2018/06/21

Secrets of the family



Secrets of the family

Secrets of the family
Peace, love and mind control - one Sydney couple's journey through the Twelve Tribes religious cult.

By Tim Elliott18 December 2013 — 4:00am

One Saturday in October 1996, Mark Ilich and his wife Rosemary did something they would regret for the rest of their lives. They attended the Newtown Festival. It was a warm spring day and the festival, in Sydney's inner west, was busy with music and people. Together with their daughter Undila, who was six, and their three-year-old son, Abraham, Mark and Rose wandered about, then sat down on a patch of grass in front of the stage, where various acts were playing.

Mark, now 53, is originally from New Zealand, but moved to Australia in 1984. A glazier and professional musician, he is contagiously optimistic and compulsively friendly. Rose is more reserved, but highly curious. She grew up in Spain and Paris and speaks several languages. They describe themselves as "idealistic". "We have always been interested in trying to come back to what seemed like a more natural, sustainable, fulfilling way of life," Rose tells me.


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Thought control and brutally strict discipline were among the things Rosemary Ilich and her family survived inside a religious cult.


On that day in 1996, however, the couple were at a crossroads. They had just returned from two years in Spain during which they had struggled to find work. Now they were back in Sydney, living in an apartment in Coogee that belonged to Mark's brother. "We weren't exactly desperate, but we were at a loose end," Rose says. "We were hungry to make friends, to have a stable social life. I'd come to the conclusion that I didn't care who people were, I was just going to take them as they are."

After a while on the grass, Mark got up to walk around. Half an hour later he returned, clutching a pamphlet entitled A Brotherhood of Man. A friendly woman in a long dress with long hair had given it to him, saying, "You look like you need a home."

Sydney couple Rosemary Ilich aka Rose Ilich and Mark Ilich who spent 14 years with the Twelve Tribes religious cult. Hair & make-up - WAYNE CHICK SMH GOOD WEEKEND Picture by TIM BAUER GW131214Photo: Tim Bauer
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The pamphlet was produced by a group called the Twelve Tribes. "Where is the brotherhood of man that John Lennon imagined in his song?" it asked. "Where are the dreamers who have given up their possessions so that greed and hunger could be done away?"

The pamphlet mentioned Jesus, "the ultimate dreamer", who was referred to by his Hebrew name, Yahshua; it also quoted the Bible. But it rejected mainstream Christianity, denouncing it as "the whore spoken of in Revelations".

All this appealed to the Ilich family. "I'd always condemned the mainstream church," says Rose. "We'd also visited a few communes in Europe.

I said to Mark, 'If these guys are what they proclaim to be, this could be the community we're looking for.' "

Higher calling … (from left) Abraham, Lebana, Mark, Rose and Undila Ilich at Katoomba in 2001.



A few days later, Rose called the number on the pamphlet and spoke to a woman called Shomrah, who invited them to visit the group at Peppercorn Creek Farm, a nine-hectare property it owns near Picton, south-west of Sydney.

The Iliches drove down that Friday, arriving at 7pm, in time for the evening gathering. They were greeted by a man with a long beard called Asher. (Asher's real name was Andrew McLeod, but like all members of the Twelve Tribes he had, upon joining the community, been given a Hebrew name.) Asher showed them to a guest room in the main farmhouse, where they left their bags. He then took them to a big tent full of people dressed in simple clothes. There were lounges and chairs and tables set with flowers and candles. There was music, too, a piano and an accordion, and beautiful, home-cooked food.

Retreating ... The Ilich family in hiding in Leura in 2002, during a visit by Rose’s family.

"I remember everyone was super interested in us," Mark says. "There was a guy called Yotham, who stayed with us all night, who was always telling me, 'I really like you, you seem like a really nice guy.' It was like we were part of an instant family."

Mark and Rose and the kids stayed that night and the next day and the night after that. In the morning they drove back to Coogee, got changed and went to the Glebe Street Fair, where the Twelve Tribes had a cafe stall similar to the one at Newtown. Yotham was there, with some of the musicians. Members of the group were dancing and they invited Mark and Rose to dance, too. "We are a family and you can be part of it," Yotham told Rose, as they spun about in the sunshine. "We can go grey together; our children will marry each other."



Cult following … a young Eugene Spriggs, also known as Yoneq, the American founder of the Twelve Tribes.

Rose and Mark were sold.

One of the first things the Iliches did was return to their flat in Coogee, accompanied by one of the community's "elders", a man named Israel. Israel told them what to keep and what to throw away. Most of their possessions - the kids' clothes, Mark's surfboard, books, toys - had a "spirit" about them and were deemed unsuitable. The Iliches had a small car, which they gave to the community, and some money in the bank, which they also handed over.

We are family … Rose’s sister and brother, Cathy and Henry Cruzado, in Sydney with cult buster Raphael Aron in 2002.

In January 1997 they were baptised, or "washed for their sins", in the creek that runs behind the farm, and given new names: Mark became Qatan ("childlike", in Hebrew); Rose became Asarelah (meaning "virtuous"). There were about 70 people in the community, including a dozen or so families, some of them second generation. "That's one of the things that attracted me," Rose says. "I thought, well, people have grown up here and decided to stay, so it must be good."



The Twelve Tribes group was founded in 1972, in Chattanooga, Tennessee, by a former high school guidance counsellor and carnival showman called Eugene Spriggs, known in the movement as "Yoneq". The group has 3000 members worldwide, with communities in the USA, Canada, France, Spain, Argentina, Brazil, Germany and England. The Australian "tribe" was established in the early 1990s by an American named Scott Sczarnecki (who has since left), and William Nunally, or Nun (pronounced Noon), another American who remains a senior figure at Peppercorn Creek Farm.

Moving on … The Ilich family in Galston, Sydney, in 2007.

Following a hybrid of Judaism and Christianity, the group's aim is to re-create the 12 tribes of Israel, thereby ushering in the return of Yahshua, who will arrive like a "King coming for his bride when she is fully prepared for Him". Members use the Old Testament as a blueprint for their lives. The insistence on communal living, hard work and, most controversially, harsh child discipline, are all modelled on life in "the first church of Jerusalem", before the advent of the clergy, which the group abhors. Marriage outside the Tribes is forbidden, with elders and even Yoneq himself acting as matchmaker.

The group has been likened to the Amish, with whom they share some similarities, particularly in regard to marriage and modern technology. Wives must submit to their husbands, and are encouraged to have at least seven children. Condoms and the pill are forbidden. Mainstream medical care is likewise shunned, something observers have linked to what appears to be a higher than normal rate of stillbirths. (Rose had a stillbirth in 2001 and says she knew of five in her time at Picton.)

Staying on … Erez and Undila in 2010, about the time of their wedding.



