The Meta-Anti-Propaganda In Photos I Took On My Trip To North Korea
Conscious that the very idea of propaganda often stretches the truth (or the lie), I always wanted to experience empirically the land of North Korea.
This September I finally had the possibility of turning my will into reality, as I visited Pyongyang, DMZ, the Diamond Mountain and more. And it appears it doesn’t seem as bad as the world wants to convince you it is. A lot has changed since Kim Jong Un came to power.
Don’t get me wrong; I am aware that I had been shown only a part of this country. But even so, if you’re being told by someone that they’ve brought ‘illegal’ photos from DPRK, please note that for example taking photos in North Korea is as legal as taking it anywhere else in the world. Of course, you are limited as where to go by your security and the tight schedule of the trip, but other than that, you can take photos as far as your camera shoots them. And no action is taken against you taking them out of the country; I haven’t had the memory cards of my camera checked and neither did any other member of the group of my trip. Anyway, please enjoy a fraction of life in the DPRK!
More info: mruffs.blogspot.com
Me in the DMZ. What you can see behind me is the South Korea
Suburban areas of Pyongyang
Putong River on the way from the airport
Stainless railings and the quality of the road are ought to convince the tourists and new-comers of Pyongyang’s well being.
On my way to the hotel
Early afternoon in the Capital of North Korea
You think the British like to que? I think that the culture of queing in DPRK is even higher
Everyone’s standing in line and waiting for their turn, no pushing, no angry atmosphere, just politely waiting for the bus.
Even in the country of Eternal Sun, there happens to be a sunset
Do you really think that “Kim doesn’t want you to see these pictures”?
The entrance to one of many Funfairs in the Capital. Even in my hometown there is none!
Is it an avenue in the most socialist and usurper country in the world or a lane in Los Angeles? You tell me
Unfortunately, I don’t think you can call these buildings inhabited in a satisfactory degree.
The Kim-Ir-Sung Square. This is where all those parades you hear from the country’s national news happen
This is a view from my hotel window. It looks awesome, right?
Pyongyang by night. But don’t worry about wasting so much electricity. Everything is shut down about midnight.
Picturesque countryside. This is a photo you can call prohibited, as it depicts a soldier
But taking pictures of soldiers you can consider limited in most countries in the world, including the ones we call ‘civilized’.
Everyone can see the poverty, but it is not different than any other form most Asian countries
Don’t think his job is useless and created for the sole purpose of creating jobs in view of the socialist ideas. There is traffic; we are in a bus after all, aren’t we?
The main mean of transport is either by foot or by bike. That’s rather eco-friendly and Netherlandish of them, right?
There’s a big number of these kiosks with snacks and food articles around the country (that are either red or white)
A typical ‘traffic jam’. Notice the red flags that are waving by the road; it is quite a common view
Our bus we drove around the country with. Our guide, Song, is standing by the entrance. She spoke English and Russian and was pretty awesome
The Ninth Muse, and simultaneously a big love of Kim Jong Il
Folklore street in Pyongyang
You know what? Koreans also like to BBQ and are very hospitable. After all, I got a chicken leg, 100 ml of vodka in a yogurt cup and a little plate with spices
In many tourist stops, like this waterfall, new stands begin to appear with souvenirs and food
Picnicking Koreans
Now that’s a treat! During my stay I got the chance to take part in Pyongyang International Beer Festival
And yes, it is still in this ‘terrifying country’, not in Europe or US
I came across a group of children carrying flowers for the dear comrades Kim Ir Sung and Kim Jong Il
A bus stop. The city lacks benches, so Koreans tend to squat
The Ryugyong Hotel, or, as it is also called, The Ghost Hotel
Its construction begun in 1987 and as of 2016 it still remains unfinished and unopen.
The breathtaking Metro station inspired by Moscow’s underground masterpieces of architecture
Casual street view in Pyongyang
If you happen to see a car in DPRK the are always mind-blowing and dissonance-creating between them and the reality that surrounds them
The city is kept clean, but none of the work is done by automatic devices
These gentlemen not only are just doing the all-so-important job of holding posters in place, but they also closely watch the tourists
Somewhere in Korea
Even in the highest tourist point in one of the National Parks, there are already locals trying to make a living
The essence of world collision
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Share on FacebookWhat you are showing here is a version of propaganda. You were only allowed to see certain places there, ones which the officials think will look quite good to other countries. It is just a form of cherry picking, which most people do with their holiday photos anyway. Plus your images of scenery don't say a thing about the quality of life for the citizens whose lives will be in constant poverty.
exactly, Tiny Dynamine! Also, only a select group of people get to live in the capital...
