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November 29, 2006

Article by Cindy Sheehan about her visit to Daechuri

  Siege and Seizure in Korea
    By Cindy Sheehan
    t r u t h o u t | Guest Columnist

    Monday 27 November 2006

    Traveling around the world these past months has given me an education about American history that majoring in the subject at UCLA never did. I have witnessed first hand what US imperialism and militarism can do to countries and societies. I sat with indigenous Hawaiian tribal leaders who shared their tragic stories of how US colonialism and militarism ruined their fishing waters and turned their lands into super-fund sites. I stood in solidarity with Irish peace activists who want the US military off their soil and want US transport and rendition planes to stop using Shannon Airport to land for refueling. These are just a few stories. Everywhere I go, the local populations have stories of greed, crime, corruption, pollution, etc., that all go hand in glove wherever the US military is present. Not to mention the "hot" war zones, where hundreds of civilians are murdered, maimed or displaced on a daily basis.

    This rampant, arrogant, and care-less US militarism has nowhere been more evident than here in South Korea, especially in the village of Daechuri, near Pyong-taek City. The loathing for George Bush, America, Americans, irresponsible capitalism, corporatism, imperialism and militarism is a planetary phenomenon, but apart from what the US is doing to the wretched countries of Iraq and Afghanistan, I have never been more ashamed of the US government than when I visited the village of Daechuri with 17 other American peace and social-justice activists and a campesino from Colombia.

    Miles before our bus reached the village on the evening of November 20th, we were stopped by approximately 200 South Korean riot police, who were decked out in their full riot regalia with bullet-proof shields. We were traveling with Father Moon, an elderly Buddhist priest who has been an advocate for the villagers for a few years now. Father Moon got out of the bus and negotiated with the police captain for what seemed hours in the near-freezing cold, but was actually only about 20 minutes. Finally, in what the villagers said was an unprecedented move, they allowed us entry into the village (after we passed another heavily guarded checkpoint). Villagers must present IDs to get into their own village, and visitors are rarely allowed to go in. Why? Because the village of Daechuri is under siege, in a criminal collaboration between the governments of South Korea and the United States of America, and the governments don't want the world to see what their crimes are doing to yet more innocent civilians.

    The village of Daechuri has the unmitigated gall to be located next to a US military base, Camp Humphreys, which is slated for an eleven-billion dollar expansion that would include a golf course for the use of soldiers stationed there. The only problem is (not for the governments) that the village of Daechuri and their thousands of acres of farmland, mostly rice paddies, are in the way of the juggernaut of US military expansion. The people of Daechuri have been cut off from their farmlands by razor wire, guard towers, and armed foot patrols. Over two-thirds of the residents have the small village, but that leaves about one-third of them there to stand against the mightiest Army and the greediest government in world history.

    In the '80s, Ronald Reagan famously said, regarding the Berlin Wall, "Tear it down!" There are many more walls on Earth that separate people from their farmlands, families, jobs and country that need to be torn down, but so-called civilized nations are building more walls and fortifications to contain and control free human movement and expression and curb populations that are just trying to live their lives in the traditional ways that they always have.

    After our tour bus pulled up into the village, we were ushered into a large warehouse, where the villagers were holding their 811th nightly candlelight vigil in protest of the US incursion. We joined their vigil and heard their stories. We heard stories of May 4th, when 20,000 Korean police descended on the village with heavy hands and strong-arm tactics that allowed the barbed wire fences to be constructed, thereby effectively cutting the farmers off from tens of thousands of dollars worth of unharvested rice. We heard stories, from village elders who lived through Japanese imperialism and occupation to the US Korean police action that killed 2.5 million Koreans, who are now having their lands and ways of life robbed from them by "Pax Americana." My heart broke for the people of Daechuri and was filled with disgust for those whom the people of Korea call "Georgie Bushie" and whom I call "BushCo."

    Daechuri has become "ground zero" in the struggle against violent US military extremism. We Americans can no longer sit idly by and turn ignorant blind eyes to what Georgie Bushie does around the globe. The people of such places as Daechuri, Shannon, Pearl Harbor and Iraq are our brothers and sisters whom we are allowing our governments to oppress and suppress.

