Michael Palin in
North Korea: Channel 5 TV
‘Eerie’
music in the early morning over the capital, Pyongyang. Not a good start for an
attempt to depict the true Democratic People’s Republic of Korea (DPRK) I
thought, as I had stayed in the same fine hotel as Palin some years before and
I had not heard it.
“Do you think they put in the music
afterwards?” asked my mother-in-law.
Probably not I thought, that seemed a bit too blatant and it has been a
long time since I was there.
But somehow that incident seemed to set
the scene – as perhaps it was meant to. What we saw could hardly be faulted:
modern Pyongyang with its excellent schools, health care and leisure
facilities, people enjoying themselves in their time off.
But we were kept aware of the
‘restrictions’ placed on Palin by the ‘sinister State’ behind the apparently affable
guides and unseen minders. The implication being that there were all these
terrible things going on behind the scenes but they were not allowed to show us
them.
They could not show us them because they
did not exist – whether they believed they existed is another matter. Towards
the end of the second programme, Palin himself seems to have his doubts.
The DPRK is different from Britain and the
West, and it may seem strange to many people here. One of Palin’s guides tried
to explain the different attitude to their leaders. Our ‘leaders’ in the West
are the result of the chaos and strife of capitalism, where dog eats dog and
the devil take the hindmost.
Their leaders are the result of the
collective struggle of a people who have thrown off imperialism and then
capitalism and its drive for ever more profit. Yes, they have had immense
problems and made many sacrifices, and they still have problems, but their
great successes have forged a collective socialist society quite different from
our own.
I don’t think Palin really understood
this, which is a great pity, but if he had would the sinister powers of our
society have allowed him to show it?
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