Community life is strictly regimented. Members rise at 6am (except on Saturday, the Sabbath, when they rise at 7am), woken by a blast of the "shofar", or ram's horn. There is a morning gathering, or "minchah", at 7am, which includes prayers and singing, followed by work, either in the farmhouse, kitchen or fields. (One of Mark's first jobs was to tend the farm's 30-strong flock of merino sheep.) The community also operates many businesses, including bakeries, cafes, house painting and demolition crews, to which Mark, and later, his son Abraham found themselves assigned. Children, meanwhile, are home-schooled using specially approved texts printed on site. There is no TV, internet, magazines, newspapers or radio. Members are discouraged from contacting former friends or family and do not vote.

Mark and Rose weren't particularly religious, but they were impressed by the group's commitment and the sense of the farm being "one big family". "One of their teachings is to 'Take counsel from the least', meaning everyone is listened to," Rose says.

A different life ... Rose Ilich today, happier away from the Twelve Tribes religious cult.Photo: Tim Bauer. Hair & make-up: Wayne Chick

Early on, Mark and Rose were each assigned a "shepherd", a senior member whose spiritual insight enabled them to act as a mentor. "My shepherd was a woman called Bakhirah," Rose says. "If I had any problems in my marriage, any concerns or troubles, I'd go to her and open up."

And there was a lot to open up about. The teachings, some of which come from the Bible and others from Yoneq, stress the deep iniquity of the outside world, a dark place in which the only light is one's conscience. Failing to follow your conscience inevitably sees one consigned for eternity to the "Lake of Fire". Members are encouraged to "renew your mind" - a phrase from the apostle Peter - and to be "an open book before your brethren", always "sharing" your sins, either with the elders, your shepherd, or at the gatherings.



The Iliches' sins were considerable. Rose, for example, had slept with men before getting married; she had also "rebelled" against her mother. Mark, meanwhile, had played drums in a rock band ("I had a 'drum spirit', apparently," he says). He had also surfed and smoked marijuana. "They present a very high standard," Rose says. "It's all you hear, all the time, and so you start judging yourself by this standard. Your thinking becomes very black and white. At the same time, they present themselves as the only way to truly obey God, whose spirit they embody. So if you disagree with the elders or your shepherd, you're disagreeing with God himself."

The pressure to confess was considerable. If just one member held back, God could not answer anyone's prayers that day. And so Rose would scour her mind daily for any hint of sin. "In the end you run out of things and your mind invents trouble." She also began examining Mark's conduct. "They told me Mark was 'worthless' because he'd been seeking 'worth' through other things, like performing music. In the past I'd thought his music was beautiful; now I started to see it as a sign of weakness."

Rose became suspicious of Mark, thinking he was "full of sin that he wasn't confessing". At the end of each gathering, having tendered their transgressions "like a lamb to God", the group would join hands and engage in a screaming session that lasted several minutes. "At the time it felt therapeutic," she says.

Mark and Rose were under the impression the group's teachings were drawn from the Bible. In fact, the majority come from the group's founder. Spriggs, 76, is a mysterious figure: a former football player, boxer and soldier, a charismatic evangelist whose rejection of "rote religion" in the 1970s proved popular with the "Jesus freaks" of the counterculture. Though initially predicated on an open-door policy - there was "no leader", and everyone was a "priest" - his movement has become increasingly fundamentalist and authoritarian.

"Spriggs regards himself as the Anointed One, with a direct pipeline to God," says David Pike, an ex-member of one the group's tribes, Manasseh, in the US. "He comes off as loving but is the perfect picture of a narcissistic cult leader. One thing I'll always remember is what he used to call a 'spirit check', when he'd come up behind a male disciple and slap his back as hard as he could and wait to see the person's reaction, whether he winced or jumped or brought his fists up. I hated it."



Spriggs is thought to live mostly in Hiddenite, in North Carolina, in an antebellum mansion the group bought in 2006. But he also travels a lot, flying from community to community, his every word transcribed into "teachings" (or "the anointing") which are published in Intertribal News, the movement's in-house newsletter.

Spriggs's teachings, some of which are withheld until members are deemed capable of "receiving" them, are frequently bizarre. He has said that "submission to whites is the only condition by which blacks will be saved" and that Martin Luther King was "filled with all manner of evil". (The group denies it is racist, pointing out that they have high-profile black members in America.)

The teachings are also minutely prescriptive, shaping every aspect of members' lives. Spriggs insists that men wear beards, since it was only the Romans who started shaving. He forbids wristwatches, which he considers a vanity, and has decreed that all members eat with chopsticks in order to speed the group's movement into Asia. Diet is strictly regulated: no sugar, chocolate, coffee or tea, with plenty of flax seed, whole grains and millet, and an emphasis on cultured foods, like yoghurt and kombucha. "At one stage chilli was strictly prohibited," Rose says. "Then it was permitted again."

All Twelve Tribes members are instructed to finish their showers with a cold rinse, which Spriggs believes boosts the production of white blood cells. When Rose asked her shepherd how cold it had to be, she was told: " 'Straight cold, even in winter, for one to two minutes.' If I tempered it with hot, I was allowing my 'flesh' to be stronger than me."

Michael Painter, who spent 18 years with the Tribes in the US and rose to become third in command, has described Spriggs's approach as "teeth, hair and eyeballs". "It was thought that if God doesn't control your teeth, hair and eyeballs, he doesn't have you."



But Spriggs's strictest teachings pertain to child-rearing. Children have a special place in Twelve Tribes eschatology, which holds that Yahshua can return only when God has, through the movement, brought forth 144,000 perfect male children, "so pure that fire comes out of their mouths". Raising obedient offspring then, is imperative. Children must at all times be "covered", a Twelve Tribes term meaning supervised by an adult. They must not play games (playing is "dissipation"). They must not have toys. They must not whistle. They must not engage in make-believe or fantasy, or possess books that anthropomorphise nature, depicting, for instance, a talking dog or a smiling sun. "At Picton, kids weren't even allowed to talk to one another unless covered by an adult, since this could only lead to 'foolishness', " Mark says.

According to Mark, unquestioning obedience is mandatory: children must reply "Yes, Abba" (Hebrew for father) or "Yes, Ima" to any parental command. Any breach earns a spanking with the "rod", a 50-centimetre-long plastic stick, one of which is kept above the door ledge in every room. Parents are instructed on how to use the "rod" in monthly child-training sessions and also in a 267-page Child Training Manual, a copy of which Mark and Rose received after their first year. Written by Spriggs, the manual insists that "you must make it hurt enough to produce the desired result" and that "stripes from loving discipline show love by the parent".

"It's called 'the rod and reproof', " Mark says. "The kids are not meant to cry. They're meant to 'receive' their discipline quietly. Then you tell them why you hit them and they say, 'I'm sorry, I'm sorry.' It becomes a ritual."

Children aren't beaten only by their parents. Any "covering" adult can "correct" them. Abraham was beaten regularly, by numerous adults, either on the hand (six strokes) or bottom (12). "The more you cried, the more you got spanked," he says. "If it was a lady and I was beaten on the bottom, my pants were kept on. But if it was a man, he put my trousers down and beat me directly on my skin."

