Posted by
jiexi9 on Wednesday, November 11, 2009 8:16:09 PM
During our stay in North Korea, we visited the home of one of the
country's celebrated athletes, and in this country, athletes are
treated very, very well by the government.
We go into the living room, which is also the
pearl jewelry bedroom of the daughter, who's a championship figure skater. She shows us her photos.
We notice a couple of things: English on the pearl jewelry pillowcase about love and family. We notice how tiny the closet is.
We head into her parents' bedroom, which is also small, and as
everywhere, pictures of leaders of the country, including Kim Il Sung
and Kim Jong Il.
Next we head into the kitchen. It seems possible North Koreans eat so
much less than anyone in the West can imagine. We're told that
breakfast is rice porridge. We're told that dinner is rice again with a
little bit of meat.
I ask if I can open the refrigerator door. In it, I find mostly water and also kimchi, pickled cabbage.
In another apartment we visit, we notice how meticulously clean this
country is and everything has a cover: a cover for the fan and a cover
for the
biwa pearl television.
At another point in the day, we head off to one of the few beauty
parlors in the country. We notice the wording under the sign is in
English, which means a lot of this is for foreigners.
Inside, the smell of a permanent wave. The straight hair of the Koreans
is becoming curly. Pictures of the dear leader and of possible
hairstyles are on the wall.
Again, we show North Koreans a
akoya pearl magazine with American clothes. We're told that Korean women prefer dark clothes, prefer simple modest clothes.
For a minute, a young woman looks through and seems a little startled.
Then she decides she better look no more. She says to me, "Those
clothes are strange."
Then we move on.