Load More Replies...I can't believe Bored Panda would agree to publish these pictures with this text. For the record, Nazi Germany also had pretty stunning monuments and food and beautiful landscapes; it was still a country that actively sought Jewish people and organised their mass-murder. Nobody cares about whether North Korea looks "nice" or if the food is amazing or if they have lovely blue rivers. It doesn't make it "not as bad as we believe". It's still a place where people have no rights, where there is no freedom of speech, where people are interned for having different political views, where tourists have to be followed by a guide everywhere they go, where rape is used as a weapon against female prisoners, where forced abortions are practiced, where there is forced labor (just like in Nazi work camps), where people cannot choose their religion. I struggle to see how it is "not that bad" and how it could be worse. But yay! You can picnic by the river and they even have a beer festival!
Thank you. It's amazing how so many people think that a proctored trip to North Korea gives them the right to ignore the first-hand accounts from refugees of the Nazi Germany scale atrocities that are going on there. It's exactly like going to Nazi Germany pre-WW2 and getting a official Josef Goebels tour of Berlin, and then coming back and saying, "All the media reports about the Jew are kinda wrong 'cause life is pretty good for the Germans." Naivety and egoism ("I've been to North Korea. So there.") all rolled into one.
Load More Replies...But there are also people in North Korea in internment camps for crimes their ancestors committed so... yeah, maybe there's a reason we think it's bad.
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Load More Replies...The pictures are nice and interesting, but the text is not really. You are showing anecdotal evidence, and you obviously were even aware that tours were guided. Why should anything be checked if you experience only what is suited for showing? Political believes nonewithstanding, North Korea _is_ totalitarian and human rights _are_ violated.
Wow, really??? Are you ALWAYS this naive?? Nobody ever said that the residents live in constant terror and the streets run red with blood from beheadings! Even the pics you took, ask the people in them about their lives! Only allowed to pick one from 20 something cuts, and NEVER allowed access to the internet if they are found somehow doing so (certain spots close to the border) they are SEVERELY punished...etc, etc, ETC! It is terrible for these people to live in that country! They only have access to a certain amount of food as well! How would you like to live like that? You cannot capture ANY of those things, EVER!
I understand what you were going for, but I'm having trouble with the flippant tone of this post. You couldn't possibly "empirically experience North Korea" as you were allowed to see limited sites. You probably didn’t see overt oppression or prison camps while you were in Pyongyang. In fact, speaking with locals sans tour guide (pretty routine tourist behavior anywhere but in North Korea) could land you in jail as "attempted espionage." Perhaps some text acknowledging why others are hesitant to give the regime their tourist dollars may help balance the post?
Wow. The naivity is stunning. North Koreans aren't allowed to leave the country. You can. Nuff said.
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Load More Replies...As a refugee from communist Poland, my mom told me stories of dumb tourists going on propaganda trips there too. My god, how offensive.
are you kidding?! you casually throwing around your thoughts on poverty in asian countries shows how terribly affected by western white privilege you are. one photo-ONE PHOTO--of a north korean labour camp is enough to eclipse any illusion these photos allegedly dispel. you're worse than fake news--you're fake real news. you should be ashamed of yourself.
I think most people are less swayed by the "media" and more concerned with the false imprisonment, executions, censorship, general fear of NC citizens that if they do or say anything to fall out of line they and their whole families could "disappear." But, yes, let's blame it on the media and the 'dumb' people that don't know the 'real story' you've somehow been 'smart enough' to be able to uncover. >:-|
NK, sorry. I was so mad I inadvertently threw North Carolina under the bus. :-o
Load More Replies...This article is just working to discredit the work don't by hundreds of aid originations. Good job playing into the hands of the propaganda
Let's take pictures of a country where people are send to camp to be killed with sometimes no reason at all, where millions of people died of starvation, where the leader is threatening the rest of the world to use nuclear weapon, so-called leader who is actually crazy batshit, and let's just say "hey, you know, it's not like they say it is, it's not all about propaganda". I'm sorry, but even if I understand the reason behind this post, it's bloody twisted and it's certainly not respectful at all for all the north korean who have to live on all that c**p day after day... Next time it will be "the places in Aleppo that are not destroyed as much as tv show you" ? I don't know, I think it's actually just bad taste :/
Wow. I didn't know Disney studios taught photography. I didn't know North Korea paid young people to vacation there. The "text" had to have been written either by a five year old or is the result of "google translate" Interesting though, it apparently never rains there, there's no garbage or even bird poop! Stunning.
