Wickenheiser sets aside politics for visit to North Korea
Hayley Wickenheiser was conflicted about the unified Korean women’s hockey team at last month’s Winter Olympics.
She felt the burden of easing geopolitical tensions had been unfairly heaped upon women who just wanted to play hockey.
But witnessing what that team meant to Koreans — and a chance meeting with the players on a beach — changed her mind and put her on a plane to North Korea.
If women’s hockey was a symbol of peace, Wickenheiser wanted it to last beyond the closing ceremony.
“It couldn’t die there,” she told The Canadian Press in an interview Thursday.
The four-time Olympic gold medallist in women’s hockey travelled to the North Korean capital of Pyongyang earlier this month following the Winter Games in Pyeongchang, South Korea.
Wickenheiser ran practices for North Korea’s national women’s and men’s teams. She reunited with some of the women she’d met at the Olympics.
North and South Korea agreed in late January to combine players from both sides of the demilitarized zone on one host women’s team.
The International Olympic Committee quickly approved it, even though it meant strangers were suddenly teammates.
Wickenheiser, the retired alltime leading scorer for the Canadian women’s hockey program, went to the Pyeongchang Games in February as a member of the IOC athletes’ commission.
She happened to meet the Korean team on a beach before their first game.
Coach Sarah Murray asked Wickenheiser to say a few impromptu words of encouragement to the players. Wickenheiser sensed the North Koreans were tense that day.
The outpouring of emotion when Korea’s women played under a unified flag convinced Wickenheiser a door had been opened.
Even though Wickenheiser was in the midst of trips to India to develop women’s hockey there, the 39-year-old from Shaunavon wanted time with the North Koreans.
“I wanted to show those women that someone cared after the fact about them as human beings and as hockey players, not as part of a larger agenda,” she said.
Wickenheiser, who lives in Calgary, admitted she had to overcome her fear of the unknown on the flight from Beijing to Pyongyang.
Her visit came on the heels of heated rhetoric between North Korean Leader Kim Jong-un and U.S. President Donald Trump.
Wickenheiser felt cut off from the world as internet access and cellphone service were not available to the masses.
She was chaperoned everywhere in Pyongyang. She said her contact with the public was limited to hockey players, most of whom don’t know who Sidney Crosby is.
Wickenheiser had consulted with the Department of Foreign Affairs and the Prime Minister’s Office about travelling to the secretive hermit kingdom.
“I sent my parents one number at the PMO to call if I didn’t show up on March 6 and told them where my will was and away I went,” Wickenheiser said with a chuckle.
But Wickenheiser didn’t want audiences with North Korea’s supreme leader like former NBA player Dennis Rodman had.
“I wasn’t there to create world peace,” she said. “I can’t speak to any of the human rights stuff. I’m very well aware I saw what they wanted me to see those two days in Pyongyang.”
Wickenheiser did talk to sport officials about the possibility of getting a North Korean team to her annual Wickfest women’s hockey festival in November.