ROK Drop

By on January 23rd, 2009 at 7:32 pm

Meet the First Female North Korean Defector with A Ph.D

This is good news to see and hopefully inspires other North Korean defectors to pursue their education as well:

http://www.koreatimes.co.kr/upload/news/090123_p08_NK.jpg

A nutritional expert and bearer of North Korean culinary tradition, Dr. Lee Aae-ran has become the first female defector from North Korea to obtain a Ph.D. from a Korean university.

Lee Aae-ran became the first female defector from North Korea to earn a PhD from South Korea.

She successfully defended early this month her dissertation on dietary challenges of North Koreans at the Department of Nutritional Science and Food Management, Ewha Women’s University, making her only the third North Korean to get a PhD here.

Out of 15,000 defectors as of last September, women accounted for 66 percent, or 9,500. Lee follows in the footsteps of Ahn Chan-il and Dr. Hyun Sung-il, two male defectors to obtain PhDs from Konkuk University and Kyungnam University.

“I found that North Koreans desperately need education on food and nutrition upon arriving in the capitalist South. I hope that my thesis can serve as a realistic reference for assisting North Koreans cope with dietary issues caused by abrupt changes in lifestyle and food intake,” Lee told The Korea Times in an interview.

Her thesis, titled “Dietary Changes of North Koreans Around 1990” explores questions central to understanding the current state of North Korean health. While probing the nutritional status and growth rate of 353 North Korean defectors, she concluded that those born between 1971 and 1980 are the shortest. “This is because the final stages of their adolescence coincided with the North Korean food crisis in the 1990s,” she said.

Through the research, Lee hopes to make a point that the poor health of North Koreans is quite alarming, suggesting that the Seoul government should be more attentive to the particular physical conditions of North Koreans per age and income group when determining types and amounts of food supply. “Current domestic policies regarding nutrition in the South place heavy emphasis on preventing an excessive intake of food to prevent diabetes, obesity and other ailments. They are not applicable to North Koreans suffering from chronic malnutrition,” Lee said.  [Korea Times]

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  • gerry
    2:24 pm on January 24th, 2009 1

    And her point is? Don't starve to death in North Korea?, South Korea is responsible for feeding North Korea? Or South Korea is helping North Korea in its fight on diabeties?

 

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