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Load More Replies...sorry but this is a classic example of 'bury your head in the sand'
You're free. You can go anywhere you want with your passport.You have the righ of giving your opinion, and posting it on an almost free internet. It's not the case of the North Koreans. So yeah, maybe the country is nice, maybe it's clean and quiet but if you don't have the right to go whenever you want, it's no more than a jail. So, I totally disagree with you sorry. Good for you, you're born in a place where You have the of freely moving anywhere and so be able to make the comparison and your opinion in a post. Thats
"You're free. You can go anywhere you want with your passport.You have the righ of giving your opinion, and posting it on an almost free internet. It's not the case of the North Koreans. So yeah, maybe the country is nice, maybe it's clean and quiet but if you don't have the right to go whenever you want, it's no more than a jail. "*
Load More Replies...Um. This is ONE view of North Korea and you don't seem to realised how controlled and sanitized it might be. You get to walk in and then walk out again. North Koreans don't have this luxury of choice. Your position is rather arrogant.
why to highligh emic VS etic. Your narrative is full of bs. talk to a local. oh that's right. you can't. you are a moron "The main mean of transport is either by foot or by bike. That’s rather eco-friendly and Netherlandish of them, right?" no. no. its simpler that than. they can't afford them. let alone a camera.
to add: let me translate for you why the comments section is blasting you for your naivety. Here goes: "Oh look at all the peacefulness and ecofriendly cleaniness" = "Poverty is great for the environment; and control is great for people"
Load More Replies...How about you move there AND denounce your current citizenship so you have as much possibility to leave the country as NK citizens? As an alternative, may I suggest visiting the House of Terror at Budapest to catch a glimpse at how these wonderful regimes work?
You know your not supposed to take pictures of the North Korean leaders pictures? And why do those people in the picture labeled “A bus stop. The city lacks benches, so Koreans tend to squat” and they have an umbrella in the DAY!?!? And why in the title “I came across a group of children carrying flowers for the dear comrades Kim Ir Sung and Kim Jong Il” do you use “dear comrades” why!!!???And in the title "A typical ‘traffic jam’. Notice the red flags that are waving by the road; it is quite a common view” you want to tell me that a bunch of people on bikes are having a traffic jam when only high up people in North Korea can drive cars!!!!??!? And in the title “These gentlemen not only are just doing the all-so-important job of holding posters in place, but they also closely watch the tourists” they are “ closely watch the tourists” because there is a reason to closely watch the tourist!!! I don’t think if someone visits the UK, Canada, US, etc(except for NK) that they get watched!
Lots of people in Asia carry umbrellas (parasols) in the daytime.
Load More Replies...i have been there twice and all these pictures bring back good memories
I wonder how this even made its way to Bored Panda. Maybe I'm the one who's naive, but I really thought that _everyone_ outside North Korea knew what at horrible regime this is. I recommend watching the excellent Danish documentary on the subject, The Red Chapel or "Kim Jong-Il's Comedy Club" (look it up at IMDB).
The difference to me between NK and the rest of Asia is that the rest of Asia is trying to improve it's standard of living and are at least open to negotiating the improvement of human rights. Of COURSE people care about Africa, NGOs wouldn't exist without everyday people who make contributions and you are devaluing all the hard work these people do in improving the lives of many disadvantaged citizens around the world. North Korea would rather let their people starve and die in persecution than accept or admit that they need help. That's the difference. I'm sure there's some great things about the place, but don't go on a tour and proclaim you've solved the problem by saying it doesn't exist. It's an incredibly complicated situation to which you do it no credit.
These pictures hurt. Why? Because you can feel a certain spirit of depression. Hard to explain, but I was born in East Germany before Germany was reunited and these pictures remind me a lot of my childhood. No, it wasn't bad and we had enough food and it's probably not to compare with North Korea, but still the people were fed up with the system and changed it.
as a person still living in a similar system, I totally agree.
Load More Replies...You should read Nothing to Envy for a real look into North Korea. Pyongyang and such cities may look appealing to you because that is how they are set up, only citizens who look healthy (well-fed, decent clothes, etc.) are permitted to live there.
That's the entrance to a "Funfair"? The stuff behind that entrance looks more like a power plant or a government facility or something. Is the "Funfair" just that crescent coaster sitting right there at the entrance?
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Load More Replies...Notice how thin those people are? Because of famine caused by mismanagement and corruption by the leadership.
I have to agree with everyone Joanna and also tell you that you have a lot of spelling mistakes in the article lol. My friend went to NK and has the exact same photos as you :) they show you what they want you to see. I agree that traveling is the Only true way to discover what is a myth and what is real ( like in Brazil which i loved and did not feel it was as dangerous as portrayed) BUT one cannot be that naive to believe NK is a free and cool country. I worked in SK and my students were always upset explaining to me about the history between the two Koreas.
