN LANGUAGE IN MORNING & Korean class in afternoon.

      @candicetran9620@candicetran9620 Жыл бұрын
    • @@felipechaves6100 韓国人は日本に対する残虐行為を、600年続けて来た事を忘れてるみたいですけど、なぜ日本事だけ覚えておかなければいけないんですか? 日本が韓国人による残虐行為を教育し始めたら、日本と韓国の関係がどうなるかあなたは理解できてますか?

      @tamenobukuji7732@tamenobukuji7732 Жыл бұрын
    • ​@@felipechaves6100 Last, WHAT JAPAN DID TO KOREA IS BADLY WRONG & INHUMANITY. But this is the wars - who bigger, stronger who win. In the past - humans is still bargains & brutal & uncivilian. SOUTH KOREAN WAS LAP DOG OF US. Theyre send thoundsand soldiers help US KILL, RAPE, BURN MANY INNOCENT VIETNAM VILLAGERS & Farmers. IT BRUTAL JUST SAME WHAT JAPAN DID TO KOREAN. Now SOUTH KOREA STILL BLOODY HATEFUL JAPAN FOR WHAT JAPAN DID TO KOREAN. BASE ON THIS, SOUTH KOREA OWM VIETNAMESE PPL TOO, SO EVERY YEARS THEY SHOULD BOW DOWB APOLOGY?? THEY SHOULD TEACH THEIR OWN PPL HOW BAD & Cruetly their older generation did to others ppl too?? IM NOT SAY THIS TO BLAME SOUTH KOREA. I just explain, what did in the past is HISTORY & NO ONE CAN CHANGE IT. All we need to care is recent & now!! These ppl is NORTH KOREAN by blood & roots. They have right to learn their language & cultures. But they also need realize theyre livin in JAPAN - Not Norty korea.

      @candicetran9620@candicetran9620 Жыл бұрын
  • If North Korea is such a good place why didn't they just stay in it while they were there, They can just live there instead of insisting to have equal rights to a country they never acknowledge to be as their own. They are just making it harder for other Koreans(Mindan) in Japan. The Quality of School they enjoy in Japan, are most probably reserved and experience only by higher up(politically connected) families in north korea. I wonder why Japan allowed a North Korean school to exist.. Korean School which focuses on culture and language is fine, but an actual North Korean School that literally have a curriculum that is clearly have a goal of brain washing children to worship the North Korean KIM family. If these Koreans just wants to have somewhere to belong to, there is Mindan(South Korea) Association which 65% of Koreans in Japan are a part of.

    @Bite0fBread@Bite0fBread Жыл бұрын
    • Cuba and North Korea are under U.S. sanctions, and there is no humanitarianism

      @wallace6228@wallace6228 Жыл бұрын
  • Thank you for your documentary. I am a graduate of Korean School in Kobe. Now I am supporting for the activity of Ms. Eiko Kawasaki. Korean Schools should be changed for the 4th, 5th generation children.

    @hyangsu911@hyangsu9118 ай бұрын
  • 6:56 Is there anyone who knows the tittle of this song, please?

    @yudhoyono88@yudhoyono887 ай бұрын
  • As a Korean living in South Korea, I don't support Korean school in Japan worshipping the worst dictator North Korean regime. I don't feel any connection to them even though they speak the same language.

    @redsky7100@redsky7100 Жыл бұрын
    • it baffles me how they associate with the North instead of the South..

      @limmyk4943@limmyk4943 Жыл бұрын
    • Interesting do you feel the same about North Korean defectors do you feel a connection to them?

      @stevenbaksh5545@stevenbaksh5545 Жыл бұрын
    • @@stevenbaksh5545I ain’t her but North Korean defectors risked their lives to go South. If they leave their propaganda behind, they are South Koreans.

      @Han-mj3lt@Han-mj3lt Жыл бұрын
    • ​@@stevenbaksh5545 Korean society does not accept those idiots worshiping North Korean leaders.( some 'leftists' in South Korea think highly of the North Korean leaders and defend the North Korean regime, but not many.) Japan is more tolerant of them than South Korea. If someone teaches such a curriculum in Korea, he will face criminal charges for violating the National Security Law. North Korean defectors are generally against North Korean regime, so South Korean society generally embraces them well.

