What Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn can teach Yeonmi Park (and us) about freedom

North Korean defector and Columbia University student Yeonmi Park drew considerable media attention for her comments earlier this month equating academic freedom at America’s Ivy League schools to North Korea. “”I expected that I was paying this fortune, all this time and energy, to learn how to think,” she said. “But they are forcing you to think the way they want you to think. I realized, wow, this is insane. I thought America was different but I saw so many similarities to what I saw in North Korea that I started worrying.” Conservative commentators Sean Hannity and Mike Huckabee urged Park to go on a bus tour of U.S. colleges to share her warning.

Ms. Park customarily speaks in hyperbole in her public comments and usually attracts interest from media outlets where those kind of dramatic comments capture headlines. Yet beyond the hyperbole, Ms. Park’s comments recall those of another dissident from a communist country who spoke at another Ivy League school 43 years ago this month:

The American Intelligentsia lost its nerve and as a consequence thereof danger has come much closer to the United States. But there is no awareness of this…. 

How has this unfavorable relation of forces come about? How did the West decline from its triumphal march to its present sickness?

But this dissident, Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn, did not go on in that same speech to contend for a bus tour urging college students to fight “cancel culture” and reclaim the freedoms that once made the country great. In fact, Solzhenitsyn went on in that speech to anger his hearers by claiming that if one looked back to the root, to the very fountainhead, of Western liberty one would find not a greatness to reclaim but rather a fundamental mistake necessitating repentance:

Have there been fatal turns and losses of direction in [the West’s] development? It does not seem so. The West kept advancing socially in accordance with its proclaimed intentions, with the help of brilliant technological progress. And all of a sudden it found itself in its present state of weakness.

This means that the mistake must be at the root, at the very basis of human thinking in the past centuries. I refer to the prevailing Western view of the world which was first born during the Renaissance and found its political expression from the period of the Enlightenment. It became the basis for government and social science and could be defined as rationalistic humanism or humanistic autonomy: the proclaimed and enforced autonomy of man from any higher force above him. It could also be called anthropocentricity, with man seen as the center of everything that exists.

The problem, to borrow an image from another dissident, is not that sand has encrusted the West’s foundation of rock and needs a thorough sandblasting to return it to its pristine beauty. Rather, the West’s rock-encrusted foundation has revealed itself, after the wind of centuries, to be fundamentally sand, and a new foundation is required.

As the reaction to Solzhenitsyn and Yeonmi Park show, this kind of talk is not received well in the West. We descendants of the Enlightenment will readily admit that freedom has seen better days, and these days we are eager to debate what and who are responsible for the decline and how to restore the glory we are certain existed in a Western golden age. But to admit that the Enlightenment project itself–what Solzhenitsyn calls “the very basis of human thinking in the past centuries”–is a colossal misstep, not a promising advance, and that what is required of us is repentance, not recovery, and that the worst of our problems rests not in the encroachment of our ideological opponents but in the very best thoughts and practices that we and our ideological heroes have mustered, this is a level of self-examination and humility that eludes our fallen human nature. Self-protection and pride leads us to mock Solzhenitsyn and Park: “If things are so bad here, why don’t you go back to where you came from?”

But by far the most common response exhibited by dissidents who come to the West and recognize its shortcomings is not to “go back” but instead to commit suicide. North Korean defectors have a suicide rate three times that of South Koreans. The rate of suicidal thoughts is also tragically higher.

The lifetime prevalence of suicidal ideation (28.3%), suicide plans (13.3%), and suicide attempts (17.3%) among NKDs are reported to be higher than the rates reported in a nationwide sample of SKNs (suicidal ideation: 15.4%, suicide plans: 3.0%, and suicide attempts: 2.4%). Moreover, the rates of suicidal thoughts and behaviors (suicidal ideation, suicidal plans, or suicide attempts) among NKDs are much higher (31.3%) than the nationwide prevalence in the Republic of Korea, Western countries, and Asian countries, which range from 0.9 to 15.9%.

Furthermore, severe depression, anxiety, PTSD, or somatization symptoms in NKDs have been found to be negatively correlated with their overall satisfaction with living in the Republic of Korea. Thus, a strategy that focuses on relieving psychiatric symptoms in traumatized refugees may help them to adapt to their new environment.