P.s. my bf told me about a tourist guy who "forgot" his bible in the public toilets in NK and they found it. Well, the guy is still slaving away to this day in some work camp
Load More Replies...I don't know whether it is just the inability to choose the best ISO for each photo or not. But every time I scroll down, I can only feel gloomy and uncertainty. It's like you captured an area which will be abandoned by the inhabitants in the next 5 years. I do hope this is purely my wrong feelings. However, it's nice to share these photos to us. Thank you! :)
https://www.boredpanda.com/illegal-photos-north-korea-michal-huniewicz/
This is what I dont understand about tourist bus tourists. Yes, you visited the city and you saw some sites but you never walked outside of what was told to you. Never researched or explored. So you have a limited view of what you are told you should see and nothing more. The difference here is you are not allowed to see outside of the tour bus route. I've been told a million times by many US tourists that New york City is loud, rude and dirty. And yes some are true but if you dont leave midtown / times square then your viewpoint is limited and not complete.
i agree with comments saying that this is also propaganda, that this is what they want the world to see, but thank you for showing at least an aspect of how things are in this forbidden land, that it isn't so much of a different world from ours (at least in terms of infrastructure, not ideals)
I get your point of propaganda, ours vs theirs but there is no need to seek to defend Kim and his ilk. they live in terrible oppression and even the well off north Koreans are considered poor to the rest of the world. if you commit a crime they can throw your whole family in jail, especially if you ever get the crazy idea of trying to escape. my close friend escaped over 10 years ago. the stuff she went through to get out really made my skin crawl.
the real question is : why are all the pictures seem to be underexposed ?
There is much to see in these photos: - the line-ups - the absence of traffic - the impression that people have to walk great distances - possibly a lack of photos from "rush" hour - the "kiosk" retail model - the impression of super-tight control on everything - the scarcity of benches and other random stuff (i.e. fire hydrants, signs) At the same time, the photos also ~seem~ to show that the situation is not quite as dire as we might have thought. We just have no way of knowing how much of the surface the photographer was permitted to scratch. It isn't specifically mentioned whether it was possible to go out on your own and explore. A "tight schedule" has never prevented me from going out on my own in any country, including a couple of communist, I've visited. So I think it would have been good if the author could have been more clear about that. Was she strictly prevented from leaving the tour-approved itinerary or leaving the hotel on her own? Did she ask to and get refused?
How old are you? 22? Your frontal lobe isnt fully developed until 25, so i hope your young age explains your ignorance. If you have done any research on the history and current state of North Korea, (plus any communist dictatorship of the past century) you would understand why what you saw was propaganda in and of itself. Perhaps read interviews with NK who have defected before thinking the West is full of lies.
This world is f****d if you guys really give a s**t about the world's problems do something about it then I like the picks.
For me, the question is, would you live there as an ordinary citizen (speaking the language, of course)on the economy, subject to the laws?
No overweight people in any of the scenes, all dress and residential building look uniform and uninspiring. The amazingly clean streets and lack of hippy-types , beggars and social misfits speak of a highly pschologically regimented people with no social help programs. Everyone works for a living - just saying.
These pictures are beautiful but they don't support the title. No one ever said N.K. wasn't beautiful.
"Here's a pretty sunset" isn't going to change anyone's point of view of N.K. But it is an I interesting look into the country, all the same
Load More Replies...I saw some YouTube videos making fun of North Korea in a really mean way. I get it, that country sucks, yes, I think we all know that, really, it's quite obvious to everyone, their leader is ridiculous, the propaganda is pathetic, yes, we all know that, really, none of us is so stupid to fall for the rather simple North Korean propaganda efforts! So let's for a change not try to state the obvious here and let's have a view for the people there who have to live under such circumstances. Thank you for these pictures and thank you for not making fun at the ones who are suffering already! Yeah and food for thought, people are more likely to get in prison in the US than in N. Korea. I get that US is better and if I had to choose I'd rather want to live in the US without hesitation, of course, yet, why there is a higher percentage in prison in the US than in North Korea deeply concerns me. Oh, and Trump vs. Kim Jong Un - simply the fact that I can even compare these two is very sad...
Oh look at you, the critics who are defending human rights! Why are you attacking this woman? I didnt see ANY DIFFERENCE between her photos and those which were posted under the titles of "What Kim doesnt want you to see"! Your media has been continuously banging on your heads with horrible news so you all sit here an moan. But what about HOMELESS people in YOUR COUNTRIES? What about the Refugees in YOUR COUNTRIES? When was the last time you fought for Human & Animal Rights (Not in comments on the internet, obviously!) So many wise people in here, my eyes hurt! What about the rights of SNOWDEN and ASSANGE who disclose the s**t that YOUR AMAZING government DOESNT WANT YOU TO KNOW?! Bunch of hypocrites who Google their opinions! F**k off!
