In 2009, authorities discovered a Bible inside one family’s home. No preaching. No organizing. No resistance. Just a book.
In 2009, authorities discovered a Bible inside one family’s home. No preaching. No organizing. No resistance. Just a book. The punishment wasn’t a fine or a warning. The entire family was sentenced to life in prison — including their two-year-old child. This is how the system works. North Korea practices “guilt by association.” If one person is accused of religious activity, parents, children, siblings can disappear with them. Entire bloodlines are erased to prevent belief from spreading. Owning a Bible. Praying quietly. Contact with foreign churches. Any of it can mean forced labor camps. Officially, North Korea points to a handful of state-approved churches as proof of religious freedom. In reality, these sites are tightly controlled, monitored, and widely viewed as political showcases — not places of worship. Human rights groups estimate tens of thousands of Christians are currently imprisoned in camps under...