Skip to main content

2015-04-25 First-time TNKR speaker

 


When I hear people say that South Koreans don't care about North Koreans, I have three main responses.

1) North Koreans are one of many groups that South Koreans don't care about.

2) The ones who do care, care a lot! Let's focus on getting them more involved rather focusing on the ones not involved.

3) It may just be that those of us engaged in activism for NK refugees need to try different methods rather than dismissing or denouncing others for not getting involved...

http://www.koreatimes.co.kr/www/news/nation/2015/01/626_155820.html

Last night, Saturday April 25, 2015, I met with two South Koreans to help a North Korean refugee get ready for her first public speech. Thanks so much, TNKR co-director Lee Eunkoo and TNKR coach Clare JH Yun!


It will be a challenge, will be this particular speaker's first speech in English. She is also a newcomer to English. But her determination, wow!

She is studying with a few coaches in the Teach North Korean Refugees project. I wish her well, and back up my wishes with action.

It was a wonderful time, and I'm looking forward to her telling her story publicly for the first time. She is determined to do it (we encouraged her to give the speech in Korean, but she wants to try it in English).

The two South Koreans translated her speech into English and then we had her practice it. My philosophy is that practice should be tougher than the actual game, so we pushed her a bit, discouraging her from reading the print out directly, having her read the speech from the teleprompter the way politicians and celebrities do.


Yes, it was one of those moments... two South Koreans taking time on a Saturday night, coming from Wonju and Ilsan to the southern part of Seoul, to do this as volunteers.

* * *

In my case, in the back of my mind, as I thought about the situation, I couldn't help also thinking: It would be a great night to be out swing dancing. Oops, focus, help her speech...

* * *

The Teach North Korean Refugees project has two parts--

Track 1 helps refugees improve their language skills (mainly Englsh). 

Track 2 helps them improve their public speaking skills.


www.lovetnkr.org/donate

2021 Reflections:

* This was April 2015, we had just started developing the public speaking project. I preferred it over tutoring, but continued with both projects until 2020.

* I had come up with a secret process to help North Korean refugee speakers build up confidence with public speaking.

* I should take it as a compliment that the idiot researchers, North Korea sympathizers, and brain-damaged people highlight me as the person getting North Korean refugees prepared for public speaking. Even when I posted photos of myself with others helping, I was the one singled out. As I wrote recently, I embrace their whining: "I AM THE MAN" and hope to do something even bigger to really make the whiners cry.

* From the beginning, we took care to make sure the speakers were more confident. And we also checked to be sure they really wanted to be on stage.

* Over the years, people would ask me if we were posting these speeches online. The answer was: NO! We give the speakers time to practice and gain confidence before we turn on the cameras. It is a stupid decision as an organization, but in the long-term, it is better for the refugees. When they are ready, then no one can stop them, and there will always be organizations ready to highlight speakers after we have gotten them prepared.

www.lovetnkr.org/donate

Popular posts from this blog

Radio, Harvard

I'll be a guest on XM 169 The Power this morning from 10:15 a.m. EST. I'll be talking about teaching English abroad. I'll be interviewed by Brian Higgins of MYB Talk . I sang last night for about five hours with friends but I'm sure my voice will be fine. Tuesday, I'll be interviewed by a Harvard University representative who wants my input on a new doctoral program for education leaders . It is a collaboration between the Harvard Graduate School of Education, the Harvard Business School and the Harvard Kennedy School. Some folks at the Booker Rising site are (again) reminding me that I'm not as smart as I think I am. CJL

Mentoring while Black (Korea Times 2/16/2023)

  Mentoring while Black by Casey Lartigue Jr. February 16, 2023 www.patreon.com/caseylartigue

Let's not shake hands (Korea Times, July 2, 2014) by Casey Lartigue, Jr.

Let's not shake hands By Casey Lartigue, Jr. While there are many things that I love about Korea, there are two things that drive me crazy. One is that, in my observation, most Korean men don't wash their hands after using the bathroom. I know some people get defensive about non-Koreans commenting in a negative way about Korean culture and life, that they want to attack the messenger and the messenger's native country. So I will start by clearly stating that many men in America don't wash their hands either. According to the Website  Stop Handshaking , while 92 percent of adults in America say they wash their hands in public restrooms, an observational study of 6,076 adults sponsored by the American Society for Microbiology (ASM) found that only 66 percent of men actually washed their hands in public restrooms (88 percent of women did so). As an aside, I am curious how they "observed" that many peopl...

North Korean defector seeks justice (Korea Times)

  It was international news when 12 North Korean waitresses and a male manager who worked at a restaurant operated by the North Korean regime in China arrived in South Korea in 2016.  The waitresses have mostly maintained a low profile. There have been numerous accusations and assertions, with some saying the waitresses didn't want to escape, some accused the Park Geun-hye administration of playing politics by releasing details of the case, etc., etc., etc. My blog at the Korea Times today features an exclusive interview with one of the former North Korean waitresses who filed a criminal case against the former manager. You can read about it here on the Korea Times website. https://www.koreatimes.co.kr/www/opinion/2023/02/728_345165.html   Keep in mind that there are many more facts to the case and that it is much deeper than this brief excerpt of her comments. She also shared legal documents that I shared with the Korea Times well in advance to give them time to review t...

Still writing (Korea Times, 2023-12-19)

Still writing by Casey Lartigue Jr. The Korea Times December 19, 2023 https://www.koreatimes.co.kr/www/opinion/2023/12/626_365284.html