      @yoosanglee@yoosanglee Жыл бұрын
    • @@limmyk4943 not defending these people but north Korea and south Korea are very culturally different at this point. north koreans and south koreans are practically different people in all but blood in every aspect. they are physically different, they have different dialect, they have different thinking. south koreans and north koreans no longer feel connected to one another, and the gap is only growing. most young south koreans these days don't care about reunification.

      @loispyeun@loispyeun10 ай бұрын
  • I normally watch history and politics related content on youtube and click this video because it popped up on my recommended list. This whole video got me speechless from the North Korea school to the school being in Japan to some of the Koreans in this video are more from the South but aligns with the North more. I don't know what's happening at all. I have to go back to watch the video from start to finish just to wrap my head around. I'm actually flabbergasted right now.

    @samsonkth@samsonkth10 ай бұрын
  • Great video

    @_widas_@_widas_9 ай бұрын
  • Weird that we mostly see musical education throughout the video. I'd love to know the weekly schedule of one class.

    @vascotelesdagama6072@vascotelesdagama60729 ай бұрын
  • Its very cool to learn about part of japan i didnt know almost anything about. Once in Kyoto i met member of Yakuza in onsen and had plenty of talk. He wasn't first Yakzuza i met, but surely was the most amazing one. He actually told me alot about current (at the time, it was some years ago) state of Yakuza and all, but he also told me that his family is from Korea and they moved during Korean wars but he said he hated japan at first but then started to love it. It was really interesting and i wish i had a chance to ask him more about it

    @vert2552@vert255210 ай бұрын
    • wow living for 15 years in Japan never met yakuza, did he tell you he was yakuza? I'm very interested.

      @user-ln4pe4lg7o@user-ln4pe4lg7o4 ай бұрын
    • @@user-ln4pe4lg7o i must say it was quite few years back so i dont remember exactly how the conversation went.. but when i went to outside baths, either he was there alone or i was first one and he came in soon after me but it was obvious just by looking at him he was yakuza. He had this yanki look to him and obviously tattoos from feet up to his neck. At first we didnt talk... rather obviously too :P, he may have said something to me and i have responded? (I dont remember if he assumed i speak japanese and we just went off or if once i responded he knew and then we got to talk) but we started talking, bit funny because we were talking about me being in japan and about yakuza and all, and then random japanese young guy came (i think he said he was 21? The second he entered, he saw the yakuza guy, he started walking out and yakuza guy told him that its find to stay, soon we had convo all 3. I kinda felt bad for the other guy because he asked him where he works and what he does and started comparing him to me. That despite my age im so far from home, speaking language and all, and that the other guy should work harder :P Thet he was super nice saying he is thankful that people like me are coming to Japan, actually learning the culture, being interested in it and protecting it too, sonething that more and more 'youngsters' dont care about. We talked about visa problems too Also he joked (i assume :P) that if i ever have any problem in japan to just come over and ask his family (yakuza) for help :D

      @vert2552@vert25524 ай бұрын
  • Jesus the argument of these activists is basically "yeah I kicked the cat but Japan kicked the dog so it doesn't matter that I kicked the cat". This shit doesn't work with someone that understands basic logic.

    @golDroger88@golDroger88 Жыл бұрын
    • morally, it would be incorrect, but logically it would make sense

      @aguy5170@aguy5170 Жыл бұрын
    • @@aguy5170 No, it's not logically correct because one thing doesn't cancel the other.

      @golDroger88@golDroger88 Жыл бұрын
    • @@aguy5170 It's a tu quoque logical fallacy

      @RainbowMarie@RainbowMarie Жыл бұрын
    • @@golDroger88 By your logic, Gary Plauché’s should have spent years in jail for pre-meditated murder. Unfortunately for you he was only sentenced for just a weekend.

      @rdxzero@rdxzero Жыл бұрын
    • @@rdxzero That's a completely different situation. None of the people responsible for whatever violence Korea or Japan did to each other are alive. All you have today is activists gaslighting each other.

      @golDroger88@golDroger88 Жыл бұрын
  • It just seems if you love North Korea, and support the regime, live there. Why stay in Japan?