The beatings started at the age of four. "The first time I cried a lot. But I stopped crying forever when I was 12." By then, he had decided to rebel. "I decided I would never do what they wanted me to do, unless I was beaten until I couldn't take any more pain, and then I would obey."



In 1984, alerted to claims of abuse, US authorities raided the group's Vermont headquarters, taking 112 children into care. (The raid was deemed unconstitutional and the children later released.) The group has been investigated for child abuse several times over the past decade in the US, France and Germany. In September this year, Bavarian police removed 40 children from two Twelve Tribes communities following a TV program that showed footage, obtained with hidden cameras, of adults beating six children with 83 strokes of a cane in the space of a few hours.

The group has repeatedly denied allegations of child abuse. Responding on its US website, it describes the Bavarian raids as "unjust" and suggests the authorities had been "manipulated by unseen spiritual powers".

The Iliches found the child discipline particularly difficult. Their oldest daughter, Undila, was largely compliant and their youngest daughter, Lebana, who'd been born in 1998, was still a toddler. But Abraham was problematic. "He was a normal boisterous boy, which to them is unacceptable," says Rose. "I ended up having to spank him almost constantly, for everything." Abraham soon became labelled a "rebellious element", something for which Mark and Rose were blamed. "We were bad parents," she says.

This became their signature stigma. In 2001, when Rose delivered a stillborn baby boy, she was told it was because she was "full of sin". "Mark's shepherd came into my room while I was still in bed and said it was 'God's kindness' that the baby had died, because it would be evil to bring a baby into the world with parents like us." Soon afterward, the elders forbade them from having sex altogether. "And we actually complied," Rose says.

Many times during our conversations I ask Mark and Rose why they didn't leave. "Leaving is not an option," Rose says. "You have to understand how brainwashed you become. You lose the ability to think critically."



They were also afraid. The Tribes consider an ex-member someone who was once enlightened and wilfully chose darkness, and who is thus more evil than an ordinary non-believer. "Nun told us that people who leave become prostitutes or homosexuals, that you'll suffer sickness, die an early death and go straight to hell."

One former member from Picton later told Rose how she had taken a flight to Auckland shortly after leaving. "She was terrified the whole time that God would make the volcanoes underneath them erupt, killing everyone on board."

Besides, there was little time to think. "You work the entire time," says Rose. "The first thing I'd do in the morning was report to my 'covering sister', who would give me my chores for the day - cooking, cleaning, child minding." Mark, meanwhile, found himself assigned to painting crews and construction and demolition teams.

The Tribes are nothing if not industrious. They own at least 24 businesses worldwide and are extremely well resourced, especially in America, where they operate furniture stores, kids' clothing outlets, a printing press, leather shops, soap factories, wholefood outlets, cafes, bakeries and several multimillion-dollar construction firms, the biggest of which, Builders of Judah, specialises in nursing homes and historic restorations. They also own a maté farm (maté is a tea-like herb) in Brazil, which according to David Pike, now makes "huge money for them".

In Australia, as elsewhere, members are not paid for their labour. "I'd regularly do 12-, 15-hour days," Mark says. "I built their Common Ground Cafe in Rozelle and their Yellow Deli in Katoomba. Every year we'd build the Common Ground Cafe at the Royal Easter Show."



The businesses were highly profitable. "Once I helped them carry $40,000 in cash out of the Easter Show. But I never saw a cent."

When Abraham turned 13, he was taken out of school - "they told me I had a bad influence on the other students" - and set to work, digging trenches and chopping trees. By the age of 14 he was working with Mark in a bakery in Lidcombe, where the Tribes made buns to sell at the Woodford Folk Festival.

"The bakery was the worst," Mark says. "For the first three weeks we slept on mattresses with doonas, on the ground, in a shed next to the bakery. We ate from the bakery, every night, doing 12-, 15-, even 20-hour days."

After 18 months at the bakery, Mark snapped. "I just said, "F... this, I'm leaving.' I didn't tell Rose - anything I told her, she'd tell the elders. So my son and I just pissed off. We hitched a ride to Sunnyholt Road. I had some spare change in my pocket and I called my brother, Peter, who lived in the Blue Mountains and told him to pick us up."

Mark and Abraham slept at Peter's house that night. But the next day, Israel turned up. "Israel had met my brother and he knew where he lived. He also knew that we had next to no money and that I'd be at Peter's place."



Mark and Abraham surrendered and were driven back to the community.

Mark's family, most of whom live in New Zealand, never had any suspicions about the Twelve Tribes. "They just thought we were in a nice Christian community," he says. But Rose's family was different. "We knew from the beginning that it was a cult," says Rose's sister, Cathy Cruzado, who lives in Paris.

In 2000, Cathy and her brother Henry made plans to visit Rose in Sydney. But when Rose told the elders of their imminent arrival, all hell broke loose. "Nun became convinced my family was coming to get me," Rose says.

Within a week, Rose, Mark and the three children were on a plane to Spain, where they were installed in a Twelve Tribes community in Zeberio, in the Basque Country. Rose's mother lived nearby, in Laredo, just 20 minutes' drive away, but Rose was not allowed at first to visit her. Instead, she was instructed to call Cathy and Henry and tell them that she and the family were in Boston. "The whole time, one of the Spanish leaders, a guy called Yowcef Rodriguez, was sitting next to me," Rose says. Cathy was upset and cancelled her flights. But Henry decided to go anyway, visiting the community in Picton, where he was served tea and cake "by robotic looking ladies wearing large skirts".

"I talked to the leader," says Henry. "He was courteous and charming until I asked him his reasons for hiding my sister, when he laughed in my face and replied that he had no idea of Rose's whereabouts."



Henry would make a total of five trips to Australia over the next decade, often with Cathy. They contacted Matthew Klein, an ex-Twelve Tribes member, for help and worked with Melbourne cult buster Raphael Aron. "I travelled 100,000 kilometres and saw my sister once, for a total of 10 minutes," Henry says. "It was in 2004 and Rose had finally agreed to meet me at Peppercorn Creek Farm."

Henry had brought a rolled poster of the Cruzado family tree since the 16th century, to show Rose that she already had a family. But Rose rebuffed him. "I was scared stiff of Henry, because the elders had been saying he was part of an anti-cult movement and that he'd kidnap me and the kids."

The minute Henry appeared, Abraham and his sisters were whisked away by an elder and hidden in the roof of the main building. "I was devastated," Abraham later recalled, "because I knew I'd just missed the best and perhaps the last chance to escape."

Dodging Rose's family was surprisingly easy: whenever Henry showed up, the family would simply be shuffled between a network of properties - an apartment in Leura, a house in Burwood, a hotel in Lithgow. At one stage the Tribes rented them a bungalow near Parramatta, then a house on the beach in Coledale, and later a home at Seven Mile Beach, near Gerroa. The elders were so paranoid about Rose's family finding them that they wouldn't allow Mark to renew his New Zealand driving licence. "They thought the authorities might use it to track us," Mark says.