THX! :) You get my point of view!
Load More Replies...No overweight people seen in any of the photographs and the streets are all amazingly clean. No hippy-types and with the uniform sanitised look of people and buildings you are looking at a psychologically highly regimented society. Just saying.
well, the scenes are clean, neat and orderly. There is no chewing gum on the sidewalks, no flying pieces of papers, no butts all over. But that is not the point what media want me to think about the country. The point is that citizens are not allowed to be who they want, but does it realy matter to be happy? I'm not saying they are not happy, probably most of them are. I think that is not possible to keep peace along the country, when people are not feeling safe, got no work, starving. There is no force that can stop the afflicted. There are lot of examples in a history of the world. Warsaw Uprising 1944, Revolution in Romania 1989, Tiananmen Square protests of 1989 - these People preferred to die than to live oppressed. NKoreans have they own way of life. New car, house with pool and beautiful view, well paid job is not the synonim of the happiness. Democracy is even worse, because stupid people is much more than wise. And that's the reason that people in EU don't feel safe.
THX! I just stopped to comments all there critics there because its going nowhere....They don't want to discuss only express their opinion which is not theirown. Anyway once again thx :)
Load More Replies...Hey People, not that we are on the level of N.K., but do our tours of the U.S. include Prisons?
Of course not, but this is more like visiting a movie set in Hollywood and raving about how wonderful california is from your impression of it. You see all sides of a place by exploring it, whether it's included in the tour or not.
Load More Replies...WARNING Please be known, that the original title of the piece was "The Meta-Anti-Propaganda In Photos I Took On My Trip To North Korea". It has been changed by the editors of Bored Panda and I lack the possibility of re-editing back, as this function has been terminated.
Well if your intention was to stir up controversy, you've succeeded beautifully. :P
Load More Replies...Omg I'm Korean and I didn't even knew how North Korea look like... It actually does look a bit like a normal city.
If you legitimately think that THAT is why people don't like the place, you don't know jack about North Korea.
Load More Replies...What you are showing here is a version of propaganda. You were only allowed to see certain places there, ones which the officials think will look quite good to other countries. It is just a form of cherry picking, which most people do with their holiday photos anyway. Plus your images of scenery don't say a thing about the quality of life for the citizens whose lives will be in constant poverty.
exactly, Tiny Dynamine! Also, only a select group of people get to live in the capital...
Load More Replies...I can't believe Bored Panda would agree to publish these pictures with this text. For the record, Nazi Germany also had pretty stunning monuments and food and beautiful landscapes; it was still a country that actively sought Jewish people and organised their mass-murder. Nobody cares about whether North Korea looks "nice" or if the food is amazing or if they have lovely blue rivers. It doesn't make it "not as bad as we believe". It's still a place where people have no rights, where there is no freedom of speech, where people are interned for having different political views, where tourists have to be followed by a guide everywhere they go, where rape is used as a weapon against female prisoners, where forced abortions are practiced, where there is forced labor (just like in Nazi work camps), where people cannot choose their religion. I struggle to see how it is "not that bad" and how it could be worse. But yay! You can picnic by the river and they even have a beer festival!
Thank you. It's amazing how so many people think that a proctored trip to North Korea gives them the right to ignore the first-hand accounts from refugees of the Nazi Germany scale atrocities that are going on there. It's exactly like going to Nazi Germany pre-WW2 and getting a official Josef Goebels tour of Berlin, and then coming back and saying, "All the media reports about the Jew are kinda wrong 'cause life is pretty good for the Germans." Naivety and egoism ("I've been to North Korea. So there.") all rolled into one.
Load More Replies...But there are also people in North Korea in internment camps for crimes their ancestors committed so... yeah, maybe there's a reason we think it's bad.
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Load More Replies...The pictures are nice and interesting, but the text is not really. You are showing anecdotal evidence, and you obviously were even aware that tours were guided. Why should anything be checked if you experience only what is suited for showing? Political believes nonewithstanding, North Korea _is_ totalitarian and human rights _are_ violated.
Wow, really??? Are you ALWAYS this naive?? Nobody ever said that the residents live in constant terror and the streets run red with blood from beheadings! Even the pics you took, ask the people in them about their lives! Only allowed to pick one from 20 something cuts, and NEVER allowed access to the internet if they are found somehow doing so (certain spots close to the border) they are SEVERELY punished...etc, etc, ETC! It is terrible for these people to live in that country! They only have access to a certain amount of food as well! How would you like to live like that? You cannot capture ANY of those things, EVER!
