She Rejects Meat, People Reject Dictatorship

I had a dream.
–From The Vegetarian by Han Kang

South Korea is not only known for K-pop, or its electronic goods, in what is a modern, western-style, liberal capitalist democracy with American troops stationed in its backyard. It is also known for the infinite suffering of its girls, young and older women. Their suffering is beyond imagination.

The Imperial Japanese Army occupied it, using relentless, savage, bestiality, from 1910 to 1945. Soldiers would randomly pick up little girls or women from the streets, or homes, and then they would simply disappear.

The fact is thousands of girls and women were forcibly abducted and trapped forcibly in multiple hell-holes, in abysmal, unhygienic conditions, and brutally raped, non-stop, by Japanese male soldiers — for days, months, years. One survivor later testified that “not one minute would pass” — and she would be, yet again, savagely assaulted by the men. Again and again.

Branded ‘comfort women’ and legitimized by a nasty and pervert King Hirohito, who aligned with the fascists during World War II, only a few survived this life-time of sex slavery. No justice has reached them till now, neither has an authentic regret seemed to have passed the lips of the successive Japanese governments which followed the war.

Hirohito’s army’s barbarism is unimaginable. They are also infamous for what is called ‘The Rape of Nanking’ (Nanjing), then the capital of ‘Nationalist China’.

Widely documented, it is believed that in 1937, over a period of merely six weeks, the Japanese army raped/gang-raped tens of thousands of girls and women, and then murdered many of them in the most grotesque manner. Hundreds of thousands of ordinary people were butchered. Nanking was ravaged. Many Chinese women then found themselves trapped in the same hell-holes in Japan, as the brutalised sex slaves of South Korea.

The people of South Korea recently refused to accept martial law and dictatorship being imposed by a discredited and corrupt president, who has been hitherto an American lackey, and a darling of the US establishment. People have thronged the streets in Gwangju, Seoul and elsewhere, in protest, defending their democracy. Since then the president has been impeached and stripped of all powers. He can’t even travel out of the country. And in case found guilty after a trial, he may even face a death sentence — in South Korea, the head of State has no immunity.

In her book The Vegetarian, Han Kang tells us how the male gaze and male power (for instance in a marriage, or, inside a so-called ‘happy family’) is integral to the entrenched masculinity of patriarch, in what appears to be a modern, liberal society. The protagonist, a slender, sensitive and quiet woman, not at all self-conscious of the innate beauty of her mind, and her body, suddenly stops eating meat. She says, in explanation, that she has seen a dream. (The dream is replete with blood, flesh, meat, death, decadence, grotesque hedonism. It is a kind of revelation.)

So, in a staged family dinner, her father stuffs meat in her mouth, repeatedly, while her mother, sister, husband, sister’s husband, they all watch in silence. Home suddenly turns into a suffocating prison, a torture chamber. She still refuses to eat meat.

Her father stuffs more meat in her mouth. Repeatedly. She pukes it all out. Then he slaps her.

Her husband, a meaningless, clerical creature, narrates, “…in the instant that the force of the slap had knocked my wife’s mouth open, he’d managed to jam the pork in. As soon as the strength in Yeong ho’s arms was visibly exhausted, my wife growled and spat out the meat. An animal cry of distress burst her lips.”

“Get away!”

She picked up the kitchen knife. “Jaw clenched, her intent stare facing each one of us down in turn, my wife brandished the knife… Blood ribboned out of her wrist. The shock of red splashed over white china. As her knees buckled and she crumpled to the floor…”

Clearly, this is not the first time that she has been violently attacked by her father. As her elder sister tells in the last chapter, this was an everyday reality in the childhood and youth of her little sister, Yeong-hye.

ALSO READ: Daughters Against Dictators

One of the reasons this South Korean president was elected, I am told, is because a large chunk of men voted for him — in protest against the rising power, stature and dignity of women in public spaces and organisations. They hate women who don’t toe their line. And they want women to be as subservient, obedient and crushed, as was the protocol earlier.

