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

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

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

Get rid of that watermelon!

Part 1: When I was a youngster I used to collect Confederate money, posters and photographs with caricatures of blacks, and "No blacks allowed signs." I loved the money because it was a reminder of how far the sorry Confederacy had fallen. I had one poster of a dark-skinned black boy munching on a watermelon. I would look at that small poster and wonder, "What in the world is wrong with anyone wanting to eat watermelon?" Yes, white people, I'm talking to you. Your parents, grandparents, and other ancestors who thought making fun of blacks for eating watermelon were crazy ! Even people who say that nothing has changed in race relations must acknowledge that the many stereotypes of blacks are no longer prevalent. But then, there are also some ready to remind us of days-gone-by by debunking stuff that doesn't need to be debunked today. According to the Washington Post: The sound you just heard was yet another racial stereotype going kersplat ! Some ...

Scam? Yo Momma!

Note: This was originally posted shortly after Jesse Lee Peterson's book was published, reposted in 2005, and now because of a fight between black customers and a Korean merchant in Dallas, Texas. Scam? Yo Momma! During the summer of 2002 I was an observer to a dispute between the Asian owners of a Chinese takeout and some of their black customers in Washington, D.C. The month-long boycott began when a local activist accused a cook at a Chinese takeout of attempting to cook a piece of chicken he had allegedly dropped on the floor. Despite the best efforts of human rights activist Dick Gregory, popular talk-show host Joe Madison, and Rev. Walter Fauntroy, the protestors were unable to coax any media to report on the protest. On some days there were, by my unofficial count, as many as 100 people chanting songs and marching. But one key person was missing: Rev. Jesse Jackson. It was important to the foot soldiers at the boycott that someone from the media report on...

March 26 is a special day (with Eunmi Park)

  March 26th is a special date in Eunmi Park's life, for two different reasons, as she will explain one day. It was also special for us today because we (FSI co-founders Casey Lartigue and Eunkoo Lee) got to spend it with her. We set a new record today: Eunmi spent almost seven hours at our office this lovely Saturday afternoon-turned-night. Most evenings when she records a video she is at our for three to five hours Today she recorded two more videos for her YouTube channel . After years of silence, Eunmi has posted six YouTube videos her first two weeks of speaking out and now has three more videos recorded to be uploaded next week. They run the range of emotions. One video is heart-warming and inspirational, one is infuriating, and the last one... I am not sure how to describe it without giving away the story, but there are some sensitive points in it. To get ready for the video, Eunmi first sends the script to FSI co-founder Eunkoo Lee. She translates it, then I (and sometimes ...

From nothing to something super special (2023-02-10)

FSI has moved into a better institutional neighborhood where we are the poorest in the area. In August 2022, I was elected as Chairman of the Board of Directors of Freedom Speakers International (FSI) and in January 2023 FSI achieved incorporation status in South Korea. This has meant that FSI must upgrade operations and structure and I am the one, as chairman and co-president, who will be blamed if it doesn’t happen. I really should not be the chairman, for a variety of reasons, but anyway I am. Eunkoo and I are not the typical executives of a growing organization. In addition to being mainly responsible for building and fundraising for the organization, we are the hands-on leaders who are constantly in contact with North Korean refugee speakers. We look forward to the day we can afford staff to handle many tasks. Until then we can expect to continue having more days like yesterday, even on Eunkoo’s birthday. 2023-02-10 Meeting #1: planning We started Eunkoo’s birthday with a planning...