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No War Base on the Island of Peace

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  • Pave Paradise, Put Up a Naval Base

    Medea

    Re-blogged from here. Other posts related to the WCD women’s visit to the village will be put into this website in time. 

    Pave Paradise, Put Up a Naval Base: South Korean Activists’ Extraordinary Struggle to Save Jeju Island

    By Medea Benjamin,

    May 29, 2015

    South Korea’s Jeju Island is a popular tourist destination full of spas, resorts, golf courses, sandy beaches, waterfalls and hiking trails.  But if you really want to get rejuvenated, skip the tourist hotspots and go directly to the village of Gangjeong to support the extraordinary community that has been opposing the building of a naval base since 2007. You’ll get your morning exercise at 7am bowing 100 times facing the base, praying for an end to its construction. You’ll get spiritual nourishment from the noon mass outside the base (no religion necessary). And if you really want to feel like royalty, join the activists in their daily ritual of sitting in plastic chairs blocking the base entrance, then having the police gently lift you up in your chair and cart you away so the cement trucks and traffic can flow in and out of the base. When the traffic ebbs you grab your chair and scurry back in place—starting the ritual all over again. Want aerobic exercise? Join in the jubilant dancing and drumming that liven up the protests. Want good food? The village cooks at the communal kitchen make fantastic, healthy meals with heaps of fresh vegetables and homemade kimchi.

    After a long journey to cross the DMZ from North to South Korea with a group of 30 peace women, some of us—including Nobel Prize winner Mairead Maguire and retired Colonel Ann Wright—stopped on Jeju Island and fell in love with this community of farmers, fisherpeople, city officials, small shop owners, florists, artists, poets, students and grandmothers. Over the years they have attracted peace activists from the mainland and internationals, including members of the Catholic Workers, Veterans for Peace, Amnesty International, and prominent figures like Gloria Steinem, Oliver Stone and Korean-American activist Christine Ahn.

    The struggle dates back to 2007, when the South Korean government began construction of a $970 million naval base in Gangjeong, a village of less than 2,000 people on the southern tip of Jeju island. The government had tried to build the base in two other villages but was thwarted by widespread protests—especially by the haenyeos, the island’s women divers renowned for spending hours in the chilly waters harvesting conches, abalones, and other marine wildlife, as well as for their history of fierce resistance to Japanese occupation.

    So the Korean government secretly cut a deal with the Gangjeong mayor at that time, who, to secure village “consent,” set up a little-publicized meeting that only 87 residents attended.

    When the rest of the villagers discovered what happened, they began to protest. Thousands have participated in sit-ins and blockades. The more radical folks chained themselves to heavy machinery to halt construction or surrounded the base with kayaks. About 700 people have been arrested and charged with hefty fines that amount to over $400,000, fines that they cannot or will not pay. Many have spent days or weeks or months in jail, including a well-known film critic Yoon Mo Yong who spent 550 days in prison after committing multiple acts of civil disobedience. “The only thing that kept me from utter despair during my long imprisonment and hunger strikes,” he told us, “was the global outpouring of support I received.”

    While the number of villagers involved has decreased over time, with people exhausted or resigned or won over by government promises of economic gain, there is still an extraordinary resistance community bursting with positive energy. Three generations work together, sharing their wisdom and the unique contributions. Their activities are infused with ritual, art, dance, music—and lots of joy and laughter. Artists create magnificent exhibits, murals, banners, puppets and sculptures. Poets, writers and filmmakers produce works that have drawn worldwide attention to the struggle. Mainland writers have been so inspired that they raised funds to build an elegant library, brimming with donated books, where local children whose parents are divided on the issue (pro- and anti-base) can study and play together.

    The group has a deep spiritual component that comes from Catholics (including priests like lifelong activist Father Moon, Benedictine sisters and visiting US Catholic Workers), Buddhists and goddess worshipers, but secular people are embraced.

    Despite the dedication, creativity, persistence and sacrifice of the activists, they have not succeeded in stopping the base. It is scheduled to be completed by the end of 2015 but will probably take another year due, in part, to the protests. The immense complex is designed to accommodate 20 warships, nuclear-armed submarines, and two 150,000-ton vessels. While the government—to sweeten the pot—says the base will also have civilian uses, like the docking of cruise ships, the primary purpose is military.

    The South Korean government denies that the US will have access to the base, but under the terms of its Status of Forces agreement, Washington can deploy its military forces at any South Korean military facility. Activists say the base is designed to accommodate Aegis destroyers that will likely become part of an integrated missile defense system under US command.  They think the US directed South Korea to build the base to intimidate both North Korea and China, and to protect US economic interests. “This increased militarization is not making the region more secure, as the South Korean government claims,” said activist Jungjoo Park as she gave us a tour of the island, “but more tense, unstable and unsafe.”

    Villagers also fear the rape, prostitution, and drugs associated with naval bases and their operating personnel, and decry the waste of $1 billion that could have been put to useful purposes.