    In all my life, I have never witnessed such courage, strength and determination. 150 people are standing firm and will not be moved no matter how many acres of their familial land are seized, how many of their homes are bulldozed, or how close the razor wire gets to their homes. They have decorated every fence with bright and cheery paintings of hope for the future and they have erected monuments and memorials to what they have already lost. Their determination and courage should be inspiration to all people around the world who also struggle for basic human rights.

    This week, 18 Americans chose to give up their family holiday celebrations to come to Korea to stand with the people of Daechuri and the Korean peace movement.

    On the day after Thanksgiving, when most Americans were watching football, trampling each other in Wal-Mart in a frantic feeding frenzy to get the newest cheap toys that are made off of the backs of virtual slave labor all over the world and/or spending most of the day circling parking lots at malls across the country to find a coveted parking space, four women from our delegation - me, Medea Benjamin (founder of Global Exchange and Code Pink), my sister, Dede Miller (co-founder of GSFP) and my assistant, Tiffany Burns - walked across about 2 acres (up to our armpits) of ruined rice crops toward the "dmz" between the village and Camp Humphreys to hang a sign that said: "Farms Not Arms" on the nasty looking razor wire, despite the warnings of the Korean guards who were waving their arms and screaming something at us from behind two rows of the barbed wire.

    The people of Daechuri have very little to be thankful for. Our soldiers in the field and innocent people in Bush-torn countries have very little to be thankful for. For me, on the third Thanksgiving I have had to bear since Casey was killed, I can't think of anything else that I would rather have done than help the people of Daechuri struggle against the very same thing that took Casey's life. The villagers honored us with a " Gold Star Families for Peace/Code Pink" Peace House that had been abandoned by an owner who took the cash settlement to leave. The villagers who remain don't want the government's blood money; they just want to keep their lands and homes.

    The villagers who walk the narrow streets of Daechuri, bowed by lifetimes of carrying heavy burdens and children on their backs, are now carrying burdens placed there by American imperial gluttony, and I, as an American, want to help them carry this burden, as many kind people all over the world have tried to help me carry mine.

    Not only is the expansion of Camp Humphreys hurting the people of Daechuri, but it will have the effect of further destabilizing a region already on pins and needles due partially to US intervention. You can bet your turkey leftovers that North Korea is watching these developments very closely and only the people of Korea and this region will pay for US infiltrations in South Korea. I know I don't feel any safer after the raping and pillaging of Daechuri - in fact, the expansion of Camp Humphreys will only do what Georgie Bushie is becoming infamous for: making America and the world less safe and secure. As an aside: I took a straw poll of about 400 South Koreans, and 100% of them said that Georgie Bushie is far more frightening than Kim Jong-Il and they want the US out of Korea so they can put their divided country back together again.

    With the complete destruction of Daechuri scheduled by the end of this year, our efforts may be too little, too late, for the ill-fated visitors who are going through long-distance BushCo callousness, but we can prevent other villages, towns, countries from experiencing the same fate with the exposure of what is happening here. We are in this together. Making the sacrifices of the villagers count for justice is as important as making US troops and the Iraqi civilians' sacrifices count for peace. Peace and justice are two values that are intertwined and interconnected, and they are the responsibility of us all.

    What can we do stateside to help these people? We can lobby our Congressional representatives to hold hearings into the tragedy of Daechuri. We can donate money to help the villagers get fuel for heating their homes during the bitter Korean winter and to obtain food, since they can't access their fields for harvest. We can turn off our TVs and educate ourselves on US corporatism, imperialism and militarism by reading such books as Confessions of an Economic Hit Man, by John Perkins, or Hegemony or Survival, by Noam Chomsky. We can do with less, especially in the season of over-the-top consumerism and waste. We can support organizations financially who work for peace and justice in lieu of a seemingly obscene overabundance of presents or decorations.

    I hope when Americans play golf on the golf course that will be constructed over the rice fields that sustained and gave sustenance to the villagers for generations, they will stop and reflect for even a brief moment that an entire village was destroyed and hundreds of people were displaced for their recreation.

    Golf! A village was obliterated for golf. If this is the "American way," then we obviously need a new way, as speedily as possible.

    --------

    Mail your tax deductible donation for the villagers of Daechuri to:     Gold Star Families for Peace
    2010 Linden Ave
    Venice, California 90291

 

    Earmark the donation for the villagers.