Much before the latest mass protests, Han Kang suddenly emerged in our stream of consciousness like a quiet evening star twinkling in a twilight of gloom and doom. A South Korean novelist, she was given the Noble Prize for Literature for 2024 for her “intense poetic prose that confronts historical traumas and exposes the fragility of human life”.

Named after the Han river, she was born in the winter of 1970 in Gwangju, which led the first, massive, people’s uprising against the military dictatorship in1980, which rocked South Korea and ushered in democracy and freedom. Hundreds were butchered by the army, women assaulted, students killed in cold blood. But the people refused to be defeated; they picked up arms. They fought on the streets, in campuses, schools, lanes and bylanes, from inside homes. And they won!

I was invited to Gwangju almost 20 years ago to write about the nightmares, the memories, the tributes and the celebrations. I travelled on road from Seoul to Gwangju. I met, mostly, beautiful young men and women, so friendly, that one female college student, who was my guide, held my arm all the while she showed me a gallery of remembrances. In the market place, I asked two college girls about their memories. They took me to a cafe, and told me stories they had heard when they were kids. One of them had streams of tears falling down her face.

A society which forgets its great actors of resistance, will rot and repent. Not in Gwangju! Here, the memorial of the fighters is not ‘a graveyard of the dead’. It is a living testimony of gratitude. A photo, a living flower, a brief introduction adorns each grave, shaded with trees. Unknown visitors cry for unknown people, bent low in respect, touching their photos. Tears float on the pictures, like dew drops on the flowers. Han Kang’s book, Human Acts, which I am now reading, tells the Gwangju story.

(One can see the cracked mirrors of contemporary India, and a shiver runs down the spine. This country seems to have lost all its memories of the great sacrifices done by our revolutionaries and freedom fighters, many of them tortured, imprisoned and hanged. Plus, the killings. Remember the Jallianwala massacre?)

Based on an earlier literary work, The Fruit of My Woman, whose title tells a tale, Han Kang wrote The Vegetarian when she was in her early 30s. Meat is a metaphor in her book. So is fruit.

The book, lucidly translated by Deborah Smith, got her the International Booker Prize in 2016. And, then, suddenly, Korean literature seemed to have become the flavour of the world.

Author Ellen Mattson, a member of the Nobel Committee for Literature, said during the award-giving ceremony on December 10, 2024: Two colours meet in Han Kang’s writing: white and red. The white is the snow that falls in so many of her books, drawing a protective curtain between the narrator and the world, but white is also the colour of sorrow, and of death. Red stands for life, but also for pain, blood, the deep cuts of a knife. While her voice can be seductively soft, it speaks of indescribable cruelty, of irreparable loss. Blood flows from the bodies piled up after the massacre, darkens, becomes an appeal, a question that the text can neither answer nor ignore: how should we relate to the dead, the abducted, the disappeared? What can we do for them? What do we owe them? The white and the red symbolize a historical experience that Han returns to in her novels.”

Indeed, in Yeong-Hye’s dream, we share our hidden longings and sensuality. In her shackled freedom, we can feel our own unfreedom. And in her refusal to eat meat, we can taste in our mouth, and in our deepest desires, the forbidden fruit, eternally denied to us.

National Mourning Over Seoul Stampede

South Korean’s Yoon Declares National Mourning Over Seoul Stampede

South Korean President Yoon Suk-yeol on Sunday announced a period of national mourning and ordered the lowering of flags over a deadly Seoul stampede during Halloween celebrations that killed at least 151 people, including 19 foreigners, media reports said.

At least 151 people were killed and 82 others were injured in a deadly stampede during Halloween celebrations in Seoul’s Itaewon district on Saturday, South Korea’s Yonhap news agency reported citing authorities.
A day after the stampede, Yoon in a live address to the nation from the presidential office, said, “It’s truly horrific.” He said that this tragedy should never have happened.

“As president, who is responsible for the people’s lives and safety, my heart is heavy and I struggle to cope with my grief,” he said adding, “the government will designate the period from today until the accident is brought under control as a period of national mourning and will place top priority in administrative affairs in recovery and follow-up measures,” reported South Korea’s Yonhap news agency.

