Here I will collect information (reliable or not, transphobic or not, as details are scant) on the LGBT situation in Korea. Take some of this with a grain of salt, but I hope you enjoy some of the reading! This is just a result of some search engine witchcraft, if y'all find anything let me know.

People of Interest:

  • Jang Yeong-jin | Jang Yeong-jin (Korean: 장영진; born 1957/1958) is a writer and the only openly gay North Korean defector. Yeong-jin was raised in Chongjin, a city on the eastern coast of North Korea.[3] During his childhood, Yeong-jin fell in love with a boy who was his friend named Seon-cheol, a friendship that lasted into adulthood.[2][3] They would hold hands and share beds.[2] Yeong-jin and Seon-cheol would later move to Pyongyang to attend different colleges.[3] They were separated in 1976 when they both joined the North Korean military.[3] According to Yeong-jin, "In winter, when soldiers were given only two threadbare blankets each and little heat, it was common for us to find a partner and sleep hugging each other at night to keep warm" and that "We considered it part of what the party called 'revolutionary comradeship.'"

  • Youtube Video In Korean: A transgender who traveled to North Korea! Reactions of North Koreans. A cis woman recounts having a transgender woman in her tour group in the DPRK in English. She claims that the trans woman had visited once pre-transition and once post transition. She said that the trans woman was stared at a lot and the North Koreans treated her as if she were a 'man in a dress'. Otherwise, this cis woman has relatively positive things to say about the DPRK. I do not have the time to translate all the subtitles from the Korean speakers, many of whom are defectors, they said quite a lot. I could do it but it takes a lot of effort. Some of the subtitles say things (according to an automated translation) such as "North Koreans have a limited understanding of transsexuals.", "Nothing about this will ever change in the North!", "The Northerners must have been so shocked! (laughing)", a defector says "We would never accept that and never allow it.", "Not being able to have kids, HA!", A man asks "Are you transgender?" A woman replies "No, but a man becoming a woman, maybe thats a good thing." A woman from the 'Pyongyang upper class' says "It seems gay. (probably a bad translate) My husband was gay and my sister is now a gay man. So it sounds gay." Someone claims that "Homosexuality is punished much less than drugs in the North. (perhaps a reference to lax drug laws?)"

I appreciate anyone adding full Korean -> English translations to this video if they're capable. I'm just using AI magic. I might ping a friend that knows Korean if no on responds and ask them for a translation of the video.

  • P1d40n3 [he/him]
    ·
    3 years ago

    DPRK defectors are not a reliable source for what actually happens in the DPRK

    • kristina [she/her]
      hexagon
      ·
      edit-2
      3 years ago

      Yeah. However I find the discordance in their discussion interesting and might hint at an underlying truth: that LGBT stuff is largely unknown and unregulated, which in South Korea it is regulated. So that's a better starting point on the DPRK

  • kristina [she/her]
    hexagon
    ·
    edit-2
    3 years ago

    I can't really find any direct DPRK sources but if yall find any lemme know. I know there was a debacle at the UN recently where a DPRK reporter published some disparaging homophobic remarks towards a gay guy at the International Criminal Court, but that doesn't necessarily show a full picture.

  • Catherine_Steward [she/her]
    ·
    3 years ago

    Why in the world would we listen to a single thing defectors say about anything? If the only information we have to go on is defectors, I'd rather say we have literally no information.

    • riley
      ·
      edit-2
      1 year ago

      deleted by creator

    • kristina [she/her]
      hexagon
      ·
      edit-2
      3 years ago

      As we all know being LGBT is a white person thing. I definitely haven't been contacted by LGBT socialists all over the globe so we can compare and contrast our material conditions. I definitely havent helped friends in china pay for hrt cause the exchange rate made it cheap af for me to do so. Surprise surprise, if we aren't being hunted to death trans people have the same lot almost everywhere. I've only heard LGBT stuff about the DPRK through exceedingly indirect sources. Its very natural for LGBT people to try to connect. Its is one of the few things in this era that is truly internationalist, we try to help each other in whatever way possible without heed for borders.

  • UlyssesT
    ·
    edit-2
    19 days ago

    deleted by creator