    Cindy Sheehan is the mother of Spc. Casey Sheehan, who was killed in Bush's war of terror on April 4, 2004. She is the co-founder and president of Gold Star Families for Peace and the Camp Casey Peace Institute. She is the author of three books. The most recent is Peace Mom: A Mother's Journey Through Heartache to Activism.

 

Download documentary on Korean social issues

The recently released documentary "16 Takes on Korean Society" highlights some of the pressing issues and struggles happening in Korea today.  It shows a side of Korean society that is seldom reflected in international media.

The relocation and expansion of the US military base in Pyeongtaek, Saemangeum tidal flat embankment, Dr. Hwang's stem cell research, video horse race track, casinos in a dead mining town, workers struggling against labor casualization, conscientious objectors of mandatory military service, revision of the Private School Act, people's resistance to the APEC Summit and WTO Ministerial, the struggle of women peasants, the Korea-US Free Trade Agreement, the US military's strategic flexibility... The Republic of Korea is going mad!

In Korean with English subtitles:

http://www.archive.org/download/16takes/16takes.avi

November 21, 2006

Cindy Sheehan in Daechuri

Cindy Sheehan came to Korea!!!
- The Summary from the PRESSIAN news

Cindy Sheehan, a prominent figure in the U.S. anti-war movement came to Korea to show her strong solidarity with the anti-US base struggle in Pyeongtaek and anti-FTA movement.

She joined the press conference held in Seoul at the Jeongdong Franciscan Education Center on November 20th. The conference was also joined by activists from Korean Americans against War and Neoliberalism (KAWAN), International Action Center, and Global Exchange. They made a statement against the U.S army base expansion in Pyeongtaek, the Korea-U.S FTA, and the dispatch of the troops to Iraq.

In the statement, they said, "The government which does not care about an individual's life and property is never a true government for the people." They  concluded that the peace and reunification of Korea is up to the Korean people. Medea Benjamin from Global Exchange said, "Now, over 80% of Iraqi people are demanding the retreat of foreign troops from their land. Many Americans and Koreans are supporting the idea. We must be in solidarity and fight together."

Cindy made clear the reason of her visit. "I came here to give support to the Pyeongtaek residents who have been struggling against Bush's evil policy on the  Korean Peninsula." She has devoted herself to the peace movement since she lost her child in the Iraq war. "For the same reason as my son was killed, people here are struggling and suffering. It is U.S. government that caused these tragedies. They are trying to put the whole world under their control by boosting their militarism and war industry."

Jose Chivino from the CSEA (California School Employees Association) and the AFL-CIO also stated, "The FTAs have made people's living conditions worse than ever before in Mexico and Chile. We must stop the U.S. and Korean congresses from passing the agreement."

In the conference, Cindy met Pil-Soon Hwang, the mother of Ji-Tae Kim. Kim is now in jail after receiving a 2-year prison sentence. Cindy said, "You must be as proud of your son as I am of mine."

Cindy and the activists are scheduled to have an interview in jail with Kim after
visiting Daechuri from November 20th to 21th. The group is also planning to join the anti-FTA rally on November 22th and a public meeting hosted by Korean People's Action against the Dispatch of Troops to Iraq on November 23th. She is going to leave Korea on November 24th.

Radical Language Exchange

November 09, 2006

Police and soldiers invade and fence off Pyeongtaek fields

A huge number of police and soldiers attacked Daechuri and Doduri fields on November 8th. The soldiers dug up the edge of the fields with backhoes and set barbed wire all day long, surrounded by the police on guard. On the previous day, the Ministry of National Defense had announced that they were planning to add 2.8 km of barbed wire to the fields in Daechuri and Doduri, in order to block the residents from farming in the fields that hadn't been fenced off in May. They also said that they had invented a special unit of 1,400 soldiers to put on guard in the fields every day.

This most recent barbed wire attack is considered to be another tactic to make people give up their struggle by stopping their farming. The farmers had been farming the fields collectively since May. They had successfully completed this season's rice harvest and were preparing to plant winter crops. The attack has made the situation of struggle worse, especially after the residents' representative, Kim Ji-Tae was given 2 years-prison sentence last week.

While the police and soldiers were working on the barbed wire, several KCPT activists ran into the field crying, "Stop it!", "Don't break the peace!" and "Give up on extending the base!". Soon after, they were surrounded by the police and arrested. The other members of KCPT were having an urgent press conference in front of the police line and protesting, "Stop digging the field and setting the barbed wire, and free Kim Ji-Tae right now!"