Mark enjoyed living at Gerroa; for one thing, it meant he wasn't slaving his guts out. It also meant he could go surfing again. "I'd found this board in the rubbish and repaired it," he says.



But one day, when Mark and Abraham were out in the surf, some elders paid a surprise visit. "Man, were they angry," says Mark.

The elders took the family back to the farm where they staged a meeting or "cohol", interrogating Mark for five hours. "They just hammered me," he says. "They were quoting verses from the Bible, telling me I 'loved the world', and that anyone who 'loves the world would lose their life'. "

Their solution was to split up the family, sending Mark and Abraham away, firstly to Katoomba, then to Bargo, while the women stayed on the farm. "Rose was allowed to visit me from time to time," says Mark, "so that I could see Lebana, who was still only little."

Throughout the mid 2000s, Mark and Abraham were allowed to come back to the farm from time to time to reintegrate. But Abraham would invariably do something "worldly" - cut his hair, smoke a cigarette, wear his trousers low - and be reprimanded. Then, when Abraham turned 15, the elders asked if he would like to "get washed", or baptised. "You can all get f...ed," he told them. "The elders almost had a heart attack," Mark says. "After that, they sent us away again, to this farm they own in Bigga."

The property, near Crookwell in the NSW southern highlands, was 460 hectares, with no power, water or house. "We just lived in this shed," Mark says. "Drank rainwater off the roof. They put a phone on for us and gave us gas cylinders to cook with. And every few weeks, Rose would visit." Their job was to chop wood, which was taken to Picton for heating. But Mark was increasingly disillusioned. "I was just so pissed off by then. Rose was in turmoil, too."



Then, in 2009, the elders sent Mark and Abraham to New Zealand. "They just wanted us out," he says. "So they gave me a couple of hundred dollars and said, 'Your New Zealand family can look after you.' "

It was in Auckland that Mark finally decided to leave the group. "I rang Rose and said, 'I think I'm leaving.' She said, 'My life is with you, I'll come with you.' "

Mark had the family sent over, ostensibly just to visit. Once there, he told them of his decision. Abraham was thrilled: "That's the best thing you've ever told me," he said. But Undila was devastated. She didn't want to leave, and began crying. She was due to marry Erez, a young man who had been sent over from the community in France. So Mark let her return. "That was the stupidest thing I ever did," he says now.

The family spent a year in Auckland before returning to Sydney. "We wanted to be closer to Undila," Mark says of the decision to return. "At that stage we thought we might have a chance of maintaining contact."

But they were wrong. Undila, who had a daughter in 2011, has made it clear she wants nothing to do with her family. "When you ring her she says doesn't want to talk to us," Mark says. "When you go there, her husband comes to the gate and says, 'Look, I told you, you're not allowed here. Don't come here.' The last time we went there, Rose got very emotional. She was crying. Our little granddaughter was there, and a couple of elders came up to cover the situation."



Mark and Rose now live in the Blue Mountains, with Lebana and Abraham, and are slowly putting their lives back together. Mark works in maintenance and has got back into surfing and music. He plays drums in a band called the Fabulous Shapelles and gives drum lessons at home. "I'm 53 years old, but it feels like I'm 21," he says. "It's like I'm starting over again, because you come out with nothing."

Rose works as a cleaner. "It's a bit of a disappointment to my family," she says. "I don't want to spend my life being a cleaner."

She has read about mind control, trying to come to terms with her experience. "When I look back, I can't believe it all happened. It's so bizarre. It's like I became a completely different person."

In the cult, she notes, they decide who has the right to exist and who does not. "But here we are," she says. "We still exist. That's something."

- The Twelve Tribes was approached by Good Weekend, but declined to comment.



This article originally appeared in Good Weekend. Find Good Weekend on facebook at facebook.com/GoodWeekendMagazine

Visiting the Cafe That's So Good You Forget it's Run By a Cult - VICE



Visiting the Cafe That's So Good You Forget it's Run By a Cult - VICE

Visiting the Cafe That's So Good You Forget it's Run By a Cult

Katoomba's Yellow Deli is owned and operated by the Twelve Tribes. Amongst other things they're about "producing an army of 144,000 male virgins, who would prepare the way for Christ's second coming."

ByMaddison Connaughton andJames Courtney
Sep 27 2017, 8:33am



Katoomba is a strange place. Probably the best description I've heard is that it has "a strong Twin Peaks vibe." It's a small town, surrounded by the beauty of the Blue Mountains, seemingly populated by busloads of camera-clutching tourists and backpackers with white boy dreads. It's the kind of place where the local store sells jackets like like:


All images by authors unless otherwise stated

But Katoomba is also home to a cult. Well, at least that's what an American tourist tells us. He describes the group as "Amish Jewish" and says they started in the US back in the 70s. For the life of him though he can't remember what they are called.

So we ask a tour guide at the local information centre whether this so-called cult has a name. "Which one?" he replies, explaining the Blue Mountains are filled with cults. There's the Exclusive Brethren, who build windowless churches; and an alleged sect of nuns who've isolated themselves from the outside world.

"I think you're talking about the Twelve Tribes though," he says. "They run a cafe in the town called the Yellow Deli." Look out for the "hipsters," the guide advises—beards, flannel shirts, artisanal food. 
"Great food, terrible service," he adds, chuckling at his hipster joke as he walks away.


We have arrived

Scrolling through the Yellow Deli's Google reviews, this seems to be the general consensus. Everyone clearly loved the "delicious home cooked meals" and the interior, which has a "Middle Earth feel to it," a "Hobbit house IRL" if you will. But of the more than 100 reviews, there's only one mentions that the cafe is run by the Twelve Tribes.

"We left before we received our food when we realised this cafe is owned by a group that is part of the Twelve Tribes cult," it reads. "They practice child labour, beating their children with rods, splitting up families, sheltering members from the outside world, and antisemitism. I would strongly urge you to give your money to one of the many other fine cafes in Katoomba, where your money will not fund a cult."


How could so many people just ignore that this cafe was being run by a really controversial religious sect? Could the food really be that good? We decided we had to check it out ourselves.


Welcome to the Yellow Deli

The Yellow Deli is on Katoomba's main street. We arrive around noon and the place is buzzing. Inside, women deliver plates of food and tea from the pass to tables—all of them wearing harem pants with long braids trailing down their backs. The men wear their hair long too. The tour guide was kind of right: thick beards, lots of flannel.

A man approaches with a broad smile and sits us in a booth by the door. His name is Justin, and he's the cafe manager. The first surprise is how upfront he is about the Twelve Tribes. We'd thought it'd be very smoke and mirrors, but Justin floods us with information before we've even ordered.

Handing us samples of the cafe's signature "green drink," Justin tells us there are around 100 people in their community, all living together. They have a farm in Picton, about a hour and 45 minutes south-east of Katoomba. Everybody works: some in the cafe, some at the farm, others teaching the children who are all homeschooled. Members of the Twelve Tribes don't vote, they don't drink or smoke, and the don't watch TV. "We do have a computer," Justin tells us. Some people use it a lot, he admits.