He also ordered all government offices to lower their flags to half-mast, according to his office.

Expressing condolences over the deaths, Yoon wished the injured a speedy recovery. During his address, Yoon said the government will ensure support for the funeral preparations of the people who lost their lives in the deadly incident.

Speaking further, he said that the government is committed to fully mobilizing emergency medical services to treat patients, including by assigning public servants individually to those requiring assistance, the South Korean agency reported.

“The most important thing is to determine the cause of the accident and prevent similar accidents,” he said. “We will thoroughly investigate the cause of the accident and make fundamental improvements so that similar accidents do not happen again in the future.”

The country’s interior ministry and other relevant ministries will do an emergency review of all Halloween celebrations and other local festivals in a bid to ensure safety, he added.

Moreover, Yoon visited the site of the accident and later headed toward central Seoul to preside over a government response meeting.

During a briefing, Choi Seong-beom, the head of the fire department in Yongsan, said the nationalities of the foreigners who were killed in South Korea include those from Iran, Uzbekistan, China, and Norway.

The agency also reported that the victims in their 20s accounted for the age group most affected by the horrific Seoul Halloween stampede. Moreover, the agency, citing the Seoul metropolitan government, said on Sunday it has received about 270 reports of missing persons related to the deadly stampede during Halloween parties in the Itaewon district.

The incident reportedly occurred when a large group of people rushed to an Itaewon bar after hearing an unidentified celebrity was visiting there, Al Jazeera reported citing the local media. Social media footage showed several people being assisted by rescue officials and private citizens at the scene, and many rescue officials performing CPR on people lying in poor condition on the streets.

The packed Halloween festivities in South Korea’s capital of Seoul took place after Covid restrictions were removed, the local officials said. The festivities marked the participation of more than a lakh visitors and the number of casualties is only expected to rise.

Emergency officials received at least 81 calls from people with breathing difficulty, “South Korea’s Yonhap News Agency reported.

A large crowd pushed forward on a narrow street during Halloween festivities, resulting in dozens needing first aid. South Korea’s President Yoon Suk-yeol ordered the dispatch of the emergency medical team to the area and said hospital beds should be prepared to minimize casualties, his office said.

Numerous people had trouble breathing when the chaotic stampede occurred as dozens were seen giving CPR to people lying lifeless on streets post-incident. South Korean President Yoon Suk-Yeol presided over an emergency response meeting Sunday over the deadly stampede, as per the officials.

“Shortly after the accident, Yoon came to the presidential office in Yongsan and presided over a response meeting related to the Seoul Itaewon Halloween accident,” the presidential office said.

“The top priority is transporting and rescuing the patients and providing prompt medical treatment for the affected people,” local media reported quoting Yoon as saying. Authorities are still looking into the exact cause of the accident as the investigation is underway.

Emergency forces were dispatched following the crowd surge which resulted in fatalities. Firefighters and police officers also reached the Itaewon neighborhood in Seoul to bring the situation under control. (ANI)

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Cardiac Arrest At Halloween

50 People Suffer Cardiac Arrest At Halloween Stampede In South Korea

About 50 people suffered from cardiac arrest on Saturday in a stampede in Seoul as a huge crowd flocked into the central district of the South Korean capital to celebrate Halloween, reported Yonhap news agency, citing Reuters.

Fire authorities were administrating CPR to at least 50 people in the Itaewon district as of 11:30 p.m. (1430 GMT) on Saturday, according to the news agency.
Emergency officials received at least 81 calls from people with breathing difficulty, ” South Korea’s Yonhap News Agency

Social media footage showed several people being assisted by rescue officials and private citizens at the scene.

A large crowd pushed forward on a narrow street during Halloween festivities, resulting in dozens needing first aid.

South Korea’s President Yoon Suk-yeol ordered the dispatch of the emergency medical team to the area and said hospital beds should be prepared to minimize casualties, his office said.

He also instructed the Health Ministry to swiftly deploy disaster medical assistance teams and secure beds in a nearby hospital to treat the injured.

Authorities are still looking into the exact origins and the cause of this accident. (ANI)

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