Three agencies ― the Settlement Support Center for North Korean Refugees (Hanawon), the Korea Hana Foundation (KHF) and the Korea Suicide Prevention Center (KSPC)–have joined together to create a suicide prevention program for North Korean defectors. Paik Jong Woo, the director of the KSPC, says, “During their escape, those defecting from the North are often exposed to traumatic events, and even in South Korea, many of them have difficulties adjusting to the new culture.”

But Paik also admits that “mental health professionals in South Korea did not possess a full understanding of the defectors’ circumstances”.

Is it possible that the difficulties may not be in them but rather in us?

That is, is it possible that dissidents from Communist countries–like North Korean Yeonmi Park and Russian Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn–may be the canaries in the Enlightenment coal mine? Those who stake their lives on the claim “Give me liberty or give me death” may be the first to recognize that freedom the way it has been explained and bequeathed to us by our Enlightenment forefathers is not capable of sustaining life, nor of providing a particularly rewarding meaning to it. As Solzhenitsyn himself recognized in his Harvard speech, the problem is not that freedom once could sustain us but now has decayed. The problem is that the seed of autonomy that looked so promising when it was planted centuries ago is, now that it is in full blossom, bearing fruit that is not so different from other ideologies after all.

The solution for the West, as Solzenitsyn could tell Yeonmi Park, Sean Hannity, and Mike Huckabee, is not a finger-pointing, heritage reclaiming bus tour. Neither is the solution for North Korean defectors and other dissidents a suicide prevention program of cultural adjustment.

Instead, the solution is to recognize it is freedom in Christ, not freedom of religion nor political freedom nor academic freedom, that alone sets us free, indeed. Christianity does not require an Enlightenment operating system on which to run. In fact, as one recent study showed, Christianity may actually be hampered, not strengthened, in Enlightenment cultures that privilege Christianity in their founding ethos. The same study contended that persecution of Christianity may be more conducive to its growth than privilege.

In short, religious and other freedoms neither preserve Christianity nor pave the way for its growth. This does not mean that they are bad. But it does mean that we Christians are not reliant on them, nor are we called to defend such freedoms as articles of our faith. Instead, we are called to articulate the difference between freedom in Christ and freedom the way the world gives (and restrains, and takes away). At minimum, we are called not to confuse these two concepts of freedom, or to trust in their inherent compatibility.

We can no longer say (if we ever could) that living in societies that exhibit Enlightenment-rooted freedoms is of course always better than living in societies where such freedoms are lacking. This is not because we suspect that another -ism or -ology could do or has done better. It is because we know that Christianity engages another, wholly other, dimension of freedom–one that cannot be diminished or enhanced by any instantiation of freedom this world can offer. After all, when Satan shows Jesus “all the kingdoms of the world and their splendor” and says to him, ” “All this I will give you, if you will bow down and worship me”, freedom-enhancing democracies are not excluded from the offer.

On a personal note, I would observe that among the most free people I have ever met are North Korean underground Christians. Despite living under rule that is generally tyrannical and specifically hostile to Christians, they rarely exhibit suicidal ideations. By contrast, some of the least free people I have ever met are former North Korean underground Christians who have escaped to South Korea. Mr. Bae, my co-author for the book, These are the Generations, a chronicle of three generations of underground Christians in North Korea, has remarked to me on several occasions that he remembers his time in prison in North Korea wistfully. “Back then I could focus on God all day, and he was very close to me,” he once told me. “But here in South Korea, there is so little time for God. I must apply all my time and energy to earning money for my family.” He told me that at times he wishes he was back in a prison in North Korea suffering for his faith.

I do not urge Mr Bae to undertake a campus tour decrying South Korea’s slide into socialism. I do not urge him to sign up for care from South Korea’s anti-suicide coalition. Instead, I affirm that by Christian standards he has spoken sensibly. But I tell him that the solution is neither to go back to a North Korean prison or to end his life. The solution is to recognize that it is often more difficult to be faithful to Christ in a society founded on Enlightenment freedoms than it is to serve Christ in a failed state. But Christ calls us to serve as his faithful witnesses wherever we find ourselves. And wherever that is, he is there with us, and he will be always, even unto the end of the age.