Green Drink: tastes like giving up your world possessions

But the internet is a pretty fraught place for the Twelve Tribes. It abounds with accounts from scarred escapees, children who grew up at the mercy of the group's strict doctrine—a strange mix of Christian fundamentalism and 70s counterculture.

A few years ago, former members Mark and Rosemary Ilich did a tell all with the Sydney Morning Herald about their time living in the Blue Mountains community. When they joined the Twelve Tribes, the couple handed over all of their worldly possessions to the group. They also handed over the discipline of their children, who Mark and Rosemary allege were routinely hit with a wooden rod by any adult in the community if they misbehaved.


Some reading materials our waiter gave us

"It's called 'the rod and reproof,'" Mark told the paper. "The kids are not meant to cry. They're meant to 'receive' their discipline quietly. Then you tell them why you hit them and they say, 'I'm sorry, I'm sorry.' It becomes a ritual."

His face souring only momentarily, Justin tells us everybody has a blog today and people can say anything they want on the internet. Then he takes our order.


The Yellow Deli's menu

We go with the Garden Burger on a homemade Kaiser roll and a Reuben, which has received a lot of love in Google reviews. While we're waiting Justin suggests a pot of yerba mate, a tea that's popular throughout Central and South America. "It helps your focus," he says, explaining the group is big on things that help centre your mind.

This mix of religious piety and what can't really escape the definition of "clean eating" that defines the Twelve Tribes is curious, but it dates back to the group's founding in 1972. What's now more than 3,000 members around the world can be traced to a single bible study group that was started by former high school teacher Gene Spriggs in Chattanooga, Tennessee.


Circle dancing is common within the Twelve Tribes. 
Image viaTwelve Tribes
---------
Spriggs—who goes by a Hebrew name now, as all Tribe members do—is known Yoneq. He is a divisive figure. Writing for Pacific Standard, Julia Scheeres reported that in the late 1970s Spriggs "began to preach that blacks were destined to be slaves, homosexuals 'deserved the death penalty,' and women—who weren't allowed to use birth control—had to atone for Eve's original sin by giving birth without painkillers."

Then there's the name: the Twelve Tribes reflects the group's belief they are recreating the 12 ancient tribes of Israel. Its goal, Scheeres writes, is to "produce an army of 144,000 male virgins, who would prepare the way for Christ's second coming."

But the mate tea is great.


I'm drinking a tea. Refreshing!

Despite the reviews of slow service, our food arrives quickly, in those wicker baskets that were very on-trend in 2013. By now the Yellow Deli is heaving with people, regulars chatting with the staff, busy locals taking lunch to go. The burger comes with a cup of pumpkin soup, and the Reuben with a side of pickles.


James tucking into the Yellow Deli's famed Reuben

James says: After Justin sufficiently tore my lifestyle decisions apart (read: selfies, drinking, working for a bank), I felt an act of defiance was the only gesture that could possibly tip the scales—which were no doubt hand carved from responsibly sourced wood—back in my favour. It felt good to order a meaty Reuben from our definitely vegan waiter.

It tasted good to eat too: Gentle heat from American mustard, slices of tender beef, and sweet, sweet sauerkraut. Around 20 minutes after eating though I suddenly became so tired I convinced myself I had been poisoned or fed loads of sleepers. But no, I was just full*

*and overwhelmed, having been invited to visit "the community" for an evening of acoustic guitars and dancing.



Maddison says: Way too often vegan burgers taste like wet packing pellets. Burger chefs, it seems, somehow missed the millions of articles that are like, "Vegan Burgers Don't Need to Taste Like Shit." But this burger was a revelation. I think the patty was smoked tofu, which gave it this amazing barbecue flavour. The zingy mayonnaise cut right through the smokiness. God, it was good.

The pumpkin soup was a different story. It was bland, what I imagine flannel might taste like. It's unfortunate the Tribes apparently don't allow chilli. This soup could've used the kick.

So good... too good?

James says: For dessert, I had a vegan cookie which was really, honestly, very delicious. It was the sort of thing you've tried to make at home once before, which IRL was hard, disappointing, and charred. Only this looked like the stock image from the Food Network site and tasted like it had been made by a mysterious community who didn't appreciate my references to Matt Preston or MasterChef .

Maddison says: This vegan carob cookie was legitimately good enough to make me question whether I would give up all of my possessions to live a life on the land. Ultimately, I decided not to. But about halfway through I was tempted.


A pic Justin took of us enjoying our yerba mate tea

Contented and very full, we left the Yellow Deli, unconverted. It's not that our waiter Justin wasn't lovely, he was, and the picture he painted of life in the Twelve Tribes was pretty idyllic. But here's the thing... It sounded like so much fucking work. Getting up early, circle dancing, sowing crops, making everything from scratch, picking out a different flannel shirt every day.


The question of whether the Twelve Tribes was a cult or just a business-savvy group of Christian hippies didn't really matter. Neither of us were built for this life of austerity. Vegan cookies are great but so is watching TV, taking selfies, drinking too much. Maybe there is a cult out there for us, maybe those cloistered nuns hidden away somewhere in the Blue Mountains would be a little more chill. If only we could find them.

We'll find you

For more food reviews, follow James on Twitter. For more cult reviews, follow Maddison on Twitter.

The Twelve Tribes | Yellow Deli in Katoomba





The Twelve Tribes | Yellow Deli in Katoomba















The Twelve Tribes is a confederation of twelve self-governing tribes, composed of self-governing communities. We are disciples of the Son of God whose name in Hebrew is Yahshua. We follow the pattern of the early church in Acts 2:44 and 4:32, truly believing everything that is written in the Old and New Covenants of the Bible, and sharing all things in common.



Links



3EternalDestinies.org

YellowDeli.com

HippieCrit.org



International



dvanactkmenu.cz

news.zwoelfstaemme.de

dozetribos.com.br

docetribus.com.ar

docetribus.com

douzetribus.fr



Please Contact us





mail_us (@) twelvetribes.org

1-888-TWELVE-T



Or call the phone number

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214 Katoomba Street

Katoomba NSW 2780Australia

Phone: (02) 4782 9744

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Yellow Deli in Katoomba




Known for the past five years as the Common Ground Cafe in Katoomba, we've now gone back to our original name as the Yellow Deli, making our public debut at the Winter Magic Festival, June 22nd 2013.



There is truly only one way for the barriers that have divided humanity for thousands of years to be broken down in reality. It is through expressing a LOVE which lets us see beyond our differences into the hearts of others. Only then will we be able to truly find common ground. This peacemaking love has been sought by many as the solution to the world's problems. But, unfortunately, common ground has been rarely found. For without tapping into the Source of this love - the Source is the Eternal God Himself - even the most valiant attempts, by the most noble souls, seem to be thwarted. 