I understand what you were going for, but I'm having trouble with the flippant tone of this post. You couldn't possibly "empirically experience North Korea" as you were allowed to see limited sites. You probably didn’t see overt oppression or prison camps while you were in Pyongyang. In fact, speaking with locals sans tour guide (pretty routine tourist behavior anywhere but in North Korea) could land you in jail as "attempted espionage." Perhaps some text acknowledging why others are hesitant to give the regime their tourist dollars may help balance the post?
Wow. The naivity is stunning. North Koreans aren't allowed to leave the country. You can. Nuff said.
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Load More Replies...As a refugee from communist Poland, my mom told me stories of dumb tourists going on propaganda trips there too. My god, how offensive.
are you kidding?! you casually throwing around your thoughts on poverty in asian countries shows how terribly affected by western white privilege you are. one photo-ONE PHOTO--of a north korean labour camp is enough to eclipse any illusion these photos allegedly dispel. you're worse than fake news--you're fake real news. you should be ashamed of yourself.
I think most people are less swayed by the "media" and more concerned with the false imprisonment, executions, censorship, general fear of NC citizens that if they do or say anything to fall out of line they and their whole families could "disappear." But, yes, let's blame it on the media and the 'dumb' people that don't know the 'real story' you've somehow been 'smart enough' to be able to uncover. >:-|
NK, sorry. I was so mad I inadvertently threw North Carolina under the bus. :-o
Load More Replies...This article is just working to discredit the work don't by hundreds of aid originations. Good job playing into the hands of the propaganda
Let's take pictures of a country where people are send to camp to be killed with sometimes no reason at all, where millions of people died of starvation, where the leader is threatening the rest of the world to use nuclear weapon, so-called leader who is actually crazy batshit, and let's just say "hey, you know, it's not like they say it is, it's not all about propaganda". I'm sorry, but even if I understand the reason behind this post, it's bloody twisted and it's certainly not respectful at all for all the north korean who have to live on all that c**p day after day... Next time it will be "the places in Aleppo that are not destroyed as much as tv show you" ? I don't know, I think it's actually just bad taste :/
Wow. I didn't know Disney studios taught photography. I didn't know North Korea paid young people to vacation there. The "text" had to have been written either by a five year old or is the result of "google translate" Interesting though, it apparently never rains there, there's no garbage or even bird poop! Stunning.
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Load More Replies...sorry but this is a classic example of 'bury your head in the sand'
You're free. You can go anywhere you want with your passport.You have the righ of giving your opinion, and posting it on an almost free internet. It's not the case of the North Koreans. So yeah, maybe the country is nice, maybe it's clean and quiet but if you don't have the right to go whenever you want, it's no more than a jail. So, I totally disagree with you sorry. Good for you, you're born in a place where You have the of freely moving anywhere and so be able to make the comparison and your opinion in a post. Thats
"You're free. You can go anywhere you want with your passport.You have the righ of giving your opinion, and posting it on an almost free internet. It's not the case of the North Koreans. So yeah, maybe the country is nice, maybe it's clean and quiet but if you don't have the right to go whenever you want, it's no more than a jail. "*
Load More Replies...Um. This is ONE view of North Korea and you don't seem to realised how controlled and sanitized it might be. You get to walk in and then walk out again. North Koreans don't have this luxury of choice. Your position is rather arrogant.
why to highligh emic VS etic. Your narrative is full of bs. talk to a local. oh that's right. you can't. you are a moron "The main mean of transport is either by foot or by bike. That’s rather eco-friendly and Netherlandish of them, right?" no. no. its simpler that than. they can't afford them. let alone a camera.
to add: let me translate for you why the comments section is blasting you for your naivety. Here goes: "Oh look at all the peacefulness and ecofriendly cleaniness" = "Poverty is great for the environment; and control is great for people"
Load More Replies...How about you move there AND denounce your current citizenship so you have as much possibility to leave the country as NK citizens? As an alternative, may I suggest visiting the House of Terror at Budapest to catch a glimpse at how these wonderful regimes work?
You know your not supposed to take pictures of the North Korean leaders pictures? And why do those people in the picture labeled “A bus stop. The city lacks benches, so Koreans tend to squat” and they have an umbrella in the DAY!?!? And why in the title “I came across a group of children carrying flowers for the dear comrades Kim Ir Sung and Kim Jong Il” do you use “dear comrades” why!!!???And in the title "A typical ‘traffic jam’. Notice the red flags that are waving by the road; it is quite a common view” you want to tell me that a bunch of people on bikes are having a traffic jam when only high up people in North Korea can drive cars!!!!??!? And in the title “These gentlemen not only are just doing the all-so-important job of holding posters in place, but they also closely watch the tourists” they are “ closely watch the tourists” because there is a reason to closely watch the tourist!!! I don’t think if someone visits the UK, Canada, US, etc(except for NK) that they get watched!