    They also see the base as a violation of their pristine environment, which is a UNESCO World Heritage site. Farmers and fisherpeople worry that the pollution generated by the base will destroy their livelihoods. Gangjeong’s coral reefs and estuaries, home to many endangered species, have already been destroyed. Particularly painful to the activists is the destruction of the Gureombi rockbed, which was a stretch of unique topography that was home to a diversity of life forms. In 2012 it was blasted to pieces and replaced by a massive concrete floor. “This was a sacred site, a dwelling place of the gods, a place where people gathered to picnic, swim, play and pray,” said Tera Kim, who spent nine months living on the rockbed trying to save it. Every year the villagers hold Gureombi Remembrance Day to mark the anniversary of its destruction.

    As our group of visitors stood by the base looking out at the ocean, we saw the women divers in the distance, divers who over decades have been swimming alongside schools of dolphins and maintaining a harmonious relationship with the ocean and coral reefs. The concrete hulks of the base facilities, the ugly walls topped with concertina wire, are a desecration of the island’s stunning beauty and moved us to tears.

    “Some say we are fighting a losing battle,” said Father Moon, a Catholic priest with a flowing white beard. “But for the sake of our ancestors and future generations, we must resist. This place should be a sanctuary for peace, not the site of a future military confrontation.”

    “Maybe mother nature herself will help us,” Yong-beom Choi, vice mayor of the village, told us half-jokingly “Jeju is famous for huge typhoons. Maybe mother nature will unleash a very localized typhoon that will wipe away this monstrosity and allow us to live in peace.”

    But the activists themselves are a powerful force of nature. Rather than waiting for a typhoon, you can support their efforts by going there or sending a donation to this heroic community of peacemakers.

    Medea Benjamin is the co-founder of the peace group CODEPINK and the human right organization Global Exchange. Follow her on twitter at @MedeaBenjamin.

    June 3, 2015

  • Gangjeong Village Story: Monthly Newsletter | April Issue

    April 2015 Final_1

    In this April Edition:
    The Shifting Laws of Causality: Connecting Gangjeong, April 3rd, and Sewol Tragedy, Gangjeong Solidarity with Sewol struggle,  Gangjeong  US tour, Korean Screenings of ‘Jeju’s Aching Heart,’ Gangjeong Easter Week report, Interview with a villager, Sail on the Sea of Peace and much more!, Free Dungree and much more!

    Download PDF

    May 5, 2015

  • Gangjeong Village Story: Monthly Newsletter | March Issue

    In this March Edition:
    Gureombi Remembrance Day, Permanent War, “Gureombi, The Wind is Blowing” travels the world, Women Crossing the DMZ Borders, Protecting Democracy or an Occupying Army? Choosing Arrest Rather than Paying Fines, Human Rights: Forever a Fugitive, Crosscurrents, Interview with Gangjeong Women’s Association leader Jeong Young-sim, Welcoming Grandma Youngdeung, Visit to the US Congress for Jeju 4·3 Solution, Remembering Fukushima and much more!

    Download PDF

    April 8, 2015

  • Gangjeong Village Story: Monthly Newsletter | February Issue

    In this February Edition:
    Gangjeong will not Give up, In remembrance of Father Bix, Okinawa, Jeju, Taiwanthe
    Peace Triangle, Keep THAAD out of South Korea, Hotpinkdolphins meets Taiwan pink dolphins, International Solidarity, Choosing jail to resist unfair fines, Deported for Loving Korea, Interview with a Jeju Activist, Seeking justice from the chimney top, “To Exist is to Resist” Gangjeong Peace School, trial updates and much more!

    Download PDF

    March 10, 2015

  • Jeju Island Anti-Base Activists on US National Speech and Film Tour

    Jeju Tour Film FlyerJeju Tour Speech Flyer

    If You Don’t Give Up You Can’t Lose / Gureombi, The Wind is Blowing Film and Speech Tour 2015

    Hee Eun “Silver” Park and Paco Michelson, peace activists from the Jeju Island Anti-Naval Base struggle will be traveling across the US in March and April to share the story of the struggle through the screening of a new full-length documentary, and speaking about their personal experiences on Jeju Island, Korea.

    Since 2007, the people of Gangjeong and their supporters have struggled everyday against state violence, corporate power, war profiteering, and environmental destruction. They have done so nonviolently and passionately. As a result of their work for peace, the tiny village of Gangjeong now has one of the highest “crime” rates in all of South Korea. More than 220,000 police officers (as of 2012) have been stationed in Gangjeong. So far, more than 700 arrests have been made, leading to approx. 200 court cases for more than 650 people, approx. $270,000 in fines levied, and 46 imprisonments. More than 30 internationals have been blacklisted, deported, or denied entry. All for the “crime” of peacefully resisting the construction of a naval base that threatens villagers’ livelihoods, the local ecology, and the peace of northeast Asia.

    At some events, Silver and Paco will be presenting the film of Korean director Sung Bong Cho, Gureombi, The Wind is Blowing followed by a Q&A. At others, they will be speaking about the situation and struggle as well as sharing their personal experiences and those of their friends on Jeju, with a presentation titled, If You Don’t Give Up You Can’t Lose.

