Twenty-one people, including 19 children were reported to have been killed in a gun-related violence at a
primary school of Texas in the United States on May 24 last. Earlier, on May
19, there was an exchange of fire following a quarrel among teenagers in
downtown Chicago, leaving two killed and eight others wounded.
In the meantime, completely
contrary things happened to the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea. The
country moved to the higher-level emergent anti-epidemic system after the
malignant virus COVID-19 entered its territory. Many officials, working people
and even students and children voluntarily donated food grains, money and
medicines to families in difficult conditions. Such beautiful deeds of helping one
another are commonplace in the DPRK.
In late 2020, two workers who
had been badly burned in an accident were taken to the Hamhung City Hospital in
the eastern part of the country. On hearing that skin grafting operations would
be conducted, their relatives and colleagues rushed to the hospital. But they
were late. Thirty-three doctors and nurses of the hospital had already grafted
patches of their skin to the patients. None of them had known the two patients’
names or met them before.
In the DPRK, one can easily
hear the phrases a large harmonious family or a large harmonious
socialist family. These words mean that all the members of the society live
with warm affection and tender feeling like family members.
In this country, if a mishap
happens to someone, their neighbours, colleagues and even those who have never
met them willingly help them. This is a trait of the Korean society.
This trait had already formed and spread across the country in
what the Korean people call the Chollima era in the mid-20th
century. The workers of a work team in the then Kangson Steel Plant sincerely
helped those who were lagging behind, in the course of which they brought about
collective innovations, thus turning out 120 000 tons of rolled steel with a
blooming mill with the annual rated capacity of 60 000 tons.
A woman worker of the then
Pyongyang Silk Mill bestowed warm affection and tenderness on her fellow women
workers who had poor skills to bring them up into skilled workers and labour
innovators. She moved to other work teams, three times so as to turn those that
were lagging behind, leading ones.
These examples rapidly spread
across society, helping the people to understand that a beautiful and noble
life is one which are dedicated to society and the collective and leading them
to live such a life. The slogan which was most prevalent among the people in
the era was “One for all and all for one!”
Thanks to the ruling Workers’
Party of Korea’s policy of putting forward those who display the ennobling
mental and moral traits of society and the collective, the trait could be
continued one century into the next.
The WPK set the
transformation of man, nature and society as an important goal in building
socialism. It is a consistent policy of the WPK to educate and lead those who
lag behind and cause trouble, and make all the people live harmoniously and
become patriots who devote themselves to the prosperity of the country.
This policy has been
translated into reality, in the course of which many examples have been
created. An unmarried young woman is looking after several orphans and numerous
young people have volunteered to work in difficult and challenging sectors away
from their homes.
Such deeds were found when the high-level emergency anti-epidemic system was put in place in the
country. Many doctors and nurses visited the households and patients under
their charge before their ill children and husbands. Workers and officials of
many factories worked day and night to send medicines and foodstuffs to the
people who were suffering from the malignant disease. Some people disposed of
their family property to prepare goods needed by those in hostels, students’
dormitories, orphanages and baby homes; and still some others selflessly shared
their food grain, subsidiary foodstuffs and daily necessities with families and
neighbours in need.
This can never be imagined in
the capitalist society in which everyone cares nothing but themselves.
The society in which all
people form an integrated whole and live with affection and love for others,
this is the socialist society of the Korean style, which the Western media
describe as a “human rights desert” and “hell.”
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