However, the number of people who struggled this day was just about 20 while the police and the army moved more than 2 helicopters and 45 infantry companies to carry out the attack. KCPT is planning to give a strong protest at a press conference in front of the Ministry of National Defense building on November 9th.

Radical Language Exchange

November 08, 2006

Pyeongtaek solidarity vigil in Ithaca, New York USA

Pyeongtaek supporters in Ithaca, New York held a vigil in support of Pyeongtaek farmers on September 27.  The supporters also screened a documentary made by Ithaca residents after a visit to Daechuri several months ago. The documentary will also be shown on local television and at an Ithaca film festival.

November 04, 2006

Dachuri Leader Kim Ji-tae sentenced to two years in prison

(news summary from Voice of the People, Reporter Jung-hwan Suh)

Scene 1- 10:40am
Dachuri Village Leader Ji-tae Kim's sentence shocks residents.


Today, November 3, 2006 at the Suwon, Pyongtaek District Courthouse at 10:00am Dachuri Village Leader Ji-tae Kim (head of the Paengsong Residents Committee) was handed the shocking sentence of 2 years imprisonment for obstructing civic affairs.  

“The wickedness of the Noh Moohyun government goes beyond imagination.”

These are the words of Father Moon Jung-hyun, Representative for the Pan S.Korea Solution Committee against US Base Extension in Pyongtaek (KCPT), who spoke in astonishment this morning in the courtyard in front of the courthouse.
Compared with other similar cases, a sentence of 2 years imprisonment is extremely out of the ordinary.

Father Moon was not the only one who was bewildered.  Greatly shocked as well were the crowd of residents from Dachuri and Doduri and members of social movement organizations, about 70 people in all, who had come out to welcome Mr. Kim expecting him only to receive probation.  No one could hide their expressions of shock and confusion.  Mr. Kim’s elderly father, Mr. Suk-gyung Kim sank to his seat and remained their unable to speak or even move, with only a sorrowful look on his face.  Mr. Kim’s mother, Mrs. Hwang Pil-soon cried out “A-i-go, Ji-tae!  Our Ji-tae!” and then collapsed.  


Perhaps having anticipated this sort of verdict, 3 units of policemen were stationed in front of the court house, even blocking the residents from attending the trial.  While the resident met gruff treatment when trying to enter the courthouse from policemen blocking their path, the court delivered Mr. Kim’s two year sentence and ended the trial.  

Scene 2- 11:20am
“Clearly a politically motivated trial.”  According to Father Moon Jug-hyun, “more cruel than the days of the Yushin System.  Therefore we must fight has hard as we did at that time.”


Upon hearing the verdict of Village Leader Kim Ji-tae’s trial, some 50 residents of Dachuri and Doduri and people affiliated with KCPT held press conference in front of the courthouse to condemn the verdict.

According to Representative Kim Yong-han who arrived early this morning and was therefore able to attend Mr. Kim’s trial, “the courts had decided because of disturbance at the last trial date (10.13) that it was necessary to stop residents from attending the trial in order to make it possible to deliver the verdict securely and protect equipment inside the courtroom.”    

At the last court date residents had protested angrily when the prosecution presented old evidence as if it were new in order to intentionally prolong Mr. Ji-tae Kim’s imprisonment.

According to Representative Yong-han Kim, “we acknowledge the seven indictments put forward by the prosecution.  Among these the severe charge of obstructing civic affairs has a sentence of 3 to 7 years associated with it.  However considering that the defendant is the village leader and had to do what he did they give him a 2 year sentence.”    
  
But, he said, “I have experienced many trials in the past, but this is the first time I have seen a first-time offender receive prison time.”


According to Father Moon, “this the first time after Yushin System that I have seen police block the courthouse and refuse the right to attend the trial.  What is worse, they even denied Mr. Kim’s parents and family the right to attend the trial, which makes this even crueler than the time of Yushin.”    

“Because this is clearly a politically motivated trial the judgment that came out was not usual,” he added.
  
“If the government acts in this way, we have no choice but to struggle against it just as during the Yushin days,” he said and encouraged the residents to gather together even greater strengthen for this struggle.