    At all events they will be raising support for legal costs of the activists and villagers of Gangjeong. Many of Gangjeong villagers are farmers whose struggle for justice has meant sacrificing their crops. Many Gangjeong supporters work full-time for the struggle and rely on odd jobs and occasional field labor to survive. The fines are increasing and many people owe thousands of dollars they cannot afford to pay.

    Come out to an event in an area near you and hear the story, see the struggle, and donate to the brave peacemakers who are giving everything they can in this fight for justice.

     


     

    Schedule Overview:

    Click on a location to go to that locations section in the list.

    March 17-19 – Boston, MA
    March 19-21 – Maine
    March 21-25 – NYC, NY
    March 25 – New Brunswick, NJ
    March 26-28 Philadelphia, PA
    March 28-30 Washington, DC
    March 30-April 4, Los Angeles & San Diego, CA
    April 4-9 – San Francisco, Oakland, Berkeley, CA
    April 9-14 Seattle, WA (and Surrounding Area)
    April 14-20 – Portland, OR (and Surrounding Area)

     


     

    Detailed Schedule:

    All events listed below are open to the public. There are occasionally non-public events as well, check with your local groups in your area for details on those.

     


    Boston

    March 16 (Mon) – March 19 (Thursday)

    March 17 – Talk and Discussion: If You Don’t Give Up You Can’t Lose

    Date: March 17 (Tue)
    Time: 7 p.m.
    Organizer: Boston College Korean Students Association
    Location: Higgins 310, Boston College (140 Commonwealth Ave, Chestnut
    Hill,  MA 02467)
    Contact Info: Ramsay Liem (liem@bc.edu / 617-777-5627)
    Website: http://on.fb.me/1B5qHlN

    March 18 – Film Screening and Q&A: Gureombi, The Wind is Blowing

    Date: March 18 (Wed)
    Time: 7 p.m.
    Organizer: American Friends Service Committee, United for Justice
    with Peace
    Location: Friends Meeting House (5 Longfellow Park, Cambridge, MA 02138)
    Contact Info: Joe Gerson (jgerson@afsc.org), Duncan McFarland
    (mcfarland13@gmail.com)
    Website: http://masspeaceaction.org/event/jeju-island-gureombi
    http://on.fb.me/1B5qWgv

     


     

     Maine

    March 19 (Thursday) – March 21 (Saturday)

    March 20 – Film Screening and Q&A: Gureombi, The Wind is Blowing

    Date: March 20 (Fri)
    Time: 7 pm
    Organizer: Global Network Against Weapons & Nuclear Power in Space, PeaceWorks, Maine Veterans For Peace, CodePink Maine, Peace Action Maine
    Location: Grace Episcopal Church (1100 Washington St (park in back off Edwards St)
    Bath, Maine)
    Contact Info: Bruce Gagnon (globalnet@mindspring.com / 443-9502)
    Website: http://space4peace.blogspot.com/2015/03/jeju-island-activists-coming-to-maine_10.html

    March 21 – Rally at Bath Iron Works

    Date: March 21 (Sat)
    Time: 11:30 am
    Organizer: Peace Works, Code Pink, Veterans for Peace, Smilin’ Trees
    Disarmament Farm
    Location: Bath Iron Works, Bath, Maine
    Contact Info: Bruce Gagnon (globalnet@mindspring.com)

     


     

     NYC

    March 21 (Saturday) – March 25 (Wednesday)

    March 22 – Talk and Discussion: If You Don’t Give Up You Can’t Lose

    Date: March 22 (Sun)
    Time: 2 pm – 5 pm
    Organizer: Nodutdol for Korean Community Development
    Location: The New School, Dorothy Hirshon Suite, Arnhold Hall, (55 West 13th Street, Room I205, New York, NY 10011)
    Contact Info: Juyeon (juyeon.jc@gmail.com / 917-656-0156)
    Website: http://on.fb.me/1B5r53r

    March 23 – Film Screening and Q&A: Gureombi, The Wind is Blowing

    Date: March 23 (Mon)
    Time: 6:40-9:00 pm
    Organizer: Monica Kim
    Location: Cantor Film Center (36 E 8th St,Manhattan, NY 10003, bet. Greene St. and University
    Place)
    Contact Info: Monica Kim (mstarkim@gmail.com / 517-214-8003)
    Website: http://on.fb.me/1B5rcfE

     


     

     New Brunswick

    March 25 (Wednesday)

    March 25 – Film Screening and Q&A: Gureombi, The Wind is Blowing

    Date: March 25 (Wed)
    Time: 7 p.m.
    Organizer: Graduate Union of Sociology Students
    Location: Rutgers University (Davison Hall Room 128, Douglas Campus, 26 Nichol Avenue, New Brunswick, NJ 08901)
    Contact Info: Haruki Eda (contact address is deleted by his request)