Lots of people in Asia carry umbrellas (parasols) in the daytime.
Load More Replies...i have been there twice and all these pictures bring back good memories
I wonder how this even made its way to Bored Panda. Maybe I'm the one who's naive, but I really thought that _everyone_ outside North Korea knew what at horrible regime this is. I recommend watching the excellent Danish documentary on the subject, The Red Chapel or "Kim Jong-Il's Comedy Club" (look it up at IMDB).
The difference to me between NK and the rest of Asia is that the rest of Asia is trying to improve it's standard of living and are at least open to negotiating the improvement of human rights. Of COURSE people care about Africa, NGOs wouldn't exist without everyday people who make contributions and you are devaluing all the hard work these people do in improving the lives of many disadvantaged citizens around the world. North Korea would rather let their people starve and die in persecution than accept or admit that they need help. That's the difference. I'm sure there's some great things about the place, but don't go on a tour and proclaim you've solved the problem by saying it doesn't exist. It's an incredibly complicated situation to which you do it no credit.
These pictures hurt. Why? Because you can feel a certain spirit of depression. Hard to explain, but I was born in East Germany before Germany was reunited and these pictures remind me a lot of my childhood. No, it wasn't bad and we had enough food and it's probably not to compare with North Korea, but still the people were fed up with the system and changed it.
as a person still living in a similar system, I totally agree.
Load More Replies...You should read Nothing to Envy for a real look into North Korea. Pyongyang and such cities may look appealing to you because that is how they are set up, only citizens who look healthy (well-fed, decent clothes, etc.) are permitted to live there.
That's the entrance to a "Funfair"? The stuff behind that entrance looks more like a power plant or a government facility or something. Is the "Funfair" just that crescent coaster sitting right there at the entrance?
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Load More Replies...Notice how thin those people are? Because of famine caused by mismanagement and corruption by the leadership.
I have to agree with everyone Joanna and also tell you that you have a lot of spelling mistakes in the article lol. My friend went to NK and has the exact same photos as you :) they show you what they want you to see. I agree that traveling is the Only true way to discover what is a myth and what is real ( like in Brazil which i loved and did not feel it was as dangerous as portrayed) BUT one cannot be that naive to believe NK is a free and cool country. I worked in SK and my students were always upset explaining to me about the history between the two Koreas.
P.s. my bf told me about a tourist guy who "forgot" his bible in the public toilets in NK and they found it. Well, the guy is still slaving away to this day in some work camp
Load More Replies...I don't know whether it is just the inability to choose the best ISO for each photo or not. But every time I scroll down, I can only feel gloomy and uncertainty. It's like you captured an area which will be abandoned by the inhabitants in the next 5 years. I do hope this is purely my wrong feelings. However, it's nice to share these photos to us. Thank you! :)
https://www.boredpanda.com/illegal-photos-north-korea-michal-huniewicz/
This is what I dont understand about tourist bus tourists. Yes, you visited the city and you saw some sites but you never walked outside of what was told to you. Never researched or explored. So you have a limited view of what you are told you should see and nothing more. The difference here is you are not allowed to see outside of the tour bus route. I've been told a million times by many US tourists that New york City is loud, rude and dirty. And yes some are true but if you dont leave midtown / times square then your viewpoint is limited and not complete.
i agree with comments saying that this is also propaganda, that this is what they want the world to see, but thank you for showing at least an aspect of how things are in this forbidden land, that it isn't so much of a different world from ours (at least in terms of infrastructure, not ideals)
I get your point of propaganda, ours vs theirs but there is no need to seek to defend Kim and his ilk. they live in terrible oppression and even the well off north Koreans are considered poor to the rest of the world. if you commit a crime they can throw your whole family in jail, especially if you ever get the crazy idea of trying to escape. my close friend escaped over 10 years ago. the stuff she went through to get out really made my skin crawl.
the real question is : why are all the pictures seem to be underexposed ?
There is much to see in these photos: - the line-ups - the absence of traffic - the impression that people have to walk great distances - possibly a lack of photos from "rush" hour - the "kiosk" retail model - the impression of super-tight control on everything - the scarcity of benches and other random stuff (i.e. fire hydrants, signs) At the same time, the photos also ~seem~ to show that the situation is not quite as dire as we might have thought. We just have no way of knowing how much of the surface the photographer was permitted to scratch. It isn't specifically mentioned whether it was possible to go out on your own and explore. A "tight schedule" has never prevented me from going out on my own in any country, including a couple of communist, I've visited. So I think it would have been good if the author could have been more clear about that. Was she strictly prevented from leaving the tour-approved itinerary or leaving the hotel on her own? Did she ask to and get refused?
