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Opinion

2015 International Women Walk for Peace and Reunification of Korea: Delegation Visited North/South Korea on May 19-25, 2015

by Mairead Maguire, Nobel Peace Laureate

The year 2013 marked the 60th anniversary of the Armistice Agreement that ended the Korean War. The temporary ceasefire has never been replaced with a Peace Treaty and the Demilitarized Zone (DMZ) continues to divide the country. The DMZ with its barbed wire, armed soldiers on both sides, and littered with thousands of explosive landmines, is the most militarized border in the world.

Seventy years ago, as the Cold War was brewing, the United States unilaterally drew the line across the 38th parallel – with the former Soviet Union’s agreement – dividing an ancient country that had just suffered 35 years of Japanese colonial occupation. Koreans had no desire to be divided, or decision-making power to stop their country from being divided; now seven decades later the conflict on the Korean peninsula threatens peace in Asia-Pacific and throughout our world.

One of the greatest tragedies arising out of this man-made cold war politics and isolation is the tearing apart of Korean families and their physical separation from each other. In Korean culture, family relations are deeply important and many families have been painfully separated for 70 years. Although there was a period of reconciliation during the Sunshine Policy years between the two Korean governments where some families had the joy of reunion, but this has stopped due to a souring of relationships between North and South Korea. Also due to sanctions and isolationist policies put on by the international community, the North Korean people and their economy have continued to suffer. Whilst North Korea has come a long way from the 1990s when up to one million died from famine, many people are poor, and feel isolated and marginalized from South Korea and the outside world.

As members of the one human family, and in order to show human solidarity and empathize with our North Korean family, to bring global attention to the ‘forgotten’ Korean war, and to call for an engagement with North Korea, and a Peace Treaty, a group of international women came together to visit North/South Korea and walk across the DMZ.

On May 24, 2015, International Women’s Day for Peace and Disarmament, thirty women peacemakers from 15 countries, made a historic crossing of the two-mile-wide DMZ from North to South Korea.

The delegation included a feminist author/activist, Gloria Steinem; two Nobel peace laureates, Leymah Gbowee and myself; Christine Ahn, the coordinator (whose dream was to cross the DMZ); and long-time peace activists, human rights defenders, spiritual leaders, and Korean experts.

During our four-day visit to North Korea, before crossing the DMZ on May 24, we had the privilege and joy of meeting many North Korean women. During a peace symposium in Pyongyang, we listened as North Korean women spoke of their horrific experiences of war and division, and some of our delegation shared how they had mobilized to end conflict and build peace in their communities. We also participated in huge peace walks in Pyongyang and Kaesong, which many thousands of North Korean women in beautiful traditional Korean costumes participated in. The women carried banners calling for the Reunification of families and of Korea, a Peace Treaty and No War. The walks were deeply moving and especially in Kaesong where families came out onto their balconies to wave as we passed.

Need new approach of engagement and peace treaty

The four-day visit was excellently organized with visits to a hospital, schools, concerts, etc., and I personally was overwhelmed by the kindness shown by our hosts to our delegation. I must admit that before this visit, my first to the North, I never realized how deeply passionate the North Koreans are for Reunification with the South and how much they want to open the borders so they can welcome South Korean families to visit and normalize relationships. North Koreans told us that Korean people are one people. Though they have different political ideologies, they speak the same language, have the same culture, and share a painful history of war and division. North Koreans have been isolated and cut off from their families in South Korea and from the rest of the world, and sanctions enacted against them. As these policies of isolation have not solved any problems, our delegates believe that a new approach of engagement and a peace treaty are necessary.

Our walk brought renewed attention to the importance of world solidarity in ending the Korean conflict, particularly since the 1953 Armistice agreement was signed by North Korea (South Korea did not sign), China, and the United states on behalf of the UN command that included sixteen countries. It helped highlight the responsibility of the international community, whose governments were complicit in the division of Korea 70 years ago, to support Korea’s peaceful reconciliation and reunification.

The challenges of overcoming Korea’s division became apparent in the complex negotiations over our DMZ crossing between North and South Korea, as well as with the UN Command, which has formal jurisdiction over the DMZ. Although we had hoped to cross at Panmunjom, the ‘Truce village’ where the armistice was signed, we decided after South Korea and the UN Command denied our crossing that we would take the route agreed by all parties in the spirit of compromise lest our actions further strain the already tense North-South relationship.

In Seoul we met with some opposition. Although we did not meet with any heads of state or endorse any political or economic system, maintaining a neutral stance throughout, and yet it was apparent that divisions within South Korea itself manifested in some of the ideologically divided reception and reactions that we witnessed. However, the Peace walk in Panju, outside Seoul, and a concert, hosted by the mayor of Seoul, was well attended and we received a warm reception from many South Korean families. We were grateful to the South Korean women peacemakers who made a visit to Seoul possible, and to the women’s organizations, which hosted us so graciously in the North of Korea.

Our international women’s peace walk, we recognize, is only a beginning and we will continue our focus to increase civilian exchanges and women’s leadership, highlighting the obligation of all parties involved to decrease militarization and move towards a peace treaty. We therefore urge increased engagement at every level, civilian, economic, cultural, and academic, government, and especially citizen-to-citizen diplomacy in peacebuilding, as an alternative to military conflict, which is not an option.

During our talks in Korea, we stressed that peace is a necessary condition for the full realization of human rights, and that human rights and peace are integral to one other.

At the end of our visit, our delegation called global attention to the need for a Peace Treaty to finally end the Korean war, to unite families long separated by the Korean division, and to assure women’s participation in a peace process. (Reference to www.womencrossdmz.org)

Mairead Maguire
Born in 1944 in Belfast, Northern Ireland. Co-founded, with Betty Williams and Ciaran McKeown, The Peace People ( www.peacepeople.com), an organization which works for peace and non-violence in the world. Received, along with Ms. Williams, the Nobel Peace Prize in 1976. Has been active to bring about peace with non-violent actions in disputed areas such as Palestine and Afghanistan, and to work for disarmament.

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