     


     

     Philadelphia

    March 26 (Thursday) – March 28 (Saturday)

    March 26 – Talk and Discussion: If You Don’t Give Up You Can’t Lose

    Date: March 26 (Thurs)
    Time: 7-8:30 p.m.
    Organizer: Philadelphia Committee For Peace and Justice in Asia
    Location: Calvary United Methodist Church (815 South 48th Street,
    Philadelphia, PA 19143)
    Contact Info: Hye-Jung Park (hjparkcorea@yahoo.com / 347-283-6065)
    Website: http://on.fb.me/1B5roeO

    March 27 – Film Screening and Q&A: Gureombi, The Wind is Blowing

    Date: March 27 (Fri)
    Time: 8 p.m.
    Organizer: Circle of Hope Church, Circle of Peacemakers
    Location: Circle of Hope Church (2007 Frankford Ave Philadelphia PA 19125)
    Contact Info: Joshua Grace (joshua@circleofhope.net / 215 423 2880)
    Website: http://on.fb.me/1B5rsLo

     


     

     Washington, DC

    March 28 (Saturday) – March 30 (Monday)

    March 28 – Talk and Discussion: If You Don’t Give Up You Can’t Lose

    Date: March 28 (Sat)
    Time: 5-8:30 pm
    Organizer: Act Now to Stop War and End Racism (ANSWER)
    Location: ANSWER National Office (617 Florida Avenue, NW, Washington, D.C.20001)
    Contact Info: Sarah Sloan (sarahsloan930@yahoo.com / 202-904-7949)
    Website: http://on.fb.me/1B5rBhS

    March 29 – Film Screening and Q&A: Gureombi, The Wind is Blowing

    Date: March 29 (Sun)
    Time: 7 p.m.
    Organizer: Coalition of Koreans In the U.S. (희망연대)
    Location: William Cho Peace Center (3883 Plaza Drive, Fairfax, VA 22030)
    Contact Info: Huk-Kyo Suh (hksuh2003@yahoo.com / 704-314-1489)

     


     

     LA & San Diego

    March 30 (Monday) – April 4 (Saturday)

    March 31 – Film Screening and Q&A: Gureombi, The Wind is Blowing w/CPT

    Date: March 31 (Tues)
    Time: 7-9:30 p.m.
    Organizer: Reconciliasian / Christian Peacemaker Teams
    Location: Casa Robles Missionary Community (6355 Oak Avenue, Temple
    City, CA 91780)
    Contact Info: Sue Hur (reconciliasian@gmail.com)
    Website: https://www.facebook.com/events/761540473966887/

    April 1 – Film Screening and Q&A: Gureombi, The Wind is Blowing

    Date: April 1 (Wed)
    Time: 3-5 p.m.
    Organizer: UCSD’s Ethnic Studies Department Colloquium, Program in Transnational Korean Studies, Graduate Division Grad Life and Grad Climate Interns, and Coalition for Critical Asian American Studies
    Location:  UCSD Cross-Cultural Center – ArtSpace, University of California, San
    Diego (9500 Gilman Dr, La Jolla, CA 92093)
    Contact Info: Esther Choi (estherminchoi@gmail.com)
    Website: https://www.facebook.com/events/1566580410258374/

    April 2 – Film Screening and Q&A: Gureombi, The Wind is Blowing

    Date: April 2 (Thurs)
    Time: 7 p.m.
    Organizer: Nanum Corean Cultural Center (우리문화나눔회), Peace21 (내일을 여는
    사람들), Friends of the Progressives (진보의 벗), Koreatown Immigrant Workers Alliance (KIWA)
    Location: Abundant Life of Korean Church (3020 Wilshire Bl., Los Angeles, CA 90010)
    Contact Info: Cheol-Ho Lee (icydewdrop@gmail.com, 424-281-7901), Danny
    Park (danny2680@gmail.com)
    Website: https://www.facebook.com/events/942948465728887/

    April 3 – Talk and Discussion:If You Don’t Give Up You Can’t Lose

    Date: April 3 (Fri)
    Time: 7-9 p.m.
    Organizer: SOOBAK (SoCal Organized Oppression Breaking Anti-imperialist
    Koreans)
    Location: 2936 W 8th St. Los Angeles, CA 90005
    Contact Info: Gonji Jessica Lee (jessica.kang.lee@gmail.com)
    Website:
    https://www.facebook.com/events/805579472859691/


     

     San Francisco, Oakland, Berkeley

    April 4 (Saturday) – April 9 (Thursday)

     April 5 – Talk and Discussion: If You Don’t Give Up You Can’t Lose

    Date: April 5 (Sun)
    Time: 2-4 p.m.
    Organizer: Code Pink (EB), East Bay Media Center, HOBAK (Hella Organized Bay Area Koreans), Korea Policy Institute, Peaceworkers
    Location: Eastside Arts Alliance (2277 International Blvd, Oakland, CA 94606)
    Contact Info: Paul Liem (pliem@mindspring.com, 510-414-5575)
    Website: https://www.facebook.com/events/644421315663973/