    @MarjorieBurns-gu9tf@MarjorieBurns-gu9tf5 ай бұрын
  • Hopefully, there will be a discussion between the ladies, the one who returned after 40 years and the one who just went back and forth between Japan and North Korea. In one frame not separated... Just curious about the collaboration thought.

    @pipijapija@pipijapija8 ай бұрын
  • 17:00この女性の話すことが本当なら今すぐに北朝鮮に住めばいいのに。その暖かくていい人達に囲まれながら生きていくのが幸せなんだと思うよ。 差別されながら嫌いな日本に住み続ける必要なんて😊無いよ。

    @user-ru1ww4rz6v@user-ru1ww4rz6v Жыл бұрын
    • @@user-pu3yq3gj2p im pretty sure she was being sarcastic

      @kpopfam9849@kpopfam9849 Жыл бұрын
    • こう言うのを洗脳と言うんですよね 何人もの脱北者が韓国や日本や世界中に居て人権侵害を訴えてるのにそのことに目を向けない そんなに良いなら移住でもしたら?と草生えますよww

      @user-xh5pv4le1p@user-xh5pv4le1p Жыл бұрын
    • netouyo...

      @oc-ek3mlpguft@oc-ek3mlpguft11 ай бұрын
  • More stories of people like Kawasaki Eiko need to be told, like What happened to them after they were deceived to North Korea and what took them to escape from there.

    @JL-ui6gx@JL-ui6gx Жыл бұрын
    • Agree! She's the one to be highlighted here. Not those idealistic and brainwashed kids who have no idea what North Korea is truly like.

      @NDE108@NDE1089 ай бұрын
  • just curious as to why they don't want to move back to Korea if they are so emotionally attached to it ?

    @maisnamraju5142@maisnamraju51427 ай бұрын
    • ikr! Japan isn't stopping Koreans from going back lol Japan is pretty comfortable though... I can tell

      @mynamesplatinum@mynamesplatinum3 ай бұрын
    • Same reason as to why you see a patriotic Turkish dude in Germany. Living in Germany is way better than if you live in Turkey itself. While still being proud of your ancestry. But in our case here, Korea was split into 2. This is the part where delusional comes into place. It's really hard to explain since I'm not really good at explaining but I'll explain as best as I can. There are so many ways that this can go, one that I can confidently say that I agree with is when you're proud of your ancestry. Sometimes you want to be a little bit different. Different than the others. Notice how these Koreans find the violation of human rights in north Korea "justified"? Like, in their eyes. While you're looking at the dark side of north Korea, why don't you look at the bright side of it? But the thing is with this pov, south korea is a successful country with their human rights being protected while still being ethnically pure Korean. Why don't they just choose to be this type of Korean, the hanguk? Most of the "Choson" in japan are delusional Koreans who think that North Korea deserves more than what they got. And of course, not all Koreans in Japan believe in North Korea agendas. It's only a minority.

      @kalvon@kalvonАй бұрын
  • Between 2006 and 2016 I spent a lot of time in Japan, and when I was in Tokyo I'd often go to 'Koreatown' - Shin Okubo - to get K-Pop merch for my niece. Always a nice friendly place to wander around. It was where I discovered that South Korea isn't just dominant in music in East Asia, but in make-up and fashion too! And drama (soap operas) - you can discover that on the TV any night. In all that time, I never realised there was a North Korean community! People I knew were open about hating China and the Chinese, but they were not so open about their feeling for Koreans.

    @LittleNala@LittleNala6 ай бұрын
  • i dont think there's anything wrong with a korean school in japan. its important to connect to your heritage and non-japanese face great ostracism in japan. but NO school should teach blind nationalism for a country. to teach about a country but fail to criticize any aspect of it, means its nothing more than propoganda. japanese schools have a similar problem of repressing the horrors of its history. and my own country of the united states also promotes mindless patriotism, represses history, and encourages us to celebrate horrible historical figures from a young age. many americans and brits will look in horror at the kim family on the wall but not realize their own education glorified equally deplorable figures. i see this episode as a lesson that applies to all places in the world: we need to stop worshiping governments, politicians, and regimes. we need to talk about everything in a country's present and past, from beautiful culture to horrible genocide. we must give students the TRUTH and let them interpret that information for themselves. the world will be a better place when we raise critical thinkers instead of blind followers

