I was in Seoul, South Korea this month at the invitation of the  wonderful EBS TV Documentary Festival, and was truly, happily surprised  to see a resurgence of activism among ordinary Koreans. 
Don't get me  wrong. Since its founding, Korea has had a tradition of fierce, die-hard  activism (which Koreans themselves may attribute to a diet high in  garlic and red pepper, as well as their commitment to social justice),  but this ferocity seemed to have gone dormant in the mid-nineties.  I  was overjoyed to find that this was no longer the case.
  
  
While in Korea, I had the opportunity to slip away to Jeju-do for a  few days. It had been 20 years since the last time I had visited the  island, when I had gone for vacation like most visitors to Jeju-do. An  idyllic, sub-tropical climate and a UNESCO heritage site status have  made Jeju-do an extremely popular tourist and honeymoon destination,  while the remoteness of the island from mainland Korea has bred a unique  and independent culture.
  
In 2005, Jeju-do was dubbed "Island of World Peace" by then Korean  president Roh Moo-hyun. This was perhaps in an effort to scrub itself  clean of a bloody past, as Jeju-do is the site of one of the most  disturbing and grisly episodes leading up to the Korean War.  
Under the leadership of American puppet Syngman Rhee,  right-wing paramilitary forces from the mainland waged a brutal  campaign against a "communist" uprising which, at the most conservative  estimates, killed 30,000 people (one-tenth of the population of the  island) and displaced countless others. This memory of the April 3, 1948  massacre is still vivid in the minds of Jeju-do villagers, who are once  again mobilizing against repression. 
  
One might also see this designation of "peace island" as a hopeful  talisman against further abuse, but for several years the South Korean  government, at American urging, has been relentless in its attempts to  build a naval base on Jeju-do, and now have their sights set on the  tranquil coastal village of Gangjeong.
  
 Members from the international community, including  Japanese people from Okinawa Island (where the U.S. has military bases)  join locals in Jeju Island to protest against the construction of a U.S.  naval base.
  Members from the international community, including  Japanese people from Okinawa Island (where the U.S. has military bases)  join locals in Jeju Island to protest against the construction of a U.S.  naval base.   
While offering several reasons for building the base -- to protect  commercial interests, to serve as yet another defense against a  belligerent North Korea -- most of the islanders understand that the  base at Gangjeong will offer little protection against a possible attack  by North Korea, functioning mostly as a proxy for American missile  defense against an ascendant China. 
In other words, American  militaristic posturing at a grievous cost to the local ecology -- an  unwelcome combination to the island, and to a region that has suffered  enough war in the 20th century.
  
The Jeju-do I visited this time around was radically different from  my previous experience. In addition to water sports and walks along the  shoreline, the people there were engaged in some less likely activities  for a paradise island, like chaining themselves to construction  equipment, tethering their bodies to each other and to the site of the  proposed naval base. 
I also attended the celebratory release of Sung Hee  Choi, an artist who was being released from jail after three months and  remains on probation. Her crime, like so many others protesting the  base, was "obstructing business" -- in Choi's case, standing in front of  oncoming cement trucks. 
Choi was in good company, as people from all  sectors of the community, including the mayor of Gangjeong, have also  been brutalized and imprisoned by police forces. Upon my arrival, I have  learned that an additional 600 riot police, including water cannons and  riot buses had been imported from the mainland in anticipation of  larger protests, leaving the community on edge.
  
 Korean activists prepare to chain themselves to  construction equipment, tethering their bodies to each other and to the  site of the proposed U.S. naval base.
  Korean activists prepare to chain themselves to  construction equipment, tethering their bodies to each other and to the  site of the proposed U.S. naval base.  
Back on the mainland, things are equally restless. As the economy lags,  and the government of South Korea moves increasingly to the right, labor  has suffered greatly. Enter Jin-suk Kim and her "aerial protest."
  
In the southern coastal city of Pusan, a woman named Jin-suk Kim has  been confining herself in a high-rise crane for nearly eight months. Kim  is a member of the Korean Confederation of Trade Unions (KCTU), and has  been up in crane no. 85 in the Yeongdo shipyard since January 6, in  protest of severe layoffs by the Hanjin corporation (HHIC).
  
Incidentally, crane no. 85 was the site of another protest eight  years ago -- but rather than a prolonged  sit-in inside the crane, the  protestor in question preferred to string a noose and hang himself from  it.
  
Although initially flying solo in her aerial protest, Kim is not  alone. Caravans of "Hope Buses" carrying thousands of supporters have  been visiting the crane area to offer their support. Like the protests  on Jeju-do, this has not been without obstacles -- one caravan was met  with batons, tear gas, and water cannons as they tried to push the  police line. 
The founder of the Hope Bus campaign, a poet named  Kyung-dong Song, himself stands a vigil of sorts in the KCTU trade union  offices in Seoul. If he leaves KCTU safe haven, he will be immediately  arrested by the police hovering around the building day and night,  waiting for that opportunity. 
This is the price Mr. Song will pay for  successfully "obstructing business" and organizing large demonstrations  without a government permit. Again,  just this past weekend in Seoul,  hundreds of miles from the no. 85 crane in Pusan, 9,000 police have been  deployed to disrupt around 2,500 "Hope Bus" protestors demonstrating  against the Hanjin layoffs with water cannons and other means of force. 
  
Hanjin is hardly the only corporation being targeted by this  resurgent labor movement. The ordinary citizens who protest the naval  base on Jeju are also protesting Samsung, a chaebol (family-run  mega-corporation), which has offered obscene bonuses to upper management  while laying off thousands of workers, and which stands to profit from  the construction of the base in Gangjeong.
  
And here we find a lovely coalescence, as these protestors are not  "labor," strictly speaking. Many of the activists I met in Korea told me  how inspired they have been by the Arab Spring protests, and of their  hope for a similar "Asian Spring" in South Korea and elsewhere to fight  against corporate greed and militarism. 
Accordingly, the Hope Bus  campaign found support not only from labor, but from the disabled,  sexual minorities, religious figures, and other groups, all of whom  stand unequivocally opposed to the immoral practices of the chaebol  culture. 
And it is not only Koreans getting involved. Renowned American  feminist Gloria Steinem  has offered her voice in support of the protestors on Jeju-do, and  prominent anti-war activists from the west have arrived on the island to  join in the opposition. Figures like Noam Chomsky are coming out in  support of Jin-suk Kim and the Hope Buses. 
  
What I saw in Korea was a beautiful thing, true solidarity among  people of different interests and nationalities, thousands of people,  ordinary people, who have found that when they speak as one, it is  impossible not to hear them.
  
 Exclusive cartoon by Brazilian artist Carlos Latuff, hero  cartoonist of FREE PALESTINE cause. Here he extends support to Jeju  Island villagers who protest against the construction of the U.S. naval  base. cartoon translation: shark's teeth IMPERIALISM bites green Unesco  site JEJU ISLAND ... but locals resist!!!
  Exclusive cartoon by Brazilian artist Carlos Latuff, hero  cartoonist of FREE PALESTINE cause. Here he extends support to Jeju  Island villagers who protest against the construction of the U.S. naval  base. cartoon translation: shark's teeth IMPERIALISM bites green Unesco  site JEJU ISLAND ... but locals resist!!!