     April 6 – Talk and Discussion: If You Don’t Give Up You Can’t Lose

    Date: April 6 (Mon)
    Time: 6-8 p.m.
    Organizer: CKS (Commitee Korea Studies) Berkeley
    Location: UC Berkeley, 126 Barrows Hall (Berkeley, CA 94720)
    Contact Info: CKS (cks.staff@gmail.com)
    Website: https://www.facebook.com/events/1404608813189759/

    April 7 – Film Screening and Q&A: Gureombi, The Wind is Blowing

    Date: April 7 (Tues)
    Time: 7:00-9:30 p.m.
    Organizer: Code Pink (EB), East Bay Media Center, HOBAK (Hella Organized Bay Area Koreans), Korea Policy Institute, Peaceworkers
    Location: East Bay Media Center (1939 Addison St, Berkeley, CA 94704)
    Contact Info: Paul Liem (pliem@mindspring.com, 510-414-5575)
    Website: https://www.facebook.com/events/644421315663973/

    April 8 – Talk and Discussion: If You Don’t Give Up You Can’t Lose

    Date: April 8 (Wed)
    Time: 7:00-8:30 p.m.
    Organizer: The Metta Center, St. John’s Episcopal Church
    Location: St. John’s Episcopal Church (40 5th St, Petaluma, CA 94952)
    Contact Info: Michael Nagler (michaeln.nagler72@gmail.com)
    Website: http://mettacenter.org/events/speaker-film-tour-long-struggle-peace-jeju-island-korea/


     

     Seattle

    April 9 (Thursday) – April 14 (Tuesday)

    April 9 – Film Screening and Q&A: Gureombi, The Wind is Blowing

    Date: April 9 (Thurs)
    Time: 5:30-8:00 p.m.
    Organizer: SahngNokSoo
    Location: Wing Luke Museum (719 S King St, Seattle, WA 98104)
    Contact Info: James Keum (keumjames@gmail.com), Christina Seong (christina.seong@gmail.com)
    Website: https://www.facebook.com/events/1597467890499723/

    April 10 – Film Screening and Q&A: Gureombi, The Wind is Blowing

    Date: April 10 (Fri)
    Time: 5:30-8:00 p.m.
    Organizer: SahngNokSoo
    Location: The Hillman City Collaboratory (5623 Rainier Avenue South Seattle, WA 98118)
    Contact Info: James Keum (keumjames@gmail.com), Christina Seong (christina.seong@gmail.com)
    Website: https://www.facebook.com/events/1597467890499723/

    April 11 – Live Music, Film Screening, and Q&A: Gureombi, The Wind is Blowing

    Date: April 11 (Sat)
    Time: 7 p.m.
    Organizer: Seth Martin
    Location: The Matrix Coffeehouse (434 NW Prindle St, Chehalis, WA 98532)
    Contact Info: Seth Martin (sethpatrickmartin@gmail.com)
    Website: https://www.facebook.com/events/850433715023993/

    April 12 – Potluck Dinner, Live Music, Film Screening, and Q&A: Gureombi, The Wind is Blowing

    Date: April 12 (Sun)
    Time: 5:30 p.m.
    Organizer: Seattle Catholic Worker, Seth Martin
    Location: Seattle Catholic Worker (12914 74th Ave S, Skyway, WA, 98178)
    Contact Info: Seth Martin (sethpatrickmartin@gmail.com)
    Website: https://www.facebook.com/events/566047346832246/

    April 13 – Potluck Dinner, Live Music, Film Screening, and Q&A: Gureombi, The Wind is Blowing

    Date: April 13 (Mon)
    Time: 6:30 p.m.
    Organizer: Tacoma Catholic Worker, Seth Martin
    Location: Guadalupe House, Tacoma Catholic Worker (1417 S G St, Tacoma, WA 98405)
    Contact Info: Seth Martin (sethpatrickmartin@gmail.com)
    Website: https://www.facebook.com/events/609362585866665/

     


     

     Portland

    April 14 (Sunday) – April 20 (Monday)

    April 15 – Potluck Dinner, Live Music, Film Screening, and Q&A: Gureombi, The Wind is Blowing

    Date: April 15 (Wed)
    Time: 5:00 p.m.
    Organizer: Eloheh Farm
    Location: Eloheh Farm (13510 NE Roedel Rd, Newberg, OR 97132)
    Contact Info: Seth Martin (sethpatrickmartin@gmail.com)
    Website: https://www.facebook.com/events/1557027914580890/

    April 16 – Talk and Discussion: If You Don’t Give Up You Can’t Lose

    Date: April 16 (Thurs)
    Time: 3:30 p.m.
    Organizer: Lewis and Clark College East Asian Studies Program
    Location: Lewis & Clark University, Miller Humanities Building room 102 (0615 SW
    Palatine Hill Rd, Portland, OR 97219)
    Contact Info: Martin Hart-Landsberg (marty@lclark.edu)

    Please come out, invite your friends, and share this to your networks!