    @rayhem@rayhem Жыл бұрын
    • Pictures of Kim Il Sung and his son hang in the classrooms of Korean schools, students are educated in North Korean ideology, and students are trained to worship them as gods. It could be called a spy training school, so to speak. While North Korea's evil deeds need not be mentioned here, what is unforgivable for the Japanese people is the kidnapping of ordinary citizens by North Korea. North Korean agents have kidnapped hundreds of Japanese citizens in Japan and brought them back to North Korea. The most egregious of these incidents was the kidnapping of Megumi Yokota. A 13-year-old girl was kidnapped by agents on her way home from school and taken to North Korea by boat. On September 17, 2002, Prime Minister Koizumi went to North Korea, where North Korea officially acknowledged that it had abducted her, and five abductees were recaptured, but many of them have yet to be returned. Megumi has not been able to return and her whereabouts remain unknown. Under these circumstances, it is not appropriate for the Japanese government to leave the Korean school as it is, and it is out of touch with the feelings of the Japanese people. Something should be done as soon as possible.

      @gu9yenk@gu9yenk Жыл бұрын
    • i couldnt agree more with your comment

      @WasabiDreams@WasabiDreams Жыл бұрын
    • ​@@gu9yenkI agree with you.

      @user-vf7cn3oy8g@user-vf7cn3oy8g Жыл бұрын
    • @@WasabiDreams Its agents abduct Japanese nationals, ignore all UN resolutions, continue to develop nuclear weapons and missiles, threaten the world, hack into bank accounts to steal money, and continue to fire missiles into the waters near Japan. There is not a person in Japan who does not regard North Korea, an extremely dangerous entity for Japan's security, as an enemy.

      @gu9yenk@gu9yenk Жыл бұрын
    • agreed. "you be the seeker of your own truth".

      @itsrye8001@itsrye8001 Жыл бұрын
  • Irony is they probably don’t want to live in N Korea.

    @tomjohnson5191@tomjohnson5191 Жыл бұрын
  • Why not the people who love North Korea try living there more on a permanent basis. I have to think they don’t really see that they have no internet. But intranet

    @Frogger790@Frogger7905 ай бұрын
  • It's just life. Here in the U.S. some people from the South still cling to the past during the Civil War, which took place over 150 years ago. They still fly the Confederate (southern) flag and even have statues dedicated to their war heroes. They claim it's part of their history and heritage while others see it as a dark side of American history. To each his own. Something you can't do in North Korea. Remember that.

    @JRFrancisco20088@JRFrancisco200889 ай бұрын
  • I was born in post war outskirts of Tokyo in 1947. Yes I did witness some Korean people being discriminated around me as there were quite a bit of animosities between Japanese and Korean adults in the community where I lived. I felt very conflicted and confused in the situations like that since I had no problem mingling with their Korean children and my mother says anything disparaging or discriminating of Korean people. However It was obvious they were separated from ordinary Japanese community by where they'd set up their house /shacks. Inside the river dikes near the river where it could be flooded and washed away if there was a storm or flush flood not that it happened a lot but even 8 or so year old I could tell it was not an ideal place for a house hold. My dearest friend was 2 years older than me and he was very kind and helped me cope with bullies since I was small. A few years later he said his family is going back to (North ) Korea. He was 15 years old I was really crushed that my best friend whom I considered more of my brother than the real ones. But kids don't make the decisions so up he went with his family. Only later i found out they chose to go back to North since they had relative there. some years past and I started reading /hearing about what happened to returnees like my friend's family. How they are discriminated once they went back HOME that they are spies or spoilers of western corruptions etc. etc. I was crushed the second time thinking how terrible it must have been to my friend and his family after all that. Jump to now, I'm an expat living in the US and removed from today's situations of North Korean and Japanese relations as clearly as someone living in Japan. However After watching this documentary I'd like for Japanese government to send these Korean school students to live in home stay programs in North Korea even for 2-3 wks to see reality is different from rose color tinted North Korean government propaganda situations. I'm certain that the citizens there for the most part are wonderful kind hearted people as long as they could get hold of the essentials and food. Then we should ask them what they really think when they come back to safe haven of Japan. Brain washing can be done anywhere very easily as long as this double standard schooling systems are allowed to continue. That's the peril of democratic governments that touts freedom of ideas/expressions and associations. It's a double edge sward politically.

