
The True Stories Behind 'Echoes of Survivors: Inside Korea's Tragedies'
The eight-episode series covers four different events in Korean history—including Busan's Brothers' Home, a follow-up on the legal cases connected to JMS church, the 'Chijon family' gang murders, and the Sampoong Department Store collapse—through interviews with survivors and witnesses, as well as dramatic reenactments of the crimes and footage from news coverage of the events.
At times, the series tips into what feels like unnecessarily exploitative behavior, such as dressing the survivors of the Brothers' Home facility in the same tracksuits they were forced to wear as abused children or in the episodes that recount the Chijon gang murders, also known as the Jijonpa serial murder case. In the latter case, justice has been served and it is unclear what purpose watching the sole survivor of the gang's crimes relive the most traumatic event of her life serves, other than as trauma porn. For a series that is ostensibly working to examine the dangers that come within systems that prioritize the accumulation of wealth over human life, these moments feel like a misstep.
The cases examined in The Echoes of Survivors will all be familiar to Korean audiences, but perhaps not to global audiences. Most of the cases presented took place during the 80s and 90s in Korea, before the internet, streaming video, and mobile devices kept us so apprised of manmade horrors being perpetrated on the other side of the world. For those who aren't familiar with the subjects covered in Echoes of Survivors, here is a brief explanation of each event.
(Content warning: This contains descriptions of child abuse and sexual violence)
The history behind Brothers Home
Brothers Home, or Hyungje Bokjiwon, was an internment camp operating as a 'welfare facility' in Busan, Korea's second-largest city. It operated from 1975 to 1987, and was propped up by anti-vagrancy ordinances, put in place in the 1960s and ramped up in the lead up to the 1986 Asian Games and the 1988 Summer Olympics. At the time, Korea was under a military dictatorship, which was overthrown in 1987.
Brothers Home was owned and run by Park In-geun, a retired military man and a Christian social worker. During this 'social cleansing' period in Korea's history, these 'welfare' facilities were given subsidies from the government based on the number of people they took in. More residents meant more money, so facility management would kidnap people off of the streets, whether or not they fit the description of a 'vagrant,' or someone without a stable job or home.
According to Korea's Truth and Reconciliation Commission, those illegally detained off the streets included 'office workers who had fallen asleep outside after drinking too much, children waiting to take trains to visit relatives, teenagers on their way home, people with disabilities, and hospital patients.' Echoes of Survivors focuses on some of the children who were forced into the facility, in many cases kidnapped off of the streets by police officers, many of whom were incentivized by Brothers Home bribes and/or performance score points.
Inside the facility, violence was perpetrated daily. This included physical and sexual abuse against women and children. Infants were sold through adoption agencies. Detainees were forced to perform unpaid labor, often with very little food. An estimated 657 people were killed. In total, an estimated 40,000 people were confined at the group residence over the course of its operation, with more than 3,000 people held at once at the facility's 'peak.'
The second episode that covers Brothers Home shifts to a search for greater accountability. Ultimately, Park In-geun was found guilty for only embezzlement and corruption, and served just 30 months in prison. He was never found guilty of any human rights abuses, seemingly at least in part due to his political allies in President Chun Doo-hwan's administration and the Busan mayor's office, and died in a nursing home in 2016.
In running the facility, Park In-geun appointed loyal family members as directors, including his wife, Lim Sung-soon; her brother Lim Young-soon; and Lim Young-soon's brother-in-law, Joo Chong-chan. Echoes of Survivors sees producer Jo Seong-hyeon and Brothers Home survivor Choi Seung-woo travel to Australia, where some members of the Park family moved after the atrocities of the Brothers Home were made public. They confront some of the living members of the Park family about the wealth they have inherited. Jo also confronts a member of the Park family still living in Korea about his alleged role in the human rights abuses. These scenes make for some of the most powerful, productive moments in the series.
Did Brothers Home inspire Squid Game?
The Brothers Homes facility has been posited as inspiration for Squid Game in the past. The production perhaps intentionally plays up the aesthetic connection between the real-life atrocities of the Brothers Home and the fictional horrors of Squid Game by having survivors wear tracksuits like the ones they were forced to wear as children while giving interviews. However, Squid Game creator Hwang Dong-hyuk has never directly cited Brothers Home as an inspiration for the series.
The JMS cult case
When In the Name of God: A Holy Betrayal hit Netflix in March 2023, it shook Korean society. The docu-series, which examines abuses perpetrated by four different religious cults, leads with a focus on Christian Gospel Mission—also known as Providence and as Jesus Morning Star, or JMS.
Jung Myeong-seok is the founder of JMS and a self-proclaimed messiah to his tens of thousands of followers across Korea and the world, including in Taiwan, Hong Kong, Japan, and Australia. After being convicted of rape in 2008 and serving a decade in prison, he was indicted again in 2022 for the sexual assault of two female followers. The story of these two survivors, Maple and Amy, were told in the first season of the Netflix documentary. At the time, producer Jo noted that he wanted to tell this story because members of his family have been victims of a pseudo-religious cult.
Echoes of Survivors uses two of its episodes to expand on how Jung Myeong-seok's pattern of sexual abuse was kept secret for so long, and the measures to which the organization went to try to keep In the Name of God from being released. Part of this is delving into the role Jung's second-in-command, Jung Jo-eun, played in allowing his abuse of female followers to continue. Last year, she was sentenced to seven years in prison for her role in the abuses. Jung was sentenced to another 17 years in prison in 2024. The docu-series also alleges that members of JMS who are also police officers abused their positions to try to keep Jung out of jail. It wonders just how many Korean institutions include loyal members of JMS.
The episodes end with Maple, who is now married to former idol and Olympic swimmer Alex Fong. The couple is expecting their first child. The final JMS episode leaves viewers with this message from Maple: 'To every woman out there going through the same pain as me, let's stay strong.'
The Chijon family murders
The 'Chijon family' murders, also known as the Jijonpa serial murder case, refer to a series of crimes that took place between 1993 and 1994. The 'Chiwon family' was a gang organized by convicted rapist Kim Gi-hwan, motivated by class anger. Kim convinced six other working class men, aged 18 to 23 at the time, to join him in targeting rich people for extortion and murder. He came up with the idea for the gang after watching a news report about university entrance exam corruption. The gang planned to collect one billion won (roughly $1.25 million at the time). They killed five people, including one of their own members who tried to leave the group.
The episodes are built around an interview with the sole survivor of the gang's kidnappings, Lee Jeong-su. In her 20s at the time, she was kidnapped alongside a man she was casually dating. The two were not wealthy, but were driving a Hyundai Grandeur, a car that was considered a sign of wealth at the time. Lee was held by the gang for seven days and was forced to kill several of their targets, including her boyfriend. Upon Lee's escape, facilitated by one of the members of the gang, she reported the crimes to the police. They apprehended the members, who were later sentenced to death.
In the episode pair's final act, Echoes of Survivors makes a rushed, incomplete effort to place the murders in a more systemic context. Most murder is informed by broader systemic injustices and true crime media often fails to contextualize its horrors, leading to narratives that contort perpetrators into monsters rather than products of our flawed social systems. Echoes of Survivors makes an attempt to contextualize the Chijon gang's crimes, but it feels hollow after so much of the runtime presents sensationalized media coverage and dramatic reenactments of the crimes without deeper analysis, especially in a docu-series ostensibly focused on survivors' stories.
The Sampoong Department Store collapse
The final two episodes of The Echoes of Survivors examine Korea's worst 'peacetime' disaster in history: the Sampoong Department Store collapse. In 1995, five years after its opening, one of Seoul's most luxurious department stores collapsed, killing 502 people and injuring another 937. More than half of the victims were employees. Many of the customers in the building at the time of collapse, in the early evening, were women shopping for dinner groceries.
The episodes include interviews with some of the survivors of the incident, including then 18-year-old store clerk Yoo Ji-hwan, who was pulled from the wreckage almost 12 days after the initial collapse. The docu-series also includes interviews with some of the people who lost family members in the disaster, and people who assisted in the rescue efforts.
The collapse came about as a result of shoddy construction that knowingly broke safety requirements in place at the time. The company originally contracted to build the massive, flat-slab structure left the project after Lee Joon, chairman of the Sampoong Group's construction division, demanded changes to the design that would allow for a more spacious floor plan. Subsequent investigations determined the building was not structurally sound, and was bound to collapse.
As much as two months prior to the collapse, employees had noticed a large crack on the roof of the top floor, where the building had begun to crumble. On the day of the collapse, the structural damage became more obvious. As the docu-series recounts, department store management held an emergency meeting at 3pm, roughly three hours before the collapse, to determine if they should close down and evacuate the building. Led by Lee, they voted only to close the fifth floor, wanting to wait until after work hours to inspect the building. Lee didn't want to lose business. Emergency alarms were sounded at 5:50pm, and employees started evacuating shoppers. Two minutes later, the roof and fifth floor of the south wing collapsed, triggering a catastrophic collapse all the way to the basement floors.
Lee was later found guilty of involuntary manslaughter and served seven years, six months in prison. His son, Lee Han-sang, who was also president of the store, was convicted of corruption and accidental homicide. Two city planners were convicted of taking bribes. Two months after the collapse, Lee Joon and Lee Han-sang offered the entirety of the Sampoong Group's wealth to help compensate the victims and their families. The former site of the department store houses a luxury high-rise apartment building, despite requests from the victims' families that a memorial be built. Impeached president Yoon Suk-yeol lived in the building before and after his truncated term as president.
Echoes of Survivors' builds some connective tissue between incidents like the Sampoong Department Store collapse and more recent Korean disasters, including the Sewol ferry disaster, as preventable manmade tragedies driven by greed. Like other moments in the eight installments, it is left to the viewer to decide how effectively the docu-series walks the line between civic-minded investigative journalism designed to hold power to account and the sensationalization of tragedy for entertainment value.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Business Insider
an hour ago
- Business Insider
'The No. 1 Destination for the Most Talented Artists': Netflix Stock (NASDAQ:NFLX) Notches Up as the Duffer Brothers Consider Jumping Ship
In what may be one of the strangest news pieces I have heard in a while, streaming giant Netflix (NFLX) may be about to lose one of its biggest acts: the Duffer Brothers. If that name is not immediately familiar, then perhaps their property will be: Stranger Things. Perhaps even stranger than the things in question is who Netflix may lose to here. Investors took it in stride, though, and sent shares up fractionally in the closing minutes of Friday's trading. Elevate Your Investing Strategy: Take advantage of TipRanks Premium at 50% off! Unlock powerful investing tools, advanced data, and expert analyst insights to help you invest with confidence. Matt and Ross Duffer, the guys behind the runaway hit Stranger Things, may be landing a new deal at, of all places, Paramount (PARA). Yes, the studio that has been relentlessly flailing for months as people wondered if it could even pull off a merger successfully may be about to poach the makers of one of Netflix's biggest properties. One of Paramount's new goals is to become the 'no.1 destination for the most talented artists and filmmakers in the world.' Interestingly, the move might have been made possible from a completely different Netflix loss, as Cindy Holland—who helped get Stranger Things off the ground at Netflix—herself moved to Paramount, and is now the head of streaming therein. However, reports note that a deal between the Duffers and Paramount would also include theatrical-release feature films. A Win in Animation But Netflix may be about to make a serious surge in one respect: animation. Netflix animation has been a bit of a mixed bag of late. Some of it is great, some of it not so much, and in some cases it is both great and terrible depending on the season. Disenchantment, I look squarely at you here. But one series is proving to be a big winner for Netflix: the unlikely hero of Kpop Demon Hunters. Not only is Kpop Demon Hunters the most viewed animated movie on Netflix right now, it is also the second most-viewed movie period on the platform. For a movie that has only been available since late June, that is no mean feat. Greenlight Analytics director of insights and content strategy Brandon Katz notes that this is Netflix's '…first real, organic, mega hit animated franchise.' But what does Netflix do for an encore here? That answer may determine whether this is a long-term winner or a flash in the pan. Is Netflix Stock a Good Buy Right Now? Turning to Wall Street, analysts have a Moderate Buy consensus rating on NFLX stock based on 26 Buys, 11 Holds, and one Sell assigned in the past three months, as indicated by the graphic below. After an 82.56% rally in its share price over the past year, the average NFLX price target of $1,394 per share implies 12.31% downside risk. Disclosure


Buzz Feed
an hour ago
- Buzz Feed
10 Everyday Phrases With Surprising Origins
It goes without saying that language is always evolving, and new words and phrases enter our everyday speech all the time. Often, we start using them without even realizing it, adopting them naturally from friends, media, or, of course, because of online discourse and social media. Many of these expressions have interesting or surprising origins that most of us never stop to think about. So, I decided to put together 10 terms that all of us use, and whose origins you might not know. "Bucket list" first appeared in popular use in 2007 with the release of the Morgan Freeman and Jack Nicholson film The Bucket List, where the characters set out to do things they'd always wanted before they died (or kicked the bucket). The phrase was coined by the movie's screenwriter, Justin Zackham, who shortened his own "List of Things to do Before I Kick the Bucket" into "Justin's Bucket List." He ended up using "bucket list" as the title when writing the screenplay. It should come as no surprise that the word "binge-watch" was popularized because of Netflix in the early 2010s. But it actually existed a bit before that! People began using the term in the early 2000s, when DVD box sets of TV shows and DVRs allowed you to watch multiple episodes or entire seasons in one sitting. Netflix helped push the term into the mainstream around 2013, when it began releasing entire seasons at once and even used "binge-watching" in its marketing. Of course, before that, the concept existed, but it was just called a "TV marathon." The term "friend zone" comes from a 1994 episode of Friends. In the episode "The One with the Blackout," Joey tells Ross that he and Rachel are never going to happen because he has waited too long to ask her out, and now he has fallen into "the friend zone." The episode's writers, Jeff Astrof and Mike Sikowitz, to this day, have no idea who came up with the phrase. The word "podcast" is a portmanteau — a combination of the words "iPod" and "broadcast." The term itself was actually created by accident in 2004. The term was first coined by journalist Ben Hammersley in an article he was writing for the UK's the Guardian about the new emerging technology of being able to download audio programs and radio. According to Hammersley, he turned in the article, but was told it was a few words too short. In order to pad it out a bit more, he added the line: "But what to call it? Audioblogging? Podcasting? GuerillaMedia?" It being called "podcast" makes sense since listening to podcasts on iPods was the most popular way to consume them. The term "catfish" or "catfishing" didn't come from the MTV show; it actually originated from the 2010 documentary Catfish, which later inspired the series of the same name. However, it was the Manti Te'o scandal in 2013 that helped popularize the phrase. Today, when we say "life hack," we mean any simple tip or trick that helps make life easier. However, the term was first coined by tech journalist Danny O'Brien in 2003, to describe clever shortcuts programmers used to simplify their work life. Ever wonder if "spam email" came from Spam the meat? Well, the answer is yes! During WWII and after, because of rationing, Spam became ubiquitous in England. So much so that in the 1970s Monty Python did a popular sketch where a customer tries to order food without Spam at a cafe that served every dish with it, only to be drowned out by a group of Vikings who keep chanting "Spam, Spam, Spam." The repetition and unavoidable presence of Spam in the skit inspired early internet users (many of whom were Monty Python fans) in the 1980s and 1990s to call excessive and unwanted emails "spam." The term "gaslighting" comes from the 1938 play Gas Light and its two film adaptations in the 1940s — both entitled Gaslight. Set in the 1880s, the story is about a husband who manipulates small elements — like dimming the gas lights — in the house while insisting his wife is imagining things, making her doubt her own perception and to think that she is suffering from a mental illness. Though the term was very sporadically used over the decades, it wasn't until the 2010s that it really took off. We might be able to blame the term "main character energy" on the pandemic. The idea of seeing oneself as the protagonist in a story took off on X (formerly Twitter) and TikTok in 2020, and you might have the posts still up to prove it! And lastly, most millennials know this one, but it might be lost on younger people. The term "stan" comes from the 2000 song "Stan" by Eminem, which tells the story of a creepily obsessed fan named Stan who writes increasingly desperate letters to the rapper. Weirdly, "stan" evolved in internet slang to describe anyone who is an extremely devoted or enthusiastic fan of a celebrity, artist, film series, etc. Of course, today, it's used both as a noun ("I'm a huge stan of that show") and a verb ("I stan that singer"). Okay, did you know this? Or do you know the origin of a term you think I should have included? Let me know in the comments below!
Yahoo
3 hours ago
- Yahoo
Dan Ziskie, 'House of Cards' and 'Treme' Actor, Dies at 80: 'A Man of Remarkable Talent'
Ziskie died on July 21 in New York, his family revealed in his obituary NEED TO KNOW Dan Ziskie died from arteriosclerotic cardiovascular disease on July 21, according to his obituary His family remembered him "as a creative, thoughtful, and interesting man whose presence enriched their lives" Ziskie was well known for his recurring role in Netflix's House of Cards and HBO's Treme Dan Ziskie has died. He was 80 years old. The House of Cards and Treme actor's family announced his death in an obituary, which revealed he died on July 21 in New York City from arteriosclerotic cardiovascular disease. Ziskie is survived by his brother David and his wife Cynthia, along with his nephews Jesse, Brett and Austin and their six children, who say they 'will miss him deeply.' 'Dan was a man of remarkable talent and a keen observer of life,' the obituary reads. 'He was as vibrant and multifaceted as the characters he portrayed on stage and screen.' Born in Detroit in 1944, Ziskie was an athlete throughout college and went on to be a crewman on a Great Lakes freighter before moving into acting. According to his obituary, Ziskie's 'love for performance led him to the Second City of Chicago,' alongside major names such as John Belushi, Brian Doyle-Murray and Joe Flaherty. His success in Chicago led Ziskie to work on Broadway productions in New York, where he was an understudy in Morning's at Seven in 1980. In 1985, he acted with Judd Hirsch in the play I'm Not Rappaport. His other Broadway credits include After the Fall and I'm Not Ready. Ziskie was best known for his recurring role as Vice President Jim Mathews on Netflix's from 2013-2017 and C.J. Liquori on the final three seasons of HBO's from 2011-2013. He also appeared in Chappelle's Show, CBS' Person of Interest, NBC's The Blacklist and Fox's 24, as well as films Zebrahead (1992) and Adventures in Babysitting (1987), among others. Some of his many episodic cameos were in Remington Steele, St. Elsewhere, The Equalizer, Newhart and Murphy Brown. 'Dan's natural talent and dedication to his craft were evident in each role he played, earning him the admiration and respect of his peers,' his family wrote. Never miss a story — sign up for to stay up-to-date on the best of what PEOPLE has to offer, from celebrity news to compelling human interest stories. He also pursued his passion for photography, with his family praising 'his eye for detail and ability to capture the essence of his subjects.' His work has been featured in The New York Times, The Guardian and the Financial Times, and he also has a photo book called Cloud Chamber, published in 2017. His obituary describes it as 'a testament to his artistic vision and continues to be cherished by readers and photography enthusiasts alike.' In his free time, Ziskie enjoyed traveling and exploring 'complex topics such as the nature of the cosmos and quantum physics.' 'Dan's life was not only marked by his creative achievements but also by the bonds he shared with his family,' his loved ones wrote, adding: 'Dan's legacy extends beyond his family, as his colleagues and friends will remember him as a creative, thoughtful, and interesting man whose presence enriched their lives.' 'His was a life lived with passion, a life that exemplified the beauty of pursuing one's dreams and the importance of cherishing every moment,' the obituary concluded. 'Dan will be profoundly missed, yet he will forever remain in the hearts of those who knew him, like a cherished character in the timeless narrative of their lives.' Read the original article on People