    February 27, 2015

  • The Crackdown Against Gangjeong Will Not Halt Our Song

    kayak

     

    Originally published in Korean on 2015.02.03
    By Ddalgi (Gangjeong villager, member of Peace Wind)

    ( Thanks for Fr. Pat Cunningham, Tom Raging Smith and Jude Lee for their collaboration work for the wonderful translation.)

     

    At dawn on the 31st of January, we climbed the watchtower. Despite having thrown it up haphazardly in the icy winds that blew all night, we erected it knowing that we could trust it to defend our village. In protest against the naval construction, we raised a kayak that had previously circled the seas of Gangjeong to the very top of the platform; a kayak that should travel on the sea was lifted to the sky. It was our destiny to be with the old village bus that has carried villagers to the provincial hall, city hall, and mainland next to the sit-in protest tent that has already endured 99 days of hardship. A barricade had been erected around the sit-in protest area.

    Private contractors who had come from the mainland for the crackdown were said to be staying at a minbak (traditional Korean lodging house) only 100 meters away. Someone informed us that a light had been turned on at the lodging house and they were on the move. We could hear the marching of the police as they approached the four-way protest intersection. The military housing sit-in protest site had been cornered off even before sunrise. The people who had been told to move by the police headed onto the watchtower, bus and in front of the tent. We were tense as we couldn’t recognise what was the sound of chains clanging in the darkness. We stoked the log fire, but were unable to drive out the cold. As dawn broke and we could start to make out the people around us, the Navy appeared and said they were there to carry out the order to remove the protest encampment. Private contractors who had appeared with the Navy began shoving us back on ourselves bit by bit.

    The powerful private contractors used their bulky bodies to force people back one by one. They used all of their strength and every part of their bodies to drive us back, even smacking into us with their helmets, to narrow in on us little by little. There was a lot of screaming and cursing. The police nearby looked on and did nothing. However much we shouted, we were simply left to suffer helplessly without the aid of a single policeperson. Among the private contractors there were some who looked as if they had only just turned 20 or were even younger. The younger women cried out of anger and sadness.

    Then they began to drag us away one or two at a time. There were people with cut heads, twisted arms and clothing torn off, and we didn’t know if the screaming would end. We heard the shatter of the glass from the village bus windows. The police smashed the glass and entered the bus in order to drag out the people from inside and arrest them. Some members of the press who were recording or taking photos of the police violence during the crackdown were also dragged away kicking and screaming. Only the village mayor, vice mayor, a local villager, Jeju resident, priest and clergyman remained sitting atop the watchtower. The police and the private contractors working for them occupied the sit-in protest area and tore the whole thing down. Very dangerously, the police tried to get onto the watchtower. They tried to climb up without putting down any safety mats or taking any other safety precautions. Unexpectedly, they brought out a construction crane and dug up the land surrounding the tower. Following this, they immediately placed a fence around the tower. Those police standing beside the police bus then tried to climb the tower again.

    It was so very, very dangerous!! People’s screams had reached fever pitch when the police started to bring out mattresses and began laying them down around the place. However, the mat they roughly spread on top of the bus was only sliding around the place. Many possible things could have gone wrong that we couldn’t have protected against. It had gotten really dark by the time Bishop Kang Woo-Il had visited and negotiated for the release of all those arrested on the condition that the protestors come down and clear the site themselves. We relieved ourselves after holding it in for more than 10 hours. A day of not sleeping, eating, or pissing had drawn to a close.

    It was assumed the sit-in would be all over in a couple of hours but such was the intensity of the resistance that it lasted for about 14 hours. However, a day and then two days slipped by and there was still no sign of two people of the 24 who were to be released. Finally after two days we heard the news that a warrant for the arrest of four detainees including the mayor and deputy mayor had been requested. There seems to be no end to the lies and deceit in which the village has been enveloped. Yesterday a siren was raised in the village and today a petition signature campaign was initiated in order to counter the lies the government is feeding the people.

    Due to strong resistance from the villagers the Navy held numerous public meetings on the issue of military housing which ultimately ended in failure, and in 2013 the navy chief of staff directly assured the villagers by saying that “the Navy would not build military housing without the consent of the villagers.” The villagers assumed this to mean that plans to build 532 units of military housing would be scrapped. Instead 72 units of housing were abruptly steamrolled through and land containing rows of lily greenhouses was cleared overnight and ring fenced to make way for military housing! The protest tent which stood for 99 days in front of the designated construction site was then pulled down so that construction could begin.