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Gaza’s only Protestant church, damaged in latest Israel/Hamas conflict, carries on

The building of Gaza’s only Protestant church sustained minor damage in the latest round of fighting between Israel and Hamas, but the one dozen remaining congregation members are continuing the church’s sizeable outreach ministries despite the risk.

The Lord is miraculously preserving a witness for himself in Gaza—that is the only possible explanation for the continued survival of Gaza Baptist Church. There are now fewer than 1,100 Christians living in Gaza amidst 2 million Muslim Palestinians. There is one Catholic church, one Orthodox church, and one Protestant Church: Gaza Baptist.

The church was founded in 1954 by Southern Baptist missionaries. Hanna Massad, who converted from Greek Orthodoxy to the Baptist faith in his youth, became the church’s first Gazan-born pastor, in 1987. The church grew to around 200 members by the early 2000’s and were meeting in a six-story building, which they still use. But in 2007, Hamas took over the Gaza Strip, and Christians became subject to the severe religious restrictions of Hamas and the Islamic Jihad. Christians began to flee the territory. Pastor Massad himself was forced to relocate to the United States due to a series of violent attacks on the church’s building and members. A church-related bookstore, the only Christian bookstore in Gaza, was firebombed. Rami Ayyad, one of the church leaders, who also served as the bookstore’s manager, was martyred in an execution-style killing.

Today only about a dozen church members have been able to remain in Gaza, but Pastor Massad leads a weekly worship service via Zoom Conference call that brings together the local Gaza group with Gazan Christians who have been forced to flee from the territory. Each week the Zoom call strengthens the remaining local believers by keeping them connected in worship with the church’s ‘diaspora’ population in Australia, Europe, America, and across the Middle East.

The local church members continue to have an impact on Gaza that is far larger than their number. The church operates a school called the Lighthouse School, through which they make a tremendous Christian witness to the community. In 2006 they opened a library for the community, containing many Christian books. They distribute food and other aid to families in need, both Christian and Muslim. They help widows and orphans. There is even a support group for widows, which is run by the widow of martyr Rami Ayyad.

Voice of the Martyrs organizations worldwide have supported the church and its various ministries since 2007, when persecution intensified. Persecution of Christians in Gaza goes back to the time of the Roman empire, yet the Lord has never in history left himself without a witness in that region. But the fewer the believers that have been able to remain and survive, the more important it is for us to care for them. Most recently, Voice of the Martyrs Korea provided funding for the widows’ support group led by Pauline Ayyad. Now, as the church repairs its building from the latest round of conflict and as it continues its outreaches in these difficult times, we are inviting Christians around the world to join us in standing with them once again. So Voice of the Martyrs Korea is designating the donations to our Families and Martyrs and Prisoners fund on through the end of June for Gaza Baptist Church and all of its associated outreach ministries.

Those who are interested in helping the Christians in Gaza can make their donation at www.vomkorea.com/en/donation or give via electronic transfer to:

국민은행 (KB Bank) 463501-01-243303

예금주 (Account holder): (사)순교자의소리

Please include the phrase “FOM” on the donation (for “Families of Martyrs”).

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A Chinese pastor teaches the benefits of persecution to his congregation in the midst of their suffering

The administrative detention of two ministers of Beijing’s Zion Church by Chinese authorities earlier this month has prompted a response from Zion’s pastor: A letter to his congregation teaching the spiritual benefits of persecution.

“Those in chains for Christ will be completely free in Christ,” wrote Pastor “Ezra” Jin Mingri, in an open letter to Zion Church members on May 1, co-signed by the church’s elders and other pastors. The letter describes the April 28 arrest of Zion Church minister Qie Jiafu and his sentencing two days later to 10-day detention. The detention of another Zion Church minister, Huang Chunzi, who was detained until May 9, was later discovered after the church released the letter.

Pastor Ezra’s letter is extraordinary by modern standards, but in fact it is a good example of what was very common in the early days of the church, including the letters we see in the Bible: Pastors writing to their congregations, often from prison, helping them understand and rejoice in persecution and not be afraid.

