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April 22, 2007

Daechuri peace marchers arrive at Seoul

A group of activists who lived for up to two years in Daechuri and Doduri left their homes on April 9th, with the destruction of the villages already underway, on a Peace March from Daechuri to Seoul.

They marched to denounce and mourn the destruction of Daechuri and Doduri (see previous post), to assert the right of Daechuri and Doduri villagers to return to their land, and to demand an end to the planned base expansion in Pyeongtaek. The activists (Pyeongtaek Jikimis, or “defenders”) held vigils every night in cities along their way. They were joined at their vigils by other opponents of the Pyeongtaek base expansion to sing, talk to local people about the base expansion, and give out out pea plant seeds from Daechuri gardens. The seeds are a symbol of Daechuri and Doduri as farming communities, and of the hope that Daechuri and Doduri farmers' struggle has inspired.

When the group arrived in Seoul on April 14th, they attempted to deliver a letter for President Roh at the Blue House (the presidential mansion). The group of around 20 marchers, plus some supporters and journalists, was stopped and surrounded on three sides by riot cops, with a police bus blocking the remaining side. A representative of the Blue House then held a bizarre negotiation with the Jikimis, first arguing that only a few people could go on to the Blue House to deliver the letter, then that no one could continue because the envelope contained seeds, making it not a real letter. When the Jikimis saw that the negotiations were a farce, they decided to send the letter through the mail, and held their protest and vigil right where they had been stopped. The activists talked about their experiences in Pyeongtaek, played the recorded voices of Daechuri villagers, and planted Pyeongtaek pea seeds in a flower garden that had conveniently been surrounded along with them by the riot cops.


The marchers continued the following day to the village of Ohyeoli (“O-hyeo-li”), another farming community threatened by displacement to expand a military facility. Ohyeoli villagers raise cattle, wheat, and rice north of Seoul (Daechuri is south of Seoul). In 1982 they were pushed off their land to make way for a Korean military training ground, much as Daechuri residents were forcibly relocated in the 1950s. In 1997, the training ground became a joint US-Korean facility.

Ever since Ohyeoli farmers's resettlement on nearby land, they have lived side by side with the largest live bomb training ground in East Asia. For 13 weeks of every year, the farmers are subjected to the sounds of booming explosions and tanks rumbling past their homes and fields. They aren't ever told in advance when the training will begin, but find out when they wake up in the morning and see riot police lined up alongside their village, to keep them out of the training area.

The training is more than an inconvenience, it's also dangerous. In 2002, two middle school girls were run over and killed near Ohyeoli by a tank on its way out of the training ground, in what became a major national incident. The soldiers responsible for the killing were found “not guilty” and released.

In 1996, the expansion of the training ground was announced. The new training ground will be double its current size, and over four times the size of the expanded base at Pyeongtaek. The site will be linked to the Pyeongtaek mega-base by military-use only train tracks.

Although the planned completion date was originally 2012, now the Korean government is trying to speed up the displacement of the Ohyeoli villagers in order to finish earlier. The villagers, who have been organizing their resistance to the training ground expansion for over ten years now, shared experiences with the Pyeongtaek activists during their visit.


(See previous post for more photos of the Jikimi march to Seoul.)


Daechuri activists plant Daechuri pea seeds in Ohyeli:

 

 

Ohyeoli. Banner reads in part "Welcome Daechuri Jikimis" 

 

Riding bikes near training ground in Ohyeoli:

 

 

training near Ohyeoli:

 

 

 

April 18, 2007

"When You Grow Up, You Must Take the Village Back"

Ceremony for Daechuri's Last Days


On 7 April 2007, a ceremony was held to mark the conclusion of the Daechuri struggle. The residents who had left earlier, and those who had stayed until the end, came together to have the ceremony.


The villagers set fire to the two bamboo guardian statues that stood at the entrance of the village. They wept as they watched the statues burn. It made me remember last spring when the villagers resisted, fighting the advancing backhoes and shouting desperately, crying in the field. We struggled, but now we're leaving.


While the statues were still burning, the residents left the field, carrying a symbolic peace boat, decorated with flowers. As they approached the Daechu Elementary School yard, someone said to Byeong Cheol, an elementary school student of the village, who was riding in the boat, "Byeong Cheol, when you grow up, you must take the village back."


A hole for a time capsule had previously been dug in the Daechu Elementary School yard, and a jar had been placed at the bottom. After the boat arrived in the yard, the residents began to write their wishes on pieces of wood, with tears in their eyes.


"We will definitely come back."

"Our descendents will certainly take the land back."

"Oh my homeland, I will never forget you."

"I hope that we will live happily, that our children will be successful, and that we will take our land back."

"I hate leaving Daechuri."


Kim Won Sun, an old resident, was holding the piece of wood with "I hate leaving Daechuri" written on it. "I can't stop shedding tears." she said, "It's the first time I've moved out. I've lived here 60 years. My heart is totally broken. I really hate leaving here. When I close my eyes, I see an image of my house and my village." On this day, though, Kim didn't visit her old house. "I didn't go to my house. Last time, when I went to the house, all of the doors were torn off. It looks so bad. I couldn't go there today."


Father Moon made a speech. "We'll never forget our defeat and our anger and disgrace. As the two school girls' death showed us, we can see clearly how Korea is cruelly subordinated by the US. Have we ever struggled as desperately as we have now to stop the expansion of the US army base?