    The struggle of a village with a population of 1,900 people engaged in an 8-year-long campaign against the construction of the Naval Base seems to have flown by in the blink of an eye. However, the once very solitary and lonely struggle suddenly became a country-wide issue and a magnet drawing many people to Gangjeong to put down roots in the village while supporting the struggle. The fence encircling Gureombi which was erected on Sept 2, 2011 suddenly became the focal point for police from the mainland who descended on the village in their droves to unleash a suppression strategy during that hot and sweltering summer. March 7, 2012 saw the beginning of the blasting of Gureombi and the resulting blockade of all entrances to the village and those moments of horror and despair as we witnessed the construction begin in earnest. The police who descended from the mainland violently sought to isolate and arrest those citizens who came in solidarity with the villagers. The huge burden of fines amassed by villagers during the years of struggle has resulted in villagers being forced to contemplate the sale of the village hall during their recent annual general meeting.

    The forcible expropriation of farmland, the stolen abalone and shellfish from the sea which has fed families for generations, and Gureombi Rock, the playground for children and the depository of many childhood memories, have now became places harboring great sadness and tears. What more can be stolen from us, what more can they take we were left to ponder.

    We were foolish to believe them when they promised not to build military housing. We were foolish to believe them when they promised to release all who were detained. We have no one to appeal to now and no one can resolve the issues forced upon us and all we are left with is a feeling of further isolation and frustration. Today Mt. Halla stands in great clarity over the village as it witnesses our home and our land being taken from us by the Navy, the police and the government. Where do we go from here, to whom do we turn to? However, today we continue to sing…

    Il-Gangjeong (Gangjeong, the Best Village)

    Where both the big Gangjeong and Akgeun streams flow
    Let’s go hand in hand to beautiful Il-Gangjeong
    Where the song of Tiger Island is echoed by Seogun Island
    Let’s go to the Sea of Gangjeong where the waves have danced
    Since ancient times, the wonderful waters of Il-Gangjeong
    Let’s go together hand in hand to the village of Life and Peace.

     

    (To see more photos and videos, see here)

     

    (Thanks for Jungjoo, for delivering)

    February 17, 2015

  • Gangjeong Village Story: Monthly Newsletter | January 2015 Issue

    In this January 2015 Edition:
    Crackdown on the Village, Cork City Council passes the motion to support Gangjeong, Proposed Petition of Veterans For Peace-Korea Peace Campaign, Damage to Fishermen, Henoko State Violence, Realizing the Island of Peace, Different frontlines for Life and Peace, Interview with a Gangjeong Villager, The Story of Magazi,  Documenting present day Gangjeong, Aotearoa’s Anti-Base Movement trial updates and much more!

    Download PDF

    February 6, 2015

  • URGENT: On Jan. 31, ROK Ministry of Defense Is to Demolish People’s Sit-in Tent

    1

    “Urgent call for people to go to Gangjeong this weekend as villagers brace themselves for yet another unleashing of brutal state violence. Gangjeong villagers are on tender hooks as they await the administrative execution of a demolition order by the ROK Ministry of National Defence (Saturday Jan 31) against a protest site set up to resist the building of military accommodation in the village center right next to a primary school. The navy are not content with taking over the coastline and destroy marine life with the building of the naval base they now want to irreversibly transform the village into an ugly military camp town. The administrative executive order will apparently be enforced by a bunch of hired thugs and military police from the mainland-apparently numbering up to 900 invaders in total who could descend on the village to stage a brutal show of state violence against defenseless villagers/activists. Please spare a thought for the villagers and activists who continue to resist state violence as they struggle to retain the identity of this once pristine village now blighted forever by an ugly naval base. We stand together and resist together-please help them stop the takeover of their village and the militarization of the island of Jeju!” (By Fr. Pat. )

     

    Below is the words that Mayor Cho sent to the villagers in the afternoon of Jan. 30.
    It will be very a long, cold and dark night tonight. However, people are gathering together here. Please be with us in your thoughts and prayers.

    The navy has not gained the consent of Gangjeong villagers yet, refused the negotiation by the Jeju Governer and even failed to get support from Seogwipo City.
    Yet, It is informed that the navy will enforce the administrative execution order to remove the sit-in tent in front of construction site of military family housing at 7 am tomorrow morning. Those guys, who don’t feel ashamed and are very rude, are going to storm into the village.

    Villagers! We should not let them occupy our village. The navy are mobilizing police to close the roads into the protest site from very early morning.

    Please come out and join to stay with us at the sit-in tent from tonight!
    Or please come gather at the sit-in tent around 5 am tomorrow morning.
    We should pass down Gangjeong Village to our descendants without feeling shameful. When we gather our hearts as one heart and flow like a river, then we can keep our village. We are proud residents of Gangjeong.

    Forever the best of best Gangjeong!

    Gangjeong Village Mayor, Cho Kyungcheol

    (By Jungjoo)

    22

    3

     

    (All the image source by a peace activist, here)

    January 30, 2015

  • Connecting the dots between Bangor and Jeju

    Re-blogged from here

    See also the video by Rodney Herold, ‘ Second Day Walk- Steilacoom to Tacoma‘

    ……………………………………..

    Ground Zero holds mock funeral for the Earth at at Bangor Trident base
    By Leonard Eiger
    Over sixty people participated in Ground Zero Center for Nonviolent Action’s annual celebration of Martin Luther King Jr’s life and legacy on Saturday, January 17, 2015. The event concluded with a vigil and nonviolent direct action at Naval Base Kitsap-Bangor in Silverdale, Washington.

