Monday, October 24, 2011

DMZ



This weekend I went on a tour of the DMZ (Demilitarized Zone) by the USO in Seoul.  It was such and awesome experience!  I dont have all the facts, but i have a good amount.  The DMZ is the border of North and South Korea.  There is the border and on either side there are 2 km where nothing really exist.  Just trees and stuff.  Its probably full of land mines.  We saw many sights and received a wealth of information and I only felt a little weary for a brief time of the trip.

Inside the Freedom House

Our American Soldier who gave us our tour and a ROK ready Korean Soldier.
There is always a man inside here when tours are present.  He is "ROK ready" pose which means he is ready to fight at any instance and he looks intimidating.  He also wears sunglasses so you can't see any movement in his face.  


We are standing IN north Korea!!!!!!

Myself, Katie and Breann in NK

Breann and I are ROK ready!


That cement line is literally the border in between North and South.

They only show half of themselves well, just incase.

This table was used for North and South to tall to each other.  But really its more used by the Swede's, and two other Northern European countries who act as peace makers for the North and South.  I guess they were the ones who called the Korean War to stop.  
(I'm really bad with details, you should probably Wikipedia this)

The JSA (Joint Security Area)  Panmunjom
You're looking at North Korea's building: Panmungak, the admin headquarters for NK security force
And our soldier in front and the S.K soldiers standing guard.  They are only out here when tour groups are here.  If no one is present they probably only stand watch inside the building (the freedom house is behind us)


North Korean soldier watching us.  Apparently there is at least one other one inside to the right.


Propaganda Village
It got its name because it has large loud speakers that would say how wonderful it was to live in NK.  People do live here.  The buildings are only repainted on the side that we see.  And they have fake windows.  And have only one floor. 

Oh ya and that flag its 30 meters wide.  It take 600 lbs to make it really wave.  Which means it was a pretty windy day for it to move at all.  Also it takes up to 50-100 men just to get the flag up and down.  Rumor has it there is an elevator shaft in the middle on the structure to keep the flag up.  

I don't remember why i was laughing, probably because its just so strange that i can take my photo in front of NK.

The Bridge of no return.
When the war ended, POWs were able to choose what side of the country they wanted to stay on, and once they chose there was no turning back.

I dont really know what building this was, but apparently they want unification.

Beyond that wall is NK.  You cant take photos beyond this yellow line.  If you do, the army men will erase all your photos.  When you go up to the wall there is maybe a couple kilometers between you and NK.  And there's trees and a highway that goes to NK.  You get a different view of Propaganda Village.  My friend said that they don't want photos getting out because they maybe SK men are hiding in the trees with tanks or other things.  So they don't want any photos popping up on facebook or blogs that reveal their location to NK.
Oh and check out that guy's lens!  He was in our tour group and i wish i asked him what he did and how his photos turned out.

You're looking at North Korea.  
Someone used the binoculars and said they could see people in North Korea riding bikes.  

NK landscape.  

NK city

It looked like most of their land was striped of the natural vegetation, especially those mountains.  I wonder what the rest of it looks like.  


In this area we watched a brief video about SK finding the 4 different tunnels that NK dug.  Then it finished with all the wildlife that is in DMZ.  Yay! Haha.  

Never!!
JK.

Unification!


just cause they were there

In this area you can go into one of the tunnels that SK found of NK.  Nk tried to cover up their tunnel as a mining cave, but ya, sure, doubtful.  You have to walk down 350 meters to get to the actual tunnel.  Then you walk a bit and you see a small opening which then shows you a cement wall with another small opening.  There are 3 walls.  I guess to prevent the enemy from coming in quickly?  I dont remember why.  But it was pretty strange walking in the tunnel.  I kept wondering what if something crazy happened, like an attack or an earthquake or a bomb?  What do you do when you're in a tunnel deep underground?  Luckily, nothing bad happened and everything was safe.

NK built four tunnels.  Maybe they have more that haven't been found, who knows?  The four tunnels are pretty equally spaced across the border or north and south Korea.  One of the tunnels is so large that it could drive a full size tank through it.  The one we walked through wasn't to large.  Enough space for two people to pass each other.  Most people had to duck, but i could walk through most of the tunnel without ducking.  And we had to wear hardhats.  :)  



The Hopeful Dorasan Train station.
You can take the KTX to Pyeongyang..... someday.  
(the KTX is one of the fastest trains (maybe in the world?)


Inside the train station.  SK remains hopeful.  They wish to be one country.  So they built a train station that goes all the way through NK.  This station is the last one in SK and goes the NK.  Apparently, the only things that have gone on this railroad is goods, no people have been on it.  

It was weird, i know that the people of SK are very hopeful and wish to be one with NK, but the military   seemed to be the opposite.  I guess they know better.  From what our American soldier  mentioned, it seemed like the SK military was much more skeptical.

The train station platform

The train station

You can get a ticket and visit the platform, but i didnt find it necessary.  So i got my little notebook stamped.  The train goes to Pyeongyang.  : /


We wanted the soldiers to be as happy as they were in my new stationary (below) but they didn't really care. 

The best stationary I've bought in Korea!!!  This was hilarious! They are so not ROK ready.


The End.

To leave you with the hope the rest of Korea has, here is a drawing by one of my first graders:



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