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Propaganda, fear and faith: how God saved this North Korean

Propaganda, fear and faith: how God saved this North Korean

Timothy from North Korea grew up scared of Christians. When he escaped the country, he ended up at a safe house which had a Bible and a cross. It terrified him – but it proved to be the start of his journey towards knowing Jesus. This is his story, and why safe houses – which Open Doors helps fund – are so vital in helping sustain the North Korean church. Please note that Timothy’s name has been changed for security reasons.

“The day I escaped North Korea, it was night. I crossed the border with other people, and the water was not deep enough that I needed to swim; we just walked.”

Timothy first experienced life outside of North Korea when he was in his late teens. He made his way across the Tumen River, which separates North Korea and China, walked through the mountainous terrain, and found himself in a Chinese city. “As I walked through the city, life looked completely different than I ever imagined or I had ever seen,” Timothy says. “And it was spectacular: different colours of lights, people wearing different styles.”

Timothy was amazed. Brought up on a steady diet of propaganda, he believed North Korea was the best country in the world, but suddenly it seemed so drab and dated. 

Timothy had come to China for one primary reason: to survive. He’d grown up a street child during the brutal famine of the 1990s, and he wasn’t allowed to get a job or join the army because of his status in North Korea. He had no hope for the future, and the only path forward he saw was to leave North Korea and try to see if he could find a life elsewhere. What he didn’t expect was that decision would lead him to Jesus.

A place of comfort… and terror?

When Timothy arrived in China, he wasn’t sure where he would stay or what he would do. But soon he met someone who offered to let him stay at an apartment. Later, he found out this was a Christian safe house run by a missionary. 

The apartment had two rooms, and Timothy shared the space with seven or eight children, all North Korean orphans. But the first thing he saw when he entered the home was a Bible and a cross. And that terrified him. “It scared me because, in my understanding from a brainwashed education in North Korea, the cross means a curse,” he remembers. “In North Korea, Christianity itself is from the enemy, who uses Christianity as a kind of tool. Christianity is mainly a spy group. That's what I was taught in North Korea – and that when missionaries and pastors used to come to Korea, they kidnapped and sold kids into trafficking.”

He was so scared he didn’t stay at the home for long. “It was meant to be a safe house, but I didn't have a safe feeling there because of what I was taught in North Korea,” he says. “But it was actually the best place. If I had stayed there, I wouldn’t have had to go through all the difficulties I faced later. It was God's opportunity, but I ran away from the house because I didn't feel safe.”

One thing the missionary told him stuck with him – even after he was captured and sent back to North Korea. “If you are in difficult, dangerous situations, you can call God,” the missionary said to Timothy. “When I was arrested later, I screamed, ‘God help me, and rescue us.’ But no one was there.”

Timothy was convinced the missionary had lied – that there was no God. When he escaped North Korea a further time, and again was arrested, he was placed in a Chinese prison where he met a Christian. The man showed Timothy how to read the Bible and encouraged him to try praying again. Since he was in prison and in a desperate situation – he felt sure he would be killed if he was sent back to North Korea again – Timothy decided to give it another try. “I prayed many times a day because I was, in fact, desperate,” he says. “And I told Him, if He gave me freedom, I promised Him I would follow Him with the entirety of my life.”

And eventually, God answered Timothy’s prayers. “China finally (and rarely) agreed to deport our group to the Philippines, from where I could go to a democratic country,” he says. “I believe it was the answer to my prayers.” Timothy was able to make his way to the United Kingdom, where he now lives. Open Doors has supported him and he’s become an advocate for the secret church in North Korea.

Significance of safe houses

Timothy sees the vital role played by safe houses in the equipping of the North Korean church. “What’s been happening through the safe houses is the provision of teaching and training, Bibles and other materials, as well as basic things like food, shelter and clothes,” Timothy says. “The North Korean Christians continue to smuggle those things and that knowledge into North Korea. If there were no safe houses, there would be no place for the equipping of North Korean evangelism. Having these safe houses in China these days is really, really difficult. I wouldn't even want to think about what would happen if there were not safe houses.

“There are still safe houses in China, and they have to be there for our persecuted brothers and sisters. They are stepping stones for a free worshipping North Korea one day,” Timothy says. 

The success of these safe houses – which equip and strengthen North Korean believers to return to North Korea and strengthen the church – would not be possible without your support and prayers. Thank you for faithfully standing with our North Korean family. 

Source Open Doors

Photo: pxfuel