Skip to main content

Independent Journalism & Cultural Advocacy

About Juche.org소개

We are independent journalists and cultural advocates dedicated to peace, understanding, and the reunification of the Korean people.

Who We Are

Juche.org is an independent Canadian journalism and cultural advocacy platform. We are not affiliated with, directed by, or funded by any government. Our work is protected under the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms and the Berman Amendment (US), which explicitly protects informational materials and journalism.

We publish educational content, cultural journalism, and human-interest stories about Korean heritage, history, and the ongoing impact of division on families and communities.

What We Believe

Korea is one nation, one people, one culture—temporarily divided by external powers. For over 4,000 years, Koreans shared the same language, the same traditions, the same ancestors. 70 years of division cannot erase this truth.

We believe in peace over conflict, understanding over fear, unity over division. We believe that Korean reunification is not a question of "if" but "when"—and that cultural groundwork today creates political possibility tomorrow.

"

This platform doesn't ask anyone to abandon their views. It invites them to expand them.

Our Journalism

Juche.org publishes:

  • Cultural journalism about Korean history, heritage, and shared traditions
  • Human-interest stories from separated families and diaspora communities
  • Educational content providing historical context often absent from Western media
  • Peace advocacy supporting dialogue and understanding between all Koreans

We are similar to many organizations worldwide that advocate for peace between divided peoples—whether supporting German reunification in the past, cross-strait dialogue, or reconciliation in other divided regions.

Our Approach: The Tiger Symbol

The tiger is our symbol because it belongs to all Koreans. Since 1908, when Korean intellectual Ch'oe Namsŏn drew the peninsula as a tiger in resistance to colonial narratives, the tiger has represented Korean identity and strength.

Both South Korea and North Korea claim the tiger. It appears on South Korean Olympic mascots and North Korean postage stamps. The tiger is cultural, not political—it's identity before ideology.

Independence

We are not affiliated with any government. Our journalism is independent and our advocacy is grassroots.

Education

We provide historical context and cultural education to promote understanding and informed dialogue.

Humanity

We center human stories—separated families, diaspora experiences, and the real impact of division.

Peace

We advocate for peaceful reunification, dialogue, and the recognition of shared Korean identity.

Our Editorial Commitment

  • • We maintain journalistic standards of accuracy and fairness
  • • We do not engage in propaganda from any direction
  • • We present information and invite readers to think for themselves
  • • We treat all subjects with dignity and humanity
  • • We distinguish clearly between news, analysis, and opinion
🐅

Korea is one. It always was.

The only question is when the world will remember.

Juche.org is a journalism and cultural advocacy platform. All content is protected speech under Canadian and international law.