We here at the Yellow Deli, along with all our cafes and Delis worldwide, are striving to provide for you more than just delicious, wholesome food in a restaurant with a catchy name. The same heart that the name "Common Ground" represents, we continue to display, but only in a greater way under the world-wide banner of the Yellow Deli. Our desire is to stand together with you in that place where men's hearts can finally find peace. We serve the fruit of the Spirit - why not ask? Come and see...



Your friends at the Yellow Deli in Katoomba.
========







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Twelve Tribes:
Spare the rod and spoil the �
Sydney Morning Herald: Insight
Date: March 24 2008


Harsh discipline of children is a central tenet of a religious sect operating in Picton, writes Tim Elliott.

In 1999 Matthew Klein had a revelation. Fed up with mainstream Christianity, the then 30-year-old industrial chemist, his wife and two young children went to live on a nine-hectare commune at Picton run by a Christian sect called the Twelve Tribes. "I wanted to be a good Christian, and I admired what I thought was this group's commitment."

Klein sold his house and business, emptied his bank account and surrendered it all to the "community", whose members were only known by biblical names. "When you join you abandon your 'worldly name' and adopt a Hebrew one," he says.

"I became Lev Qadash, which is Hebrew for 'dedicated heart'."

But it wasn't long before Klein began noticing "odd things" about the group. He knew that the 60 or so members weren't allowed to marry outsiders or to vote, and that they had no access to newspapers, magazines or TV. But questioning the elders was also strictly prohibited. "We were told that reasoning was the same sin as witchcraft," he says.

Then there were the "ridiculously long" work hours. "The group owns bakeries and cafes and operates a restaurant at the Royal Easter Show. Sometimes you were working 20-hour days, for no pay. There's plenty of money coming in, but no one who works there ever sees any of it."

Most disturbing of all, however, was the child discipline. In an effort to keep their minds pure, Twelve Tribes children aren't allowed to have toys, play games or make-believe. If a child disobeys these rules or fails to respond to an adult, he or she is hit on the bare bottom or hand with a 45-centimetre, reed-like stick, one of which is kept above the door ledge in every room.

"One spanking generally consisted of three to six hits," Klein says, with the rod regarded as "an instrument of love, not punishment".

"One day I left my two-year-old boy with an elder while I went and worked. When I came back, I asked how it went and he said, 'We had a few problems but we got over them'. He said that my boy wouldn't come to him so he'd spanked him. When he still wouldn't come, he spanked him again. I asked him how many times that happened and he said, 'About 10 or 12'. So he'd hit my boy about 60 times in the course of the day."

It was then that Klein realised something was "majorly wrong". But such was the sect's power that he spent another year with group, during which time he and his family were moved to a community in Canada, to avoid the attention of his parents. "That's what they do: if you talk out against them, you get cut off from family members who are still in there. And if you kick up too much of a stink, they just move you overseas."

Klein finally left in 2001, and has since regained custody of his children. But he hasn't seen his wife for seven years. "The kids wonder why she doesn't get in touch. I'm not even sure where she is."

FOUNDED in 1976 in Chattanooga, Tennessee, by a former high school guidance counsellor, Elbert Eugene Spriggs ("Yoneq"), Twelve Tribes now has 3000 members worldwide, with communities in the US, Canada, Argentina, Brazil, France, Germany, Spain and England. 

Australia has three, including at Katoomba, where the Twelve Tribes recently bought a $1.7 million property that it is converting into a Common Ground cafe.

Following a hybrid of Judaism and Christianity, the group's aim is to re-create the 12 tribes of Israel, thereby ushering in the return of Yashua (Jesus), who will arrive like "a King coming for his Bride when she is fully prepared for Him". Members claim to use the Old Testament as a blueprint for their lives, but guidance also comes from Spriggs's prolific and frequently bizarre teachings, many of which, it is said, come directly from God. (Spriggs claims the Lord first spoke to him while he was working at a carnival in 1969.)

Spriggs's teachings include assertions that "submission to whites is the only provision by which blacks will be saved", and that the civil rights leader Martin Luther King was "filled with all manner of evil" and "deserved to be killed".

BUT it is the Twelve Tribes' attitude towards children that has proved most controversial. Harsh discipline is one of the group's central tenets, as detailed in its 267-page Child Training Manual, copies of which have been handed out to parents at Picton. Written by Spriggs, the manual codifies when, why and how to hit children, saying "you must make it hurt enough to produce the desired result" and that "stripes or marks from loving discipline show love by the parent".

Peter Baker ("Nathaniel"), an elder of the Picton community, would not answer questions about the manual. But he defends the Twelve Tribes, saying "we are devoted believers in Jesus Christ". Baker, who came to the Twelve Tribes from the Exclusive Brethren, says no staff get paid, explaining that members "work only for love, like the disciples of old". They don't vote, he says, "because we look forward to the Kingdom of God coming to Earth, so we don't involve ourselves with government business". As for the sticks, "we have found them to be more effective than wooden spoons."

Yet others say the community is a law unto itself. "Once, when I was making some food in the kitchen, I saw an eight-month-old boy being repeatedly hit with a stick for 40 minutes by his mother," George, a former member from Picton, says. "All because the kid kept dropping a lid that she'd given him."

David Pike, a former member from the tribe of Mannasah, in the US, told of seeing a two-year-old "switched" for eight hours "because she didn't want to eat a bowl of millet, which is what they eat all the time. I also saw young boys who couldn't sleep on their backs because their buttocks were so welted and bloody."

The group has been embroiled in several high-profile scandals overseas, with members in the US recently convicted of child-sex offences and child labour violations. In 2000 two members in France were sentenced to six years in jail for negligence after their 19-month-old son died of malnutrition.

"It's particularly harmful to children because there is no one who can be an advocate for them outside the system," Ros Hodgkins, a counsellor who has treated former Twelve Tribes members, says. "And by claiming to have the sole path to salvation, the group exerts considerable power over members."

Other control mechanisms include the systematic informing by wives on husbands and children on parents. "If you don't inform on your family, you're told you don't love them and you won't receive salvation," a former member, Michael Curry, says.

Curry, who now runs a picture-hanging business in Coogee, spent a year with his wife and daughter at Picton, but left in 2001. "My wife and daughter stayed inside - they were totally brainwashed, and I couldn't convince them to leave. I haven't seen my wife for seven years. I've heard that she's living with them in America and has remarried someone from the Tribes. My daughter would be 22 now. I saw her a few years ago at the group's cafe at the Royal Easter Show, but she told me that I was evil and to get away from her."

THOUGH numerically small, the Twelve Tribes is remarkably well resourced, especially in the US, where it operates furniture stores, leather shops, soap and candle factories, wholefood outlets, cafes, bakeries and several building businesses, the biggest of which, BOJ (Builders of Judah) Construction, specialises in nursing homes. A former member in the US says BOJ grosses $US15 million ($16.6 million) a year, most of which is used to finance the sect's property acquisitions.