Mr. Jong Il Kim, Joint Executive Director of KCPT, said of the situation, “Today, we must strictly question the violent attitude assumed by the government authorities who ordered the residents be blocked from the courtroom and the stance taken by the police and the prosecution.  We will also mobilize all means and measures possible to secure the release of Mr. Kim Ji-Tae.”

“In as much as the struggle to stop the base expansion is in a new phase with will fight to prevent the base expansion with new determination,” he said, assuring that there would be a corresponding plan after these events.

The press conference ended, but the residents could not be calmed, throwing newspapers and paper cups they were carrying in an expression of their pent up rage.    

Pyeongtaek base expansion is part of aggressive transformation of US military strategy

(translated from the Korean; original article written by: ??)
 

Around the same time that the Pyeongtaek base expansion plan became public, the closing of a major US Army base at Yongsan, in the heart of Seoul, was also announced. Critics denounced the base shuffle as an element of the Global Posture Review (GPR), a shift in US military strategy that would transform the US Forces in Korea into a more aggressive, rapidly deployable force for the entire Asia-Pacific region (see www.antigizi.or.kr/english/nobasept.htm). The South Korean government has repeatedly asserted that the transfer of the US Army from Yongsan had nothing to do with the GPR. Yet new information shows that in fact the South Korean Ministry of National Defense knew all along that the transfer had been driven by the GPR.

The document "Question and Answer about the Agreement on the Transfer of the USA Army from Younsan and the LPP (Land Partnership Plan) Revision" (July 23, 2004), obtained by People's Solidarity for Participatory Democracy, elucidates that "the transfer of Yongsan Camp into the central integrated base in the Osan and Pyeongtaek regions is a part of the GPR pursued by the US government."

In the document, drawn up when the practical negotiations about the transfer of Yongsan Camp were already completed and just before the Parliament approved the agreement, the Ministry of National Defense explains that, "Though we have explained our position in a variety of ways, including parliamentary committee, meetings for policy explanation, social meetings, response by mail etc.,  there are still many doubts. This Question and Answer document should help clarify the various doubts that have been raised until now."

In the section in the document titled “The background of the impetus for the Yongsan base transfer"(p.4), they repeat the already established claims that the closing of the Yongsan base, "responds to the wishes of those who want the relocation of the foreign troops now stationed in the middle of Seoul... In March in 1988 the USFK started an investigation into the transfer of the US bases that are in the middle of Seoul, including the Yongsan base, in order to create conditions for stable stationing and the strengthening of the Korean-US alliance.” Yet, in another clause titled "Why the US side wants the transfer"(p.6)), it says, "the transfer of the Yongsan base to the central integrated base in the Osan-Pyeongtaek region is a part of the Global Posture Review (GPR) pursued by the US government."

Afterwards, the government, in the National Assembly inquiry and in the public information reported to the people, persisted in saying that “the Yongsan base transfer is a matter that was requested by the Korean side from the time of the previous government, and is not related to the USFK relocation plan”. In short, even though the government clearly knew that there was a connection between the Yongsan base transfer and the GPR, and also was aware of this while it was conducting negotiations, it gave false information to the National Assembly and to the people in order to justify the unreasonable  results of the negotiations.

When faced with the ratification process in the National Assembly in December 2004, and in reply to queries about speeches made in the National Assembly, the government has consistently maintained that there is no connection between the Yongsan base transfer and the GPR. On December 6,  2004, Cha Yeong-ku, the negotiating representative for the Korean side at the FOTA meeting (Future Korean-US Alliance Policy Initiatives), made a speech at a public hearing sponsored by the Committee On Unification, Foreign Policy, and Trade. Cha insisted that “Linking the Yongsan base transfer with the GPR is really the utmost nonsense. The GPR is a general concept for future interventions, as the idea of future war changes. How can you connect that with the Yongsan base?”

Furthermore, on 7 December, Deputy Foreign Minister Choi Yeong-jin made clear in a reply to the National Assembly Committee on Unification, Foreign Policy, and Trade that, “Putting together the GPR and the Yongsan base transfer is very unreasonable. The US side wanted to keep the Yongsan base as it was until the last minute. The connection with the GRP is wrong on two points. It does not correspond to the facts: not only was it late in terms of time, but also the US side wanted to keep the Yongsan base headquarters up to the very end.”