    @mikiohirata9627@mikiohirata9627 Жыл бұрын
    • The issue is that anyone sent to Korea as part of a "homestay" program is neither guaranteed to return, nor guaranteed to get a picture of reality.

      @dustycarrier4413@dustycarrier4413 Жыл бұрын
    • The sanctions have everything to do with North Korea's suffering. The same with Cuba, and many other countries the USA has invaded. What would happen if Korea had united and remained as one country? It would be a very prosperous country just like Vietnam, a peaceful prosperous communist/ socialists country

      @deidradahl2802@deidradahl2802 Жыл бұрын
    • @@deidradahl2802 Why not ask the South Korean people whether they want to be reunited with the North? It's not guaranteed that a united korea under north korea would be prosperous.

      @faxmachine5306@faxmachine5306 Жыл бұрын
    • @@deidradahl2802 The sanctions were put in place because your peaceful NK started developing nukes. Before there weren't such sanctions. SK also tried to establish free-trading zones on the border but they were shut down by NK. Also remember that NK has dozens of concentration camps were ~150-200k political prisoners are being tortured, exploited, violated and killed, children of course included. Nobody but their socialist ideology is to blame for this. They took inspirations from their other socialist brethren like the SU and PRC.

      @the_real_glabnurb@the_real_glabnurb Жыл бұрын
    • @@faxmachine5306 After the war, if there was no interference from all sides they would have been united and be as prosperous as Vietnam. Now it's too late, difference in culture etc., '''Too much water under the bridge''

      @deidradahl2802@deidradahl2802 Жыл бұрын
  • My korean-japanese friends have gotten into fights with north korean students before... they told me how aggressive the north korean kids are. My friends retain a strong and deep connection to their korean heritage and adapts seamlessly with japanese culture as well. They can go anywhere in the world and make friends and thrive. I personally think that's a great gift to have (being able to bond with other people and other culture)

    @user-pl1xr5wy8e@user-pl1xr5wy8e11 ай бұрын
    • To be fair, that can be a sign of trauma as well. Not supporting NK, just adding some context to aggressive behavior.

      @sourgreendolly7685@sourgreendolly76856 ай бұрын
    • The Japanese earnestly desire that all Koreans in Japan return to the Korean peninsula.

      @azurecliff8709@azurecliff87093 ай бұрын
    • @@azurecliff8709 hmm... I'm sure fine with North Koreans living here :D I'm even fine with their extremist ideals-- if they don't cause a ruckus about it! Just b chill and we can all live together eh?

      @mynamesplatinum@mynamesplatinum3 ай бұрын
  • This could be perfect ingredients to create those who yarn their home country (or even radicalisation) because they don't really know what it's like to live there (visiting is not living), free access to social media (inc. disinformation), and being discriminated by local community.

    @hailstar007@hailstar0076 ай бұрын
  • It's crazy, I'm not a full Japanese speaker (I'm learning, but nowhere near fluent) but I could hear their heavy Japanese accents as they spoke Korean

    @JD-fx9ly@JD-fx9ly8 ай бұрын
    • They're Japanese, Korean isn't they primary language. Zainichi Korean means originating from Korea before the split.

      @akaRyuka@akaRyuka4 сағат бұрын
  • 女性や子供を利用して被害者の振りをするのは彼らの伝統的な手法だよな。半世紀以上も同じことを繰り返す変わらない人達

    @user-en5vg2bd4r@user-en5vg2bd4r Жыл бұрын
    • 長崎と広島も

      @wallace6228@wallace6228 Жыл бұрын
    • ​@@wallace6228 現実に起きた事とプロパガンダは違うからさw 北朝鮮政府主導の拉致、麻薬密輸に協力してる一部の在日朝鮮人が“私達は被害者ろ“を非難してるわけな。あと日本にいる脱北者を非難したりな

      @user-en5vg2bd4r@user-en5vg2bd4r Жыл бұрын
    • @@wallace6228 i am Japanese but i don't understand why you bring up "Hiroshima" and "Nagasaki" here.