In Australia, Twelve Tribes has run a range of businesses, from demolition, plumbing and painting to import-export, plus several Common Ground cafes, mobile versions of which have made appearances at events such as the Royal Easter Show, the Woodford Folk Festival and the Sydney Olympics. ("They recruit at some very reputable places," Hodgkins says.)

The group's holding company, The Community Apostolic Order, has assets worth $4.55 million but claims tax-exempt status as a charitable institution. Though "members' equity" is at $2.8 million, only one former member the Herald spoke to had managed to recoup anything on leaving, and only after threatening legal action.

Each Twelve Tribes "community" sends a 10 per cent tithe to the US which is spent on evangelical pamphlets or "freepapers", and on purchases such as the Avany, the Tribes' 38-metre private yacht, which features Limoges porcelain, spas and handcrafted mahogany finishings.

"This is one opulent boat," David Pike, who worked on the Avany's restoration, says. "We used to take it for evangelical tours to Savannah and ask people for donations, until the Coastguard told us that was illegal."

The US cult investigator Rick Ross has called Spriggs a "jet-set cult leader. There is no question he controls millions of dollars. Where is it? Only [Spriggs] knows."

When Zeb Wiseman, a son of the Twelve Tribes second-in-command, Charles "Eddie" Wiseman, defected in 2001, he told of Spriggs's extravagant lifestyle, travelling by chauffeured car and going on shopping junkets with his wife. Spriggs is thought to travel almost constantly, staying in homes in the US and France.

"But the houses are always in someone else's name," Pike says.

Pike insists, however, that Spriggs is "not doing it to get rich. He actually believes God speaks to him, that he is doing God's will and building the Kingdom and gathering the Bride and the Chosen Ones to bring about the return of the Messiah."

Both Klein and Curry complained to the Department of Community Services about the group's treatment of children. "But they said they can't do much because it's hard to get evidence," Curry says. Klein says approaching the authorities about the group's work practices proved similarly fruitless: "They wanted stuff that I couldn't give them like official names of the companies and directors."

So the group keeps operating.

"There are lots of families who've been ripped apart," Klein's mother, Maree, says. "And they can't speak out, because they're scared of losing contact. They're still hoping their kids will come home one day."Disclaimer:This news page is about groups, organizations or movements, which may have been called "cults" and/or "cult-like" in some way, shape or form. But not all groups called either "cults" or "cult-like" are harmful. Instead, they may be benign and generally defined as simply people intensely devoted to a person, place or thing. Therefore, the discussion or mention of a group, organization or person on this page, is not necessarily meant pejoratively. Readers are encouraged to read widely on a topic before forming an opinion. Never accept information from a single source at face value. This website only holds a small amount of information and should not be relied on as a complete source. For example, if you find older information, this should be weighed up against newer information as circumstances can change.

2018/06/19

알라딘: 장마당과 선군정치 - ‘미지의 나라 북한’이라는 신화에 도전한다



장마당과 선군정치 - ‘미지의 나라 북한’이라는 신화에 도전한다

헤이즐 스미스(저자) | 김재오(역자) | 창비 | 2017-09-20 |
  원제 North Korea: Markets and Military Rule (2015년)





정가 25,000원
판매가 22,500원 (10%, 2,500원 할인) | 무이자 할부


반양장본 | 528쪽 | 153*224mm | 751g | ISBN : 9788936486198
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1980년 이래 북한의 사회경제적 변화에 관한 역사적·경험적 연구. 1990년대 초 백만명의 사망자를 낳은 ‘고난의 행군’ 이후 ‘아래로부터의 시장화’를 겪은 북한사회를 평가한 책이다. 저자는 북한역사를 식민지 시기, 냉전 시기를 거쳐 현재에 이르는 세부분으로 나눠, 북한의 발전, 북한이 남한 및 서구와 맺어온 관계를 분석한다. 특히 ‘고난의 행군’ 이후 북한을 ‘침체’로만 바라보는 관점에 맞서, 이 시기 북한사회에 중요한 정치·경제·사회적 발전이 상당했다고 주장한다.
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한국어판 서문
감사의 글

서론 | 북한의 정치, 경제, 사회

1부 캐리커처 버리기: 역사에 대한 이해
1장 뻔한 클리셰 너머
2장 민족정체성

2부 김일성주의의 흥망
3장 식민지배와 김일성의 부상
4장 국가 건설로서 전쟁
5장 ‘우리식 사회주의’
6장 시시포스 경제 모델
7장 노동자 국가의 계층 분화
8장 고난의 행군과 김일성주의의 종언

3부 시장화와 군사통치
9장 아래로부터의 시장화
10장 위로부터의 군사통치
11장 복지의 시장화
12장 사회구조의 시장화
13장 핵무장
14장 전략적 인내, 전략적 마비
15장 변화를 이끄는 북한 주민들


참고문헌
옮긴이의 말 | 북한 핵무장은 어디에서 시작하여 어디로 가고 있는가
찾아보기


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조효제 (성공회대학교 사회과학부 교수)
: 북한이 고의적으로 주민을 굶겨 죽인다면 ‘반인도적 범죄’를 저지르는 셈이다. 그러나 이는 북한 사정에 정통한 국제기구들의 조사 결과와 배치된다. 왜 북한에 관한 논의에서 흔히 사실확인보다 가치판단이 앞서는가. 헤이즐 스미스 교수는 북한을 안보논리로만 파악하는 인식론적 왜곡이 가장 큰 이유라고 지적한다. 이런 편견을 조장하는 주체는 누구이며 그 기원은 무엇인가. 이책은 북한을 바라볼 때 예단을 피하고 과학적으로 접근해야 하며, 균형 잡힌 시각이 필수적임을 상기시켜준다.
도널드 P. 그레그
: 헤이즐 스미스의 이 책은 ‘악마화’에 대한 해독제로서 강한 효력을 발휘한다. 북한을 그저 천덕꾸러기가 아닌, 국제적 고립에서 벗어나려 안간힘을 쓰는 나라로 바라보게끔 한다.
로버트 M. 해서웨이
: 헤이즐 스미스가 실증 자료에 기반해 집필한 이 역작은 서방 고위급 정책입안자들을 비롯해 외부에서 북한을 바라보는 이들이 가지는 희화화된 이미지를 설득력 있게 무너뜨린다.

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저자 : 헤이즐 스미스 (Hazel Smith)
저자파일
최고의 작품 투표
신간알리미 신청
최근작 : <장마당과 선군정치> … 총 37종 (모두보기)
소개 :
영국 런던 SOAS 한국학연구센터 연구교수. 런던정경대학에서 국제관계학 박사학위를 받았고 센트럴랭커셔대학 한국학 국제연구소 소장 등을 지냈다. 온갖 ‘신화’에 둘러싸인 북한의 정치·경제·사회를 철저한 자료조사에 근거해 과학적으로 연구해왔다. 특히 북한과 동아시아 안보 및 식량 원조를 비롯해 국제 인도주의에 관심을 두고 있다. 1998년에서 2001년 사이에 세계식량계획과 유엔아동기금 업무를 맡아 2년가량 북한에 체류하며, 세계식량계획 역사상 최대 규모의 식량 원조 사업을 감독했다. 지은 책으로 Hungry for Peace (2005), North Korea in the New World Order (공저, 1996) 등이 있다.