However, that kind of claim simply confirms the fact that the Yongsan base transfer is inseparably linked with the GPR. In June, Richard P. Lawless, Deputy Under Secretary of Defense for Asia-Pacific Affairs and the US negotiating representative, made it clear in an interview on Korean national radio that, “If the USFK are transferred to the south of the Han River and integrated with the Osan-Pyeongtaek hub, then the military’s efficiency will be enhanced. So it’s important to arrange the Osan-Pyeongtaek hub in an orderly fashion. In connection with the problem of the Yongsan base transfer, from the Korean view, the US was perceived as the chief one who caused the delay of the transfer agreement but in fact it was the Korean government that wanted the alliance headquarters and the UN headquarters to be left at Yongsan”, and suggested that he sees the Yongsan base transfer as a link in the reorganization of the USFK.

The document which PSPD obtained confirms similar facts. It says “the US side proposed the transfer of the alliance headquarters on the basis of the military point of view... but it was not the private plan of the US independently to decide on the transfer, since the headquarters are jointly managed by equal numbers of Koreans and Americans." It makes clear that Korea was the one that suggested leaving these at Yongsan and it was the US that wanted to transfer them completely.

Actually, the GPR has been promoted since the 1980s. Formalizing it officially with the title "Global Posture Review" came after 2001, and it was in November, 2003 that it was made public. However, the government made an effort to divide the transfer of the Yongsan garrison and the general relocation of the USFK bases, and denied any relationship between them. The fact that the Korean government insisted that the Yongsan base transfer and USFK relocation are separate issues confirmed once again that they told “lies” or else “deliberately ignored” facts, in order to avoid censure for their unequal and humiliating compliance with the US side’s demand that Korea must bear the full amount of the transfer expenses.

Consequently, as the National Assembly already promised to the nation, they must re-examine the various doubts and problems that surround the agreement on the Yongsan US base transfer and the revised Land Partnership Plan agreement, and must undertake an investigation of the negotiations for the unequal agreement on base transfer, which were conducted in secret.

Street Arts Festival to defend Daechuri, schedule of Seoul events



 

-“The Fields Weep in Silence” Fall Event-
If you wish for peace protect Dachuri: 30-day Street Arts Festival put together by the Residents of Pyongtaek, Dachuri, Doduri and 1000 Artists

1. Significance
In 2003 a group of cultural workers and artists came together to form “Plain People Arts Collective” an arts organization dedicated to stopping the American base expansion in Pyongtaek and protecting Dachuri and Doduri residents’ right to housing.  Since then “Plain People” has carried out many diverse arts protects towards these goals.

Past projects, conducted with other supporting artist include: village festivals in 2004 and 2005, an on the spot art festival held for 12 weeks from February to April 2006 (Spring also comes to Stolen Fields), an arts exhibit in the Nonghyup barn in Dachuri (the Mountains and Rivers of Our Homeland) beginning in July 2006, the cultural festival “Pyongtaek, the Fields Weep in Silence” in June and July of 2006 and others.

Despite these efforts and the protest of Dachuri and Doduri residents, the government proceeded with the forced eviction and demolition of houses on Sept. 13th.  

Angered by this action, 1000 artist have come together with residents to hold a 30 day cultural and arts festival (If you want Peace, Protect Dachuri) to stop the base expansion and protect peace and human rights.

2. Event Summary
Sponsoring Organizations: Alliance of Artist Organizations to Stop the U.S. Military Base Expansion and the Destruction of Art Work in Dachuri, Dachuri Residents Committee
Managing Organization: Plain People Art Collective


Dates: Friday, October 10th- Saturday, November 11th
Location: Jongro 2 Ga, in front of Poshingak
Times:
Street Performance: Everyday beginning at 7:00pm
Street Exhibit: Everyday 3:00pm-8:00pm
Press Conference: October 12 11:00am, In front of Poshingak
Opening Event: October 13 7:00pm
Closing Event: November 11 7:00pm

3. Event Themes and Goals
- To inform the general public about the injustice and human rights abuse involved in the Pyongtaek military base expansion, beginning with the forced eviction.
- To hold public performances in which many people can participate.
- To create a base and center of participation for sympathetic individuals and organizations, which is easily accessible.

4. Content
- Street Performance: Diverse cultural and arts performances that last from 1 to 1:30 hours each day: songs, dance, literature, traditional drumming, traditional music, folks songs, percussion, traditional art, etc.

