eparated from her family, filmmaker Yang Yonghi depicts harrowing life experiences through documentaries and an upcoming theatrical project
Award-winning filmmaker Yang Yonghi was just 6 years old when she watched her eldest brother leave Japan for North Korea as one of 200 "human gifts" for leader Kim Il-sung's 60th birthday.
As a North Korean anthem blared, through bursts of confetti, he handed her a note before his ferry departed Niigata Port: "Yonghi, listen to a lot of music. Watch as many movies as you want."
It was 1972, a year after her parents — members of the ethnic Korean "Zainichi" community in Japan — had sent their other two sons the same way, lured by the Kim regime's promise of a socialist paradise with free education, health care and jobs for all.
The boys never moved back.
"My parents dedicated their entire lives to an entity that came up with such a senseless project and forced them to sacrifice their own children for it," Yang, now 57, told AFP.
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