In August,
Pyongyang's second ever international Ultimate Frisbee tournament will take
place. Some people are hopeful the game will improve relations, but others
believe it is putting more money in the regime's coffers.
Eric Fish
is what some might consider a veteran of Ultimate Frisbee. The Missouri native
has been playing the sport, a mixture of basketball and American football, for
around a decade. He says he had never played Ultimate, as its known for short,
in any memorable location - that is until last year when he saw an
advertisement for a tournament in the North Korean capital Pyongyang.
"I
couldn't pass it up," said Fish, 27, who studies journalism in Beijing and
claims to have a "morbid fascination" with socialist and communist
states.
"There
is a tendency for bad news (about North Korea), because that's what the media
covers. I assumed there was more nuance to it."
Fish says
he was not disappointed. He was joined by about 60 other players, comprised of
Western tourists, members of Pyongyang's small expat community and around 15
North Koreans that work for a state-run tourism agency.
"I was
amazed. They had never played Frisbee before," he said. "They picked
it up pretty quick."
In August,
Ultimate will return to North Korea in what organizers, Beijing-based Koryo
Tours, hope will become an annual sports exchange. The company runs other
adventure travel packages to the North such as football (soccer), cycling and
cricket. Koryo charges 1180 Euros for the 5-day Ultimate tour, which includes
stops at North Korean historical sites as well as a chance to teach Frisbee to
middle school children.
![]() |
| Elusive North Korea is closed to most foreigners |
"Frisbee
is like hula hoop, in that we consider it one of the most fundamental and
universal things, but there are a lot of people in North Korea who have never
seen a Frisbee before," says Koryo Tours' Simon Cockerell.
Filling the
regime's coffers?
But some
analysts say the money tourists pay to go on these excursions to North Korea
only lines the pockets of the ruling regime.
"Such
activities have conditioned us to be optimistic and generous to North Korea
while North Korea has taken advantage of the outside world's cash," says
Lee Sung-yoon who lectures in Korean Studies at Tufts University's Fletcher
School of Law and Diplomacy in the US.
Lee says he
does not oppose these kinds of visits in general, but "it's a bit
unrealistic to believe that it will lead to some sort of diplomatic
breakthrough," he said.
Other
observers say that Ultimate is an especially fitting kind of sports exchange
between nations with a lack of trust.
Sports
diplomacy
"There's
a code of conduct, called Spirit of the Game, which is basically be honest,
play the right way. That's a part of the culture of Ultimate and I think
spreading that is not a bad thing in any way," says Andray Abrahamian who
helped develop the Pyongyang tournament with Koryo Tours.
Abrahamian,
35, is Executive Director of the Choson Exchange, an NGO that supports economic
development in North Korea. He says due to the North's opaque system, doing
work there, whether organizing a sports match or holding workshops on financial
management with government officials, presents challenges. "It's hard to
know where the buck stops," he says. But by holding more sports programs
like the Ultimate tournament, in which North Koreans and Americans play as
teammates, Abrahamian believes a cultural and political divide can be overcome.
![]() |
| Eric Fish teaches North Korean school children the game of frisbee |
"This
is just one tiny contribution to the normalizing of interactions between North
Koreans and foreigners," he said.
Spirit of
the game
As for Eric
Fish, who played in last year's Pyongyang Ultimate tournament, he says while he
can't be sure how much change his trip made at a diplomatic level, he is
confident that at least for the North Koreans he played alongside, their
opinions about Americans or Westerners did improve.
"Once
you're playing, you forget who is from where," he said.
Fish adds
that any sense of national allegiance or rivalry was lost during a brief moment
of celebration with a North Korean teammate; an instance that still seems
surreal to him.
"She
ran over, gave me a big old hug," Fish said. "Wow, getting a hug from
a North Korean woman who just scored a point in Ultimate Frisbee. Everything
about that situation makes no sense at all."
Author:
Jason Strother, Seoul



No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.