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Freedom Collection

Interviews with Han Nam-su

Interviewed December 21, 2024

I came to South Korea and attended college at Sogang University. There I majored in diplomacy and political science.

While I was attending the university, I founded an NGO because I was burdened, emotionally and psychologically, by a desire to help North Korean society change and guarantee human rights for its people.

I needed to speak for the human rights situation and work for North Korea’s societal change from South Korea. My life started to get really busy.

If a defector comes to South Korea, then under the Refugee Protection Law, the South Korean government provides assistance in terms of housing and settlement.

You can attend college free of charge if you are defector. This is why I was able to continue on with my studies.
The assistance provided by the South Korean government combined with a strong will and survival instinct are ways for defectors to start new lives.

The South Korea that I learned about [in North Korea] and the South Korea that I experienced for myself were polar opposites. While in North Korea, I was taught that South Korea was an American colony and many people were starving to death because it was so poor. For this reason, North Korea said we needed to achieve unification and liberate South Korea from being a United States colony.

When I saw South Korea for myself, it was totally different from what I was told. South Korea was a country that respected human rights based on values like freedom and democracy.