      @poniso9142@poniso9142 Жыл бұрын
  • 彼等が日本に住んでる理由? 祖国より安心安全で食事も美味しいから住んでるんだよ 祖国に住んでる家族や親族が90年台から00年初期にかけて情報をいっぱい教えてくれて移住するのを諦めた家族はいっぱいいると思う 複雑な問題がこの動画で更に複雑になりそう

    @Yu-suke-america@Yu-suke-america Жыл бұрын
  • One question to them : Why they still stay in Japan, if they think North Korea is so good ??

    @juntan157@juntan1573 ай бұрын
  • It's so funny that the guy with glasses are speaking ill of Japan, but is using Japanese and living in Japan. If he hates Japan so much and think North Korea is a better place to live, I really hope he moves to North Korea and see the bizarre reality there for himself. We accept foreigners who love Japanese culture of want to achieve something here, but not those who do nothing but beg for governmental support. Our government, our tax, and our land is for people who love Japan, not for brainwashed Koreans who reject going back to their country despite saying North Korea is much better than Japan.

    @user-ji2yv7ri3w@user-ji2yv7ri3w3 ай бұрын
    • How are these schools, spreading biased information, even legal? Japanese politicians are being too generous.

      @user-ji2yv7ri3w@user-ji2yv7ri3w3 ай бұрын
    • 同意

      @Beatdownhead@Beatdownhead2 ай бұрын
  • 義務や責任は負わないのに、権利を主張する外国人が日本に多すぎるんだよね、 みんながみんなじゃないし、システムの問題かもしれないんだけど。 でもその権利を得れないと必ず「差別だ」と言う。正直もうどうすればいいか分からないし、彼らとは一生平行線上

    @user-up1eu5yz5k@user-up1eu5yz5k Жыл бұрын
  • I admire Eiko Kawasaki for what she has gone through and suing the North Korean government.

    @annnee6409@annnee6409 Жыл бұрын
  • Why can they just go back to North Korea

    @isabelamarie5004@isabelamarie50047 ай бұрын
  • Entire video and they never asked them why they emulate North Korea instead of South Korea, or a pre-split Korea. Makes this whole video kind of as waste when they don't even ask the most obvious and likely most illuminating question.

    @combat.wombat@combat.wombatАй бұрын
  • 動画の趣旨と外れるけれど韓国語・朝鮮語をあとから学んだ人のように、イントネーションが日本語に準じているところが興味深い

    @r9740@r9740 Жыл бұрын
    • 学校の韓国語の先生に在日の方が数名いましたが、かなりカタカナ発音でしたよ。イントネーションも関西弁でした。

      @ajiken123@ajiken123 Жыл бұрын
    • @@ajiken123韓国のアクセントにならないように、わざと日本風にしてたりしないのかな?

      @user-im1lf9ss8k@user-im1lf9ss8k Жыл бұрын
    • @@user-im1lf9ss8k 朝鮮学校や日本の在日社会で子供の頃から日本式アクセントに染まってしまってるので、ちゃんとした韓国語の発音しようとしてもできないそうです

      @ajiken123@ajiken123 Жыл бұрын
  • I'm wondering if North Korea would allow a community of Japanese who warship Hideki Tojo to be in their country.

    @1947_gout_key_d_lai@1947_gout_key_d_lai Жыл бұрын
    • I had the same thought

      @A_TP@A_TP Жыл бұрын
    • How are they equivalent. You japs separated their country. N. Korea kidnapped few japs? Yer smart so smarties.

      @Josh-bm4lh@Josh-bm4lh Жыл бұрын
  • If North Korea is so good and Japan is so bad, why don’t ALL these people leave Japan and live in North Korea? Easy peasy.I wonder why the reporter doesn’t ask this very important question. The hypocrisy of these people infuriates me. They have lived there 5 generations and still stick to their own beliefs, why just not go back to Korea? even South Korea? I can’t fathom how they justify themselves and their entitlement. These kids listen to parents blindly because they are not taught critical thinking. So weird to me. 😢

    @laylam4241@laylam42419 ай бұрын
  • I really liked how you just show all the sides and takes about the struggle. A real delicate situation where government abuses made the lives of people harder for generations. I hope people can live in peace being who they are.

    @ren7a8ero@ren7a8ero8 ай бұрын
KZhead