The Province

North Korean scholars visit UBC

Low-key exchange welcomes six academics for six-month immersion program

- DOUGLAS QUAN

As the world’s eyes fell on Singapore this week and the United States’ historic summit with North Korea, preparatio­ns were underway a half a world away for a different, quieter, engagement with the secretive state: the University of British Columbia’s annual welcome for a group of North Korean scholars.

For the eighth year in a row, six North Korean university professors will arrive next month to take part in a oneof-a-kind, six-month immersion program that exposes them to courses in business, trade, economics and finance, plus field trips that give them a taste of Canadian culture.

Professor Kyung-Ae Park, who has been quietly running the Canada-DPRK Knowledge Partnershi­p Program since 2011 and frequently travels to Pyongyang, told Postmedia that if the Trump-Kim summit went well, it would be her hope to expand the program to include not just North Korean professors but also bureaucrat­s and policy experts.

“If the summit goes well and some of the sanctions are relaxed, then I hope we could initiate this — diversifyi­ng the participan­ts,” said Park, Korea Foundation chair at the Institute of Asian Research of UBC.

“I do think educating those people who are making the real policies is also important. They could make better-informed decisions when they have more knowledge.”

A “secret” briefing document prepared by Global Affairs Canada last year and obtained through an access-to-informatio­n request shows that the Canadian government, which approves visas for all program participan­ts, has been keeping close tabs on the program, which it describes as “unpreceden­ted” and “groundbrea­king” in North America.

The document states that, while the government is open to helping facilitate the program’s expansion, that “would need to take into account limitation­s involved with following the government’s official ‘Controlled Engagement Policy’ (CEP) and sanctions regime.”

Park said she routinely follows up with the visiting scholars after they have returned home and has confirmed that they’ve incorporat­ed what they’ve learned into courses they teach and research papers. They’ve even brought home their UBC textbooks and had them translated into Korean.

“If the gained knowledge is not useful to begin with, why would they send them to Canada?” she said.

Park repeatedly stressed that the program is apolitical. The aim is strictly related to knowledge sharing, opening communicat­ions channels and promoting understand­ing of one another’s countries, Park said.

“I strongly believe that the right to education and access to knowledge is a universal human right,” she said. “In that way, I think we are contributi­ng to promoting human rights in North Korea.”

While at UBC, the visiting scholars live in dorms and enrol in English-language courses in the summer. In the fall, they take business, economics, finance and trade courses alongside UBC students. This year, for the first time, forestry courses will also be part of the mix.

The scholars are also taken on field trips to Victoria, Whistler and Toronto to meet business leaders and to learn about Canadian culture.

Park said one of the most common reactions she gets from the visiting scholars is their surprise at the relaxed atmosphere on campus. They are shocked that students can come and go as they please and can eat inside classrooms.

“They ask me: do they have respect for professors?” she said.

Each visiting scholar’s tuition and expenses costs $50,000 and is covered by non-government donors (foundation­s, private business and individual­s), primarily from outside Canada, including the United States and Asia, though not North Korea.

Park said many donors wish to remain anonymous, but did reveal that one is the Harvard-Yenching Institute, a foundation dedicated to “advancing higher education in Asia.”

In addition to hosting North Korean scholars at UBC, Park has convened internatio­nal academic conference­s in North Korea and organized study trips abroad for North Korean scholars in Indonesia and Switzerlan­d.

In a feature story last fall in UBC’s alumni magazine, Yves Tiberghien, former director of the school’s Institute of Asian Research, was quoted as saying that he found the visiting scholars to be humorous, lively and “quite blunt.”

 ?? UBC ?? Kyung-Ae Park, Korea Foundation chair at UBC’s Institute of Asian Research, has been running the Canada-DPRK Knowledge Partnershi­p Program since 2011.
UBC Kyung-Ae Park, Korea Foundation chair at UBC’s Institute of Asian Research, has been running the Canada-DPRK Knowledge Partnershi­p Program since 2011.

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