Human rights activist Yeonmi Park coming to DePauw campus Oct. 5

Friday, August 21, 2015

As the youngest-ever Ubben Lecturer, Yeonmi Park will come to DePauw University this fall to share her powerful story of defecting from North Korea, the horrors of human trafficking and the need to bring freedom to all people of the world.

The 21-year-old, who was a featured speaker at the Oslo Freedom Forum and the One Young World Summit in Dublin, will deliver a Timothy and Sharon Ubben Lecture at DePauw on Monday, Oct. 5.

Yeonmi Park

The program is scheduled one day after Yeonmi Park's 22nd birthday and six days after Penguin publishes her book, "In Order to Live: A North Korean Girl's Journey to Freedom."

Park's 7:30 p.m. speech, in the Green Center's Kresge Auditorium (605 S. College Ave.), will be followed by a question-and-answer session and book-signing session. Like all Ubben Lectures, it is presented free of admission charge and is open to everyone.

Park's story of her struggle to survive in the darkest, most repressive country on earth, her harrowing escape to South Korea through China's underworld of smugglers and human traffickers, and her emergence as a leading human rights activist -- all before her 21st birthday -- has made her a leading voice of oppressed people around the world and earned her placement on the BBC's list of the "Top 100 Global Women."

Born to a family of civil servants in the North Korean city of Hyesan, along the Chinese border, Park grew up in a society in which the regime controls everything you do, everything you learn, where you go, what you say, even what you think.

Her world view changed, she says, after viewing a pirated copy of the James Cameron film, "Titanic," which is banned in North Korea. Before viewing the film, Park says she believed that "dying for the regime was the most honorable thing you could do," but the movie showed, "people dying for love, a man willing to die for a woman. It changed my thinking. It gave me a taste of freedom."

Her family was relatively privileged until 2002 when her father, a party member, was arrested for smuggling gold, silver and nickel to Chinese traders to keep the family alive during a relentless famine. sentenced to 17 years in a forced labor camp, where he was tortured and soon fell ill. Granted a medical release, he decided the only way for the family to avoid starving to death was to escape North Korea. The women would go first.

In 2007, with the aid of human traffickers, Yeonmi's sister crossed the frozen river into China, followed by Yeonmi and her mother. Park's father was sick and stayed behind in North Korea, thinking his illness would slow them down.

They endured terrible hardships while hiding from Chinese authorities who hunt down escapees and return them to North Korea. Yeonmi witnessed her mother being raped by traffickers; her sister was lost and presumed dead. Her father, who eventually joined them, died of colon cancer and Yeonmi buried his ashes on a lonely mountain.

Finally, on a freezing night in early 2009, Yeonmi and her mother walked and crawled across a stretch of the Gobi desert to Mongolia, where they sought refuge in the South Korean embassy. Incredibly, Yeonmi's sister Eunmi escaped five years later, and was reunited with them in Seoul.

Because she often felt that she had been forgotten, Park is determined that the world must never forget the North Korean people who are suffering and dying every day. At the 2014 Oslo Freedom Forum and the One Young World Summit in Dublin, she became an international phenomenon, delivering passionate and deeply personal speeches about the brutality of the North Korean regime.

Her upcoming book, "In Order to Live," is about the resilience of the human spirit and the transcendent power of love to overcome the most ghastly horrors and the most hopeless circumstances. She has published an op-ed about North Korea's "Black Market Generation" in the Washington Post, and has been featured on CNN, CNBC and the BBC, as well as in the New York Times and Wall Street Journal.

At April's Women in the World summit, Park said, "For the first time in my life, I own me. I own myself, and this is so powerful to me. I always belonged to the states or to a man who bought me, and I have a voice now. Freedom allowed me to have a voice. I want to use this voice, and I want everyone else to use their voice, too."

Established in 1986 through the generous support of 1958 DePauw graduates Timothy H. and Sharon Williams Ubben, the Ubben Lecture Series was designed to "bring the world to Greencastle" and has presented 101 programs.

Park will become the youngest Ubben Lecturer to date. Liz Murray, who visited DePauw in April 2005, was 24 at the time; Andrew Luck, who addressed DePauw students this spring, is 25.

Other previous Ubben Lecturers have included Bill Clinton, Margaret Thatcher, Jimmy Kimmel, Mikhail Gorbachev, Tony Blair, Spike Lee, Dan Quayle, F.W. de Klerk, Elie Wiesel, Jesse Jackson, Ralph Nader, Jane Goodall, John Major, Shimon Peres, Ron Paul, Willy Brandt, Peyton Manning, Michio Kaku, Gen. Colin Powell, Piper Kerman, Brian Mulroney, Mike Krzyzewski, Bob Woodward, Ross Perot, Paul Volcker, Karl Rove, Howard Dean, Harry Belafonte, Todd Rundgren, Sam Donaldson, Martin Luther King III, David McCullough, Carl Bernstein, Jane Pauley, Mitch Albom, Julian Bond, Lee Hamilton, Jimmy Wales, David S. Broder, Jason Reitman, Bret Baier, Jim Lovell, Candy Crowley, William J. Bennett, ice cream entrepreneurs Ben Cohen and Jerry Greenfield, Bill Bradley, George Will, Ken Burns, Carl Rowan and many others.

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  • We don't realize just how good we have it here in this country. I did a tour of duty in South Korea in 1986. It opened my eyes to how well we live here, the liberty we enjoy on a daily basis. Everyone should go and listen to this remarkable young lady talk about the horrors of North Korea.

    -- Posted by donantonioelsabio on Fri, Aug 21, 2015, at 9:22 PM
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