We regularly receive letters at VOM Korea from persecuted pastors asking for our help with legal or political intervention in their cases. Such requests are important, but they can also overlook the pastor’s role to teach the congregation that persecution is an unavoidable part of the Christian life and that it is often God’s catalyst for individual and congregational growth.

In his letter, Pastor Ezra directs the congregation to pray that God uses the detention of Minister Qie Jiafu to bring revival to Zion Church. He assures the congregation that Minister Qie Jiafu himself is certainly being spiritually revived by God through his detention. And he says that persecution raises a question for believers: “What cost [price] does our faith deserve?”

It is a good question not only for Zion Church members but also for us.

Zion Church was one of Beijing’s largest megachurches, gathering more than 1,500 in attendance on Sundays until September 2018, at which point the building was shut down by authorities. Since then, the church has met outdoors and in small groups in believer’s homes, with authorities periodically detaining church leaders for various alleged offenses.

But Pastor Ezra’s letter shows something that we are seeing across China today in the churches where the Communist authorities are cracking down the hardest; namely, those persecuted churches are become much stronger spiritually. As Pastor Ezra says in his letter, quoting the Apostle Paul in 1 Corinthians 15:58, they are becoming “steadfast and immovable”. Church members are learning to worship indoors, outdoors, in their homes, in the streets, with ministers, without ministers, with their family members, and even in prison. It’s certainly not the outcome the authorities were expecting or hoping for. But it’s an outcome that we Christians should have been able to predict from reading the Bible.

The full congregational letter from Pastor Jin to Zion Church follows.

Dear Brothers and Sisters in Christ,

Greetings from your grateful pastors,

The persecution which began in 2018 seems to have reemerged in Spring 2021. We have learned that many churches and Christians across the country have been raided. So grateful that God uses us—a small vessel and lets us have share in the hardship.

On the evening of April 28, Chinese Communist Party (CCP) security agents seized Minister Qie Jiafu. During the early morning of April 30, officials announced that he would be administratively detained for 10 days. Today marks the first day of his custody at the detention center. Many faithful stewards and maids of God in China have walked this path before Qie, and their path was tougher than today’s. We will witness that people who tread the path [of persecution] will bear good changes, for instance, God will refine their hearts, and build their characters. He will increase their love for Christ and hope for His kingdom.

We believe that our Lord is shaping our beloved Brother in this way.

Not only that, we with our detained Brothers and their families in Christ, pray. May the Lord answer our prayers to encourage them, comfort them, and accompany them. We look forward to the great joy of reuniting with them.

Please intercede with us for the following three prayer requests:

Pray that we may meet with Brother Qie soon. We went to the designated detention center, but officials couldn’t find Brother Qie’s information in their system. Detention center staff said that no visits nor phone calls are allowed during custody. Also, guards will not allow anyone to deliver anything to him nor deposit money (a small amount of money for the use at the detention center) on his account. We are making efforts in the hope that we will see Brother Qie soon.

Thank God for the protection over Brother Qie’s family, particularly the peace God has granted to his wife. His family has cancelled some of their big plans because of detention. At this time, Brother Qie cannot fulfill his responsibilities to his family. May the Lord give his family wisdom and stamina. Also, pray that the Lord dispatch many angels to help them.

Pray that God uses this recent turmoil to revive us. The event as such reminds us that spiritual warfare is fiercely taking place throughout this land. God compels each of us to think: What on Earth do we believe? What cost [price] does our faith deserve?

As long as we can breathe, we must preach the gospel, pastor flocks of sheep, and serve the world. Let us not forget the reminder from the disciples: “Therefore, my beloved brothers, be steadfast, immovable, always abounding in the work of the Lord, knowing that in the Lord your labor is not in vain.” [1 Cor 15:58]

Jin Mingri, lead pastor of Zion Church
Pastors, Elders, and Committee of Zion Church

The release of Minister Huang Chunzi on May 9 and Minister Qie Jiafu on May 10 was confirmed by contacts in China.

Individuals interested in donating to Voice of the Martyrs Korea’s work in partnership with the house church Christians of China can visit www.vomkorea.com/en/donation or give via electronic transfer to:

KB Bank: 463501-01-243303

Account Holder: (사)순교자의소리

Please note “China” on the transfer.

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