At the New Ledger: North Korea’s Ajumma Rebellion

Over at the New Ledger’s Hegemon blog, I talk about the women who are standing up to Kim Jong Il’s Great Confiscation with an affectionate look at the power of ajumma.

Update:  The full post is below the fold.

A sort of tea party movement may be breaking out today in the least likely of all places.

The unseen pillars of Korean society are its ajummas. “Ajumma” — literally “aunt” — is one of those wonderfully untranslatable Korean words — more colorful than “hausfrau,” less derogatory than “fishwife,” and probably not too far from “yenta.” In South Korea, “ajumma” is an inglorious term most associate with gargantuan red sun visors, bright lipstick, baggy clothing, and an oblivious, pushy determination that draws the scorn and admiration of anyone who has ever been in an ajumma’s way. My Korean wife has called “ajumma” The Third Gender. In “A Nation of Sheep,” Eugene Lederer observed ajummas fleeing south over the snow and ice in flimsy slippers, with all their valuables on their backs, and concluded that they had “no nerve endings.” I met one ajumma on Cheju Island who made her living by rising before the sun and carrying 40 pounds of snacks and drinks 180 feet up the side of this crater to sell to exhausted climbers a third her age (the woman was in her 70’s, so technically, she was really a halmoni).

There is steel under those garish colors, for the ajumma is also legendary for her determination to pay any price or bear any burden for her family. Today, South Korea’s Chosun Ilbo reports that North Korean ajummas are leading the popular resistance to Kim Jong Il’s Great Confiscation, a canceling and reissue of the national currency that wiped out the savings of millions of families and threatens to plunge North Korea back into famine just as winter begins. Then, North Koreas died passively by the millions. Collectively, the survival strategies of those who remained formed an underground market, operated largely by North Korea’s ajummas. And this time, the ajummas are fighting the suppression of their survival strategy by forming something of a North Korean tea party movement:

“The women are tough and defiant,” a source said, “and now they are angry. Markets are turning into places of protest against North Korean leader Kim Jong-il.” The women gather to accuse the authorities, defying threats of arrest. [Chosun Ilbo]

These developments extend a trend we’ve begun to see in the last year — ajummas as leading dissenters against the world’s scariest, most totalitarian regime (see here, here, and here).

AFP, picking up the Chosun Ilbo story, adds:

Open Radio for North Korea, a broadcaster and website that collects information from informants there, said two money-changers were executed on Friday in Pyongsong near Pyongyang for illegally exchanging currency. [AFP]

The regime tried to soothe its angry subjects by last-minute adjustments to the limits on the amount of their savings they were allowed to exchange. Today, it is promising them a pay raise by paying them their old wages in the new, lower denominations. That amounts to an immediate hundred-fold pay raise, but in currency that’s less trusted than ever, still chasing after too little food to go around — in other words, guaranteed hyperinflation. The only thing that would make matters even worse would be destroying the makeshift market distribution system that’s been keeping North Koreans alive for the last decade:

According to North Korea Intellectuals Solidarity (NKIS), a decree has been handed down saying that selling rice in the jangmadang [markets] has been banned and that any rice on sale will be confiscated.

The NKIS source explained, “New market management regulations have been received by local people’s committees, and instructions ordering a crackdown on the markets have been forwarded to the National Security Agency.”

Indeed, side effects of the market crackdown have already been reported. Good Friends, a Seoul-based NGO, has released a story claiming that, “In the Kangan-dong jangmadang in Sooncheon in South Pyongan Province, the rice price, which used to be around 16 won per kilogram (in new won), rose to 50 won on the 3rd.”

Furthermore, despite the fact that the authorities have already announced that the rice price would be pegged at the level it was immediately after the July 1st Economic Management Reform Measure in 2002, 45 won, by the 7th it had risen to more than 80 won. [Daily NK]

The irony of this is the initial speculation by some analysts that the Great Confiscation was designed to halt hyperinflation. In fact, the real purposes seem to have been fundamentally political — the enforcement of dependency by robbing citizens of their personal savings and suppressing the markets where they buy their food.

North Korea’s ajummas won’t bring down Kim Jong Il alone, but they are breaking new ground in transforming discontent into dissent, and bringing it out into the open. It’s hard to say whether this will lead to something like our own tax revolt centuries ago, but then, as now, it is pocketbook issues that have the greatest power to mobilize people to the extraordinary courage it must take to risk a fate like this.

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3 Responses

  1. Next thing you know, those ajummas will be breaking the law and wearing pants. Oh wait, too late…

    This “ajumma merchant” class is of course the first re-appearance of a long tradition of merchant class in North Korea dating back to the Kaesong traders of the Koryo period. That’s not what’s surprising – you can’t suppress centuries of tradition, with a mere fifty years of trying. The real kicker here is that the North Koreans are alarmed enough to actually go through with something as drastic as this – perhaps they read history and discovered that the merchant/bourgeoisie class has frequently been the spearhead against economic suppression (and sometimes political too!)

  2. Hunger can be a powerful motivator. I think the Norks have submitted like good sheep for 64 years to everything the regime has required. Now, their only means to even a haphazard chance at a quality of life that includes, oh – let’s say EATING is vanquished with the currency seizure. I don’t believe they are willing to starve a second go round like the late 90s famine. I think this could be very bad for the Juche regime this winter.

    This blasphemy is occurring, a key indicator that the Juche religion is in trouble:

    Chosun said security authorities have gone on emergency alert after old bills carrying the image of late president Kim Il-Sung were found torn or damaged on piles of garbage in several cities.

    The situation is pregnant with a forthcoming Ceaucescu moment… please God!

  3. This winter could be interesting. They redenominated all the money. They tested nukes, fired long range missiles over Japan. Tore up the Armistice agreement. Now they are shooting to kill at the Chinese border.

    Kay Seok, a researcher at Human Rights Watch, said North Koreans were now more restive than in the famine of the 1990s, when up to 1m people are believed to have died.

    “I wonder whether North Korea could have underestimated how much people have changed. Fifteen years ago people were very obedient, but since then they have been struggling and defying many restrictions,” she said. But no one should doubt the willingness of the regime to crack down hard on dissenters, she added.

    One reason Kim Jong-il went ahead with the currency reform may have been to discipline the nascent moneyed middle class, who could be seen as his political opponents. Several organisations who deal with refugees have had reports of North Koreans burning money through fear it will be seen as treasonable to have accumulated it.

    Is this really business as usual in the DPRK?