How old are you? 22? Your frontal lobe isnt fully developed until 25, so i hope your young age explains your ignorance. If you have done any research on the history and current state of North Korea, (plus any communist dictatorship of the past century) you would understand why what you saw was propaganda in and of itself. Perhaps read interviews with NK who have defected before thinking the West is full of lies.
This world is f****d if you guys really give a s**t about the world's problems do something about it then I like the picks.
For me, the question is, would you live there as an ordinary citizen (speaking the language, of course)on the economy, subject to the laws?
No overweight people in any of the scenes, all dress and residential building look uniform and uninspiring. The amazingly clean streets and lack of hippy-types , beggars and social misfits speak of a highly pschologically regimented people with no social help programs. Everyone works for a living - just saying.
These pictures are beautiful but they don't support the title. No one ever said N.K. wasn't beautiful.
"Here's a pretty sunset" isn't going to change anyone's point of view of N.K. But it is an I interesting look into the country, all the same
Load More Replies...I saw some YouTube videos making fun of North Korea in a really mean way. I get it, that country sucks, yes, I think we all know that, really, it's quite obvious to everyone, their leader is ridiculous, the propaganda is pathetic, yes, we all know that, really, none of us is so stupid to fall for the rather simple North Korean propaganda efforts! So let's for a change not try to state the obvious here and let's have a view for the people there who have to live under such circumstances. Thank you for these pictures and thank you for not making fun at the ones who are suffering already! Yeah and food for thought, people are more likely to get in prison in the US than in N. Korea. I get that US is better and if I had to choose I'd rather want to live in the US without hesitation, of course, yet, why there is a higher percentage in prison in the US than in North Korea deeply concerns me. Oh, and Trump vs. Kim Jong Un - simply the fact that I can even compare these two is very sad...
Oh look at you, the critics who are defending human rights! Why are you attacking this woman? I didnt see ANY DIFFERENCE between her photos and those which were posted under the titles of "What Kim doesnt want you to see"! Your media has been continuously banging on your heads with horrible news so you all sit here an moan. But what about HOMELESS people in YOUR COUNTRIES? What about the Refugees in YOUR COUNTRIES? When was the last time you fought for Human & Animal Rights (Not in comments on the internet, obviously!) So many wise people in here, my eyes hurt! What about the rights of SNOWDEN and ASSANGE who disclose the s**t that YOUR AMAZING government DOESNT WANT YOU TO KNOW?! Bunch of hypocrites who Google their opinions! F**k off!
THX! :) You get my point of view!
Load More Replies...No overweight people seen in any of the photographs and the streets are all amazingly clean. No hippy-types and with the uniform sanitised look of people and buildings you are looking at a psychologically highly regimented society. Just saying.
well, the scenes are clean, neat and orderly. There is no chewing gum on the sidewalks, no flying pieces of papers, no butts all over. But that is not the point what media want me to think about the country. The point is that citizens are not allowed to be who they want, but does it realy matter to be happy? I'm not saying they are not happy, probably most of them are. I think that is not possible to keep peace along the country, when people are not feeling safe, got no work, starving. There is no force that can stop the afflicted. There are lot of examples in a history of the world. Warsaw Uprising 1944, Revolution in Romania 1989, Tiananmen Square protests of 1989 - these People preferred to die than to live oppressed. NKoreans have they own way of life. New car, house with pool and beautiful view, well paid job is not the synonim of the happiness. Democracy is even worse, because stupid people is much more than wise. And that's the reason that people in EU don't feel safe.
THX! I just stopped to comments all there critics there because its going nowhere....They don't want to discuss only express their opinion which is not theirown. Anyway once again thx :)
Load More Replies...Hey People, not that we are on the level of N.K., but do our tours of the U.S. include Prisons?
Of course not, but this is more like visiting a movie set in Hollywood and raving about how wonderful california is from your impression of it. You see all sides of a place by exploring it, whether it's included in the tour or not.
Load More Replies...WARNING Please be known, that the original title of the piece was "The Meta-Anti-Propaganda In Photos I Took On My Trip To North Korea". It has been changed by the editors of Bored Panda and I lack the possibility of re-editing back, as this function has been terminated.
Well if your intention was to stir up controversy, you've succeeded beautifully. :P
Load More Replies...Omg I'm Korean and I didn't even knew how North Korea look like... It actually does look a bit like a normal city.
If you legitimately think that THAT is why people don't like the place, you don't know jack about North Korea.
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