    1

    Under the theme “Building the World House,” the day focused on Dr. King’s commitment to nonviolence and his opposition to war and nuclear weapons. Dr. King’s essay “The World House” may very well be the best summation of Dr. King’s teachings.

    While some participants maintained a peaceful vigil at the Main Gate to Naval Base Kitsap-Bangor in Silverdale, Washington on Saturday afternoon, others dressed in black monk’s robes carried a coffin containing a globe representing the earth to the side of the road. People walked up to the casket and placed flowers on it, and then another robed participant recited a eulogy, “Mourning the Death of the Earth after Nuclear Annihilation.” A funeral dirge completed the ceremony.

    When the ceremony was finished participants carried the casket onto the roadway, blocking traffic entering the base. Washington State Patrol officers ordered the resisters to move the coffin out of the roadway. They complied, and carried the coffin to the median where they were detained. All received citations for being in the roadway illegally, and then released.

    2

    Those cited were Mary Elder, Seattle, WA; Peter Gallagher, Seattle, WA; Raghav Kaushik, Kirkland, WA; Mona Lee, Seattle, WA; Bernie Meyer, Olympia, WA; Michael Siptroth, Belfair, WA; and Rick Turner, Seattle, Wa;

    Following the initial action more protesters entered the roadway and blocked traffic. Gilberto Perez, Bainbridge Island, WA carried a sign calling for no naval base on Jeju Island, Korea. Jonathan Landolfe, Tacoma, WA carried a sign saying “Sea Hawks, Not War Hawks.” Bruce Gagnon, Bath, ME carried a sign saying “Human Needs, NOT WAR$”. All were removed from the roadway by State Patrol and cited for being in the roadway illegally.

    3

    Gagnon, the Coordinator of the Global Network Against Weapons and Nuclear Power in Space, gave the keynote address earlier in the day at Ground Zero Center. Gagnon spoke of the unsustainability of the US Navy’s shipbuilding budget, and how “entitlement” programs including Social Security, Medicare and Medicaid are being defunded in order to fund the newest ships that include a new fleet of ballistic missile submarines. The OHIO Class Replacement Program alone (12 new Trident submarines) will cost an estimated $100 billion.

    Members of Ground Zero Center also participated in the Seattle MLK Rally & March on January 19th, carrying a full size inflatable replica of a Trident II D-5 thermonuclear armed missile. Accompanying the missile was a banner with a famous quote by Dr. King: “When scientific power outruns spiritual power, we end up with guided missiles and misguided men.” Participants handed out leaflets with facts on Trident.

    The Trident nuclear weapons system was designed during the height of the Cold War and was predicated on the theory of Strategic Nuclear Deterrence, a doctrine that no longer applies long after the fall of the Berlin Wall. Continued deployment of Trident increases the risk of either accidental or intentional nuclear war, and building a new generation of ballistic missile submarines is increasing global proliferation of nuclear weapons at a time when the nuclear armed powers should be reducing reliance on nuclear weapons and making good faith efforts toward disarmament.

    4

    The Trident submarine base at Bangor, just 20 miles from Seattle, contains the largest concentration of operational nuclear weapons in the US arsenal. Each of the 8 Trident submarines at Bangor carries up to 24 Trident II (D-5) missiles, each capable of being armed with as many as 8 independently targetable thermonuclear warheads. Each nuclear warhead has an explosive force of between 100 and 475 kilotons (up to 30 times the force of the Hiroshima bomb). It has been estimated that by the time the new generation of ballistic missile submarines are put into service, they will represent 70 percent of the nation’s deployed nuclear warheads.

    5

    Ground Zero Center for Nonviolent Action holds three scheduled vigils and actions each year in resistance to Trident and in protest of U.S. nuclear weapons policy. The group is currently engaged in legal actions in Federal court to halt the Navy’s construction of a Second Explosives Handling Wharf at Bangor. Ground Zero is also working with other organizations to de-fund the Navy’s plans for the next generation ballistic missile submarine.

    For over thirty-seven years Ground Zero has engaged in education, training in nonviolence, community building, resistance against Trident and action toward a world without nuclear weapons.

    January 23, 2015

  • Cork City Council in Ireland passes a motion of support for the people of Gangjeong!

    Cork
    Image source: Wiki

     

    A Great news from the Ireland!  The Cork City Council motion is the 2nd motion for an international city council  to support Gangjeong! In Dec. 2013, The Berkeley City Council, United States , has passed a motion for Gangjeong. See here and here.

    The news below is by JoYakGol on Jan. 12, 2015:

    ‘Cork City Council in Ireland tonight unanimously passed the following motion: In the light of the recent RTE television series What in the World? Cork City Council supports the people of the South Korean fishing village of Gangjeong who are opposed to the construction of the US-backed naval base on their island home on the UNESCO World heritage site of Jeju.’

     

    January 14, 2015

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