This month marks the 70th anniversary of the end of the Korean War. If anyone has studied the history of the world, or even the history of a country, any country, they understand that there’s always someone to fight. South Korea is a testament to that fact.
Photo as Metaphor
When I visited South Korea a few years ago, I placed the War Memorial of Korea in Seoul at the top of my list of places to visit. The memorial exceeded all expectations. The massive complex covered the beginning of the country―around 3,000 years ago―to the present. There were timelines, artifacts, photos, weaponry, and various war memorabilia. This article, however, isn’t really about the War Memorial of Korea, and yet, to an extent, it is.As I concluded my hours-long visit at the memorial, I walked through the open-air exhibit, where past and modern military armaments―planes, tanks, missiles, etc.―were organized. As I photographed the many exhibits, there was one photo that has remained logged in my memory—a kind of metaphorical depiction of the emotional and mental state of South Korea. A necessary state. To me, it defines what’s required for South Korea to move forward. Yet this requirement also ensures that, in some ways, the country can never move forward.
The photo is of four elementary-aged boys, perhaps 5, no more than 6 years old. They stand in front of an old M4 Sherman tank, the type used during the Korean War. All four salute, while two of them additionally hold out their other hand as a gun. It struck me that this is the necessary indoctrination these young South Koreans must undergo.
I can perceive the uneasiness of reading the phrase “necessary indoctrination,” especially concerning military matters, but not all indoctrination is wrong. Not all propaganda is inaccurate or deceptive.
While watching these boys for a moment, I remember asking myself if they really understood what they were doing. Did they really understand the demands of the salute or, even greater, the demands of the gun?
A Split History
Since the end of World War II, Korea has been split in two. The aforementioned statement that Korea was founded 3,000 years ago may be astounding, but it’s nonetheless true. Korea had been a country of stability, peace, and isolation for the majority of its existence. It wasn’t until an approximate 75-year span (1876–1953) that Korea had its identity stripped and was then slowly but surely ripped apart by differing ideologies.North Korea and South Korea desire to unify, although their methods for unification vary significantly. North Korea tried for the first few decades to unify through force, barbarism, and assassinations. South Korea has attempted through more diplomatic means, while struggling―at times violently―to govern its own people as it grew to understand democracy after millennia of monarchy.
Legitimacy Through Nuclear Power
So how many more rulers will the Kim Dynasty have before it’s removed? That’s the question that’s impossible to answer. And why is it impossible to answer? Because of North Korea’s nuclear capabilities. There’s no easy solution. Kim Jong Un has connected the legitimacy of the Kim Dynasty to its military might, and removing that connection would require removing Kim Jong Un.I don’t believe you will ever have one without the other, primarily because North Korea, specifically its regime, continues to embrace its own indoctrination—an indoctrination that the Cold War is ongoing. It’s an idea contrived by the Kim regime and propagated to the populace. North Koreans can hardly be expected to disbelieve it, having remained so long in strict isolationism from the rest of the world. More emphatically, they must believe it, or else be thrown into a labor camp.
A Necessary Indoctrination
And here we have this photo: South Korean school children standing in front of a tank at the War Memorial of Korea, saluting and making finger guns. The symbolism is unmistakable, practically heavy-handed. But it all makes sense, even if the children are amiss to the magnitude of their gestures.As I noted before, not all indoctrination is wrong. Some indoctrination is necessary. It isn’t just about fighting; it’s about understanding what lies at the back door.
For the rest of the world, it’s a reminder that there’s “no end state, no final peace ... there will always be an opponent with whom to contend.”