Now we are recording our history that will be handed down to our descendants. The Anseong Stream is still going to flow along the field. The field will remain in people's minds as a shrine of peace. Our struggle is a seed of hope for people who dream of world where there is equality. Time will tell who was in the wrong. Even though we were defeated and the Korean government and the United States won this time, their violence will be revealed in time. We have learned how valuable human rights are while struggling against the imperialist army and the violence of the state. Noh Moo Hyun achieved the common ground with the conservative party that he so wished. He's degraded himself. He is no longer our president. Noh Moo Hyun will be remembered by the people as a shameful president who sold out his country."


Father Moon's last words echoed over the field. The residents began to place the pieces of wood into the time capsule. The village head, Shin Jong Won, burst into tears as he was lowering the pieces of wood into the hole. The residents also began to weep. After the people's treasured things and messages had been sealed in the jar, they filled in the hole, stamped down the earth there and set a sign over the place. To conclude the ceremony, the flower boat was set on fire.

from Chamsesang; translated by Radical Language Exchange

April 11, 2007

Daechuri Activists March from Daechuri to Seoul

Activists who have made Daechuri and Doduri their homes set out this Monday on a Peace March from Daechuri to Seoul. They are marching to denounce and mourn the destruction of Daechuri and Doduri (see previous post), and to demand an end to the planned base expansion in Pyeongtaek. The activists (Pyeongtaek Jikimis) are holding vigils every night in cities along their way. They are joined at their vigils by other opponents of the Pyeongtaek base expansion to sing, talk to local people about the base expansion, and give out out pea plant seeds from Daechuri gardens. The seeds are a symbol of Daechuri and Doduri as farming communities, and of the hope that Daechuri and Doduri farmers' struggle has inspired.
The activists will arrive in Seoul on Saturday, April 14th, where they will hold a vigil and press conference in front of the Blue House (the president's house).

For more information (in Korean) on participating in the the march call 016-498- 2017.

 

 

 

 

More photos of the Jikimi activist's peace march from Daechuri to Seoul:

http://cafe205.daum.net/_c21_/bbs_read?grpid=187bd&mgrpid=&fldid=4kJK&page=1&prev_page=0&firstbbsdepth=&lastbbsdepth=zzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzz&contentval=0002ozzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzz&datanum=174

http://cafe205.daum.net/_c21_/bbs_read?grpid=187bd&mgrpid=&fldid=4kJK&page=1&prev_page=0&firstbbsdepth=&lastbbsdepth=zzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzz&contentval=0002pzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzz&datanum=175

 http://cafe205.daum.net/_c21_/bbs_read?grpid=187bd&fldid=4kJK&contentval=0002zzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzz

http://cafe205.daum.net/_c21_/bbs_read?grpid=187bd&fldid=4kJK&contentval=00034zzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzz

 

Schedule: Daechuri and Doduri Jikimi Peace March, April 9-April 15

Vigil every night, 7:00-8:00

 

Day            Departure     Destination         Candlelight vigil location

April 9         Daechuri      Songtan             Seojeong-ri subway station

April 10       Songtan       Osan                 Osan subway station

April 11       Osan           Byeongjeom       Byeongjeom station

April 12       Byeongjeom Suwon               Suwon subway station

April 13       Suwon         Anyang              Anyang subway station

April 14       Anyang       Seoul                 Blue House press conference/ Gwanghwamun

April 15       Seoul          Paju

April 09, 2007

Daechuri is being destroyed. Daechuri lives!

After holding their last candlelight vigil on March 24th (see previous post), Daechuri and Doduri farmers began to leave their homes. The farmers came back on Saturday, April 7th for a parting ceremony. During the ceremony, a procession of farmers and supporters walked from Doduri to Daechuri. When they reached Daechuri, the villagers buried a time capsule in front of the rubble of the Dachuri elementary school, destroyed by police last May. The time capsule contains messages from villagers and supporters, some written on paper and others painted on wood.

The farmers have never stopped opposing the base expansion or demanding their right to stay on their land. The time capsule was buried under flags that read “return!”. The time capsule expressed their hope that one day soon, the machines of death and empire that have destroyed their community will fall silent, and that they will be able to come back to reclaim the time capsule and rebuild their homes.

The activists who have made Daechuri and neighboring Doduri their homes will also begin to leave this week. Some of them will set out this week on a “Peace march” from Daechuri to the Blue House (the president's house) in Seoul. The KCPT alliance of Korean social movements is planning a similar march in May, and will continue to organize against the base expansion.

The farmers will live in temporary housing for two years, and many will then move to a new village. When they came back to say goodbye to their homes on April 7th, they found that the destruction of their town had already begun. Many of the murals and poetry on the walls of their village were already rubble. While villagers and supporters shouted “stop base expansion” around the banners and other objects that they had lit on fire as part of the ceremony, demolition equipment smashed a nearby house.

An amazing center of community, art, and hope is being destroyed to make way for a center of war and repression. But Daechuri and Doduri villagers' strength and determination, and the memory of what was created in Daechuri and Doduri, will live in all of our struggles. Wherever there is global empire and exploitation, there will be a thousand Daechuris ready to resist, and next time, to win. Daechuri lives!

 

 

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(The KCPT and saveptfarmers sites will continue to carry updates about the ongoing fight against the base expansion. It ain't over yet!)


See also:

Photos of the villager's parting ceremony:
Photo collage video of art in Daechuri and last candlelight vigil

Photo collage video of Daechuri villager's parting ceremony and the Pyeongtaek activist's peace march to Seoul:

Photos of the the villagers preparing to leave their homes: