The Christians of North Gando lose their country and leave their hometown, but gain the Gospel. The cross they hold in their hands is the symbol of daring for independence and a royal summon of the generation they have to endure. Historian Sim Yo Han retraces the footsteps of the late Father Moon Dong Hwan and finds meanings of the anti-Japanese independence movement hidden in various parts of North Gando.

The small county of Seongju staged protests against the THAAD. Young mothers led protests from conce...

On January 1, 1994, thousands of indigenous people occupied seven towns in the southern Mexican stat...

A serious crisis has shaken Spain since the referendum on self-determination and the proclamation of...

There lives a couple known as "100-year-old lovebirds". They're like fairy tale characters: the husb...

Interpreting an event of ROKS Cheonan corvette, torpedoed and sunken by North Korea, this documentar...

At the turn of the 19th and 20th century Finnish philologist G. J. Ramstedt travelled around Mongoli...

Eunmi, a woman who underwent intense anti-communist education while she grew up in South Korea, live...

During the Japanese colonial period, 22 Korean female workers were forced to work in a spinning mill...

In 1975, Ryszard Kapuściński, a veteran Polish journalist, embarked on a seemingly suicidal road tri...

They're called bar women, hostesses, or sex workers and "western princesses." They come from poor fa...

KIM Soonak is a survivor of sex slavery by the Japanese military. The war may have ended, but her li...

Jeju-do is the largest of Korean islands and lies between Korea and Japan. There, for hundreds of ye...

Things That Do Us Part is a documentary that reframes the stories of three women fighters who dove i...

Follows a Palestinian leader who unites Fatah, Hamas and Israelis in an unarmed movement to save his...
Korea is a divided nation. Filmmaker Min Sook Lee sets out on a revelatory, emotion-charged journey ...

"You belong to the country for the next two years." The film describes Woo-cheol's struggles with be...

A relentless chronicle of the tragedy of the Uighurs, an ethnic minority of some eleven million peop...