- Street Exhibit: Paintings, photography, calligraphy, etc.
Participating artists: Yungbok Ryu (woodprint), Yoonyup Lee (woodprint), Sungsoo Kim (painting), Soontaek Yoo (photography), etc.
-Meeting with Dachuri and Doduri Residents: Presentations on the spot by residents, video images of residents, portraits of residents by artists, etc.

- Participating Artists as of October 11th 11:00am
-Music: Taechun Jung, Eunok Park, Ingwun Jun, Bongju Song, Our Country, Gotdaji, People Searching for Songs, Soritarae, Good Friends, New Hope, Song Factory, Ji-In Chun, Sung Hwan Park and Band, Beautiful Youth, Exciting World, Gisang Su, Meejin Yoon, Joon Park, Yungsuk Yun, Jichong Oh, Byunghee Son, Jisang Lee, etc.
  
-Dance: Thursday 1:00pm, Samhun Lee, Jongjin Lee (traditional dance), Gweyung Ja (traditional dance), etc.

-Movie Screening: Korea Independent Film Association, “Night”, etc.

-Drumming: ritual sequence, Our Yard, Prayer Pole, Painting, Our Sound Research Group, etc.

-Art: People’s Art Coalition, Painting Factory, Stoke, Yunbok Ryu, Yoonyup Lee, Sungsoo Kim, etc.

-Cartoons: Our Cartoon Alliance, Workers Cartoon Network, Plain Flower, etc.

-Photography: Soonta ek Noh, etc.

-Cutural Sonsaesillia, Yoongyu Lee, Sunwoo Kim, Hoogi Park, Suchan Su, Yongju Yoo, Sanghak Ahn, Youngjoo Lee, Hoehyang Ryu, Dongman Moon, Hyuklim Shin, Jonghawn Doh, etc.

-Traditional Art and Culture: Jaesuk Byun (ceremony), Sungchun Ji, Youngho Kim, Youngman Jo (Kyuungki Folk Song), etc.

-Calligraphy: People’s Solidarity for Calligraphy, Taekmyung Yuh, Changwoong Im, etc.

-Other: Hwanghoe (magic). Eunmi Kang (mc), etc.

Remaining Schedule
November 4 (Saturday)
Singing Performance: “Beautiful Country” children’s singing group (instructor Seung-ha Ko)

November 5 (Sunday)
Dance Performance: Thursday 1:00 (???)
Mime Performance: Jin-gyu Yoo
Singing Performance: “For Shining Smiles”

November 6 (Monday)
MC: Sung-ho Lee
Percussion Performance: “Youngsan Maru”, traditional percussion group “Pan”
Poongmul (traditional drumming) Performance: “Taeollim” drumming group
Singing Performance: Tae-choon Jung, new song group “Na-pal Flower” (singers: Chang-woo Pek, Soon-gwan Hong, Hyun-sung Kim, Su-jin Lee. Poet: Hwe-sung Jung)

November 7 (Tuesday)
MC: Wue-young Woo
Puppet Performance: Gyu-mi Ko
Mime Performance: Du-sung Lee
Traditional Martial Arts Performance
Singing Performance: Tae-choon Jung

November 8 (Wednesday)
MC: Eun-mi Kang
Singing Performance: Tae-choon Jung, Yoon Do-hyun Band (YB Band), Song of Hope “Got Daji”. Hot Potato (Kim C)
Dance Performance: Pae-tae (Yoo-mi Lee)
Traditional Play: joint performance by “Gyulpa” and “Hope Bird”
Pansori (traditional folk song) Performance: Myung-ja Kim

November 9 (Thursday)
Singing Performance: Su Ki-sang Band, Park Sung-hwan Band, Ma Gu-ri Band, Tae-choon Jung, Eun-ok Park

November 10 (Friday)
Poetry Recital: Hyun-lim Shin, Wae-hyang Ryu
Singing Performance: Tae-choon Jung

November 11 (Sunday): Final Performance
Poetry: Jong-hwan Do, Gyung-dong Song
Singing Performance: Tae-choon Jung, Eun-ok Park, Jun Il-gwon Band, Poong gyung (invited),  Moon Bata Lamp Band
Dance Performance: Chang-ho Han