Kim Cheol Woong was the country's star pianist before his musical taste landed him in trouble... SEOUL, South Korea — Kim Cheol Woong belonged to North Korea’s coddled elite. Then in 2001 he was accused of treachery. His crime: playing a Richard Clayderman piece on his piano. Scion of a privileged political family in the reclusive state, Kim was a star pianist in North Korea’s state symphony. He grew up memorizing garish children’s songs like “Revolutionary Army Game” — part of the nation’s required piano curriculum.
One day, alone in a room, he practiced the “capitalist” piano piece. He was hoping it would help him woo a woman he loved. Outside, a snitch heard the saccharin melody, and then reported the instrumentalist to authorities. The piece in question was Richard Clayderman’s classic, “’L’ for Love,” an elevator standard that Kim first heard while studying at the prestigious Moscow Conservatory. Clayderman is a French pianist known for his pop ballads and easy listening style. Some Westerners may wish Clayderman’s sleepy banquet-hall melodies would be banned. But regardless of where you stand, in reclusive North Korea the “crime” reflects the regime’s stark morals.
The government accused
Kim of playing “jazz,” a blanket label for depraved Western music not
sanctioned by the state. Police made him write a 10-page self-criticism
over and over. Humiliated and angry, he fled his fatherland.
“Even
if you are the greatest pianist in the world, you cannot play piano if
you do not show sufficient loyalty to Kim Jong-il and Kim Il-sung,” said
39-year-old Kim, referring to the two former dictators of North Korea.
After a secret trek across the border to China, the performer realized that his comfortable life was finished.
In
China, “people called North Koreans beggars and bastards,” he said at a
July 13 concert. “I was ignored and humiliated by other people.”
Kim
worked at a logging camp and then as a house servant. He eventually
found a job as a church pianist and converted to Christianity.
After
three unlucky arrests, however, Chinese police put Kim on a list for
repatriation to North Korea. He narrowly escaped detention both times.
China sends home North Koreans because it considers them economic migrants and not political refugees protected under international law. But once in North Korean hands, returnees can expect months or years of beatings and hard labor.
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