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역자 : 김재오
저자파일
최고의 작품 투표
신간알리미 신청
최근작 : <영어교육의 인문적 전망> … 총 3종 (모두보기)
소개 : 영남대 영문과 교수. 서울대 영문과에서 박사학위를 받았고, 반년간지 『안과밖』 편집주간을 맡고 있다. 옮긴 책으로 『유럽적 보편주의』 『윌리엄 모리스』(공역) 등이 있다.

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“북한은 유별난 나라인가?”
24개월 공식 취재, 25년 연구를 통해
‘고난의 행군’ 이후 북한이 찾은 생존이데올로기의 전모를 밝힌다

2017년 9월 15일 북한의 탄도미사일이 일본 상공을 지나 북태평양에 떨어졌다. 9월 3일 북한의 6차 핵실험 이후 유엔 안전보장이사회가 대북 제재 결의안을 발표한 데 대한 반발의 표시로 분석되고 있다. 문재인 정부가 세계식량계획 등 유엔 산하기구를 통해 북한에 800만 달러의 인도적 지원을 검토하겠다고 발표한 지 하루 만이다. 지금 한국·미국·중국·유럽을 비롯한 국제사회는 안보문제에 집중하며 대북 무역제재 조치를 가하는 등 격한 반응을 보이고 있다. 북한은 왜 끊임없이 핵·미사일에 열을 올리며 고립을 자초하는가? 북한의 핵무장에 깔린 심리는 무엇이며, 그런 정권의 움직임을 북한 주민들은 어떻게 바라보고 있는가? 북한이라는 ‘미지의 나라’가 실제로 어떻게 작동하는지 제대로 알기 위해, 북한을 둘러싼 판에 박힌 인식을 걷어내고 사실에 기초하려는 노력이 그 어느 때보다 필요한 시점이다.
『장마당과 선군정치: ‘미지의 나라 북한’이라는 신화에 도전한다』의 저자 헤이즐 스미스(Hazel Smith)는 온갖 신화와 오해로 덧씌워진 북한 사회를 25년간 철저한 자료조사와 인터뷰, 현지 체류경험을 바탕으로 최대한 ‘진실’에 가깝게 복원하려 했다. ‘북한 정권은 주민을 샅샅이 통제한다’ ‘북한 사람들은 모두 똑같이 사고한다’ ‘북한 사회는 결코 변하지 않는다’ … 등 북한 사회에 대한 외부의 선입견에 맞서, 북한 역시 여느 나라처럼 과학적이고 학문적인 방식으로 분석 가능한 나라임을 보여준다. 특히 저자는 1990년대 100만명의 사망자를 낳은 대기근(고난의 행군) 이후 북한에서 중요한 정치·경제·사회적 발전이 상당히 많이 이루어졌으며, 이런 변화는 정권에서 행하는 ‘위로부터의 군사통치’와 대비되는 민간 중심의 ‘아래로부터의 시장화’에서 비롯하는 것으로 보고 있다. 즉 2000년대 이후 현재 북한 사회를 이끄는 실질적인 동력은 북한 주민들에게 있다는 분석이다. 2015년 케임브리지대학 출판사에서 출간한 North Korea: Markets and Military Rule을 김재오 영남대 교수가 우리말로 옮겼다.

가십에 매료된 사이, 북한은 핵을 키웠다

1993년 북한이 핵확산금지조약(NPT) 탈퇴를 선언하며 구체화된 핵개발의 역사는 햇수로 20년이 넘는다. 극도의 식량난과 경제난, 국제적 고립과 경제 제재를 겪으면서도 북한의 핵·미사일 개발은 계속됐다. 과연 그동안 국제사회는 어떻게 대처했을까.
미국 오바마 정부는 북한이 핵무기와 미사일을 포기할 때까지 기다린다는 ‘전략적 인내’ 정책을 내놓았지만, 이라크전쟁·아프가니스탄전쟁·세계금융위기로 우선순위에서 밀려 대북 협상은 전략적 ‘마비’ 상태가 됐고 북한의 핵·미사일 능력을 키우는 결과를 낳았다(이 책 14장 참조). 여기에는 미국의 정책입안자들조차 북한을 너무 모른다는 속사정 ― “우열을 가리기 힘들 정도로 균형을 이룬 상원과 연방의회에서 다수가 북한에 대해 아는 바가 거의 혹은 아예 없는 상황”(353면) ― 이 깔려 있었다.
오랫동안 ‘북한 체제는 스스로 무너질 것’이라는 인식이 팽배했다. ‘고난의 행군’으로 불리는 1990년대 중반의 대기근 사태로 북한 주민 100만명이 사망한 것으로 알려졌다. 이 상황에서 부모가 자녀를 인신매매하고, 배고픔을 이기지 못해 인육을 먹는다는 등의 괴담이 힘을 얻었다. 최고지도부의 도덕적 일탈, 국제사회의 인도주의적 지원을 핵과 미사일 개발에 사용하는 부도덕한 정책, 수용자를 대상으로 생화학 실험을 하는 정치범 수용소 같은 소문이 북한이탈주민의 입으로부터 나왔다. 세계 언론매체에서도 선정적인 가십을 보도하며 북한의 기괴한 이미지를 고착해갔다. 미국을 비롯한 각국 정보기관에서는 북한 정권이 주도해 미국 달러를 위조하고 마약 거래에 참여하는 등 국제 범죄에 참여한다는 내용을 발표하기도 했다.
그러나 북한을 ‘범죄국가’라고 주장하는 이런 가십들은 불확실한 기록과 추정에서 나왔고, 실제 사실과 다르다는 점을 입증할 근거가 존재한다. 이를테면 북한에서는 식량 원조를 받아 빈곤층으로부터 이를 빼돌려 엘리트층에게 흘려보낸다는 일설이 있다. 그러나 국제기구의 조사와 자료를 통해 살펴보면, 북한은 최악의 기근 동안에도 전체 식량 수요량의 80퍼센트를 계속 생산했으며, 군대는 1990년 2300만 인구 중 100만을 차지했는데 국내에서 생산된 식량으로 군에 음식을 공급하는 것이 정부의 정책으로 공표되었기 때문에 ‘빼돌린’ 국제 원조 물품이 필요하지 않았다는 것이 입증된다(이 책의 1장 참조).

“북한은 유별나지 않다”
유엔 공식자료를 통해 본, 몰랐던 북한

“북한은 결코 유별나지 않다. 설명하기 매우 어려운 나라도 아니다.”(21~22면)
헤이즐 스미스의 『장마당과 선군정치』는 북한에 대한 ‘비상식적 상식’을 걷어내는 작업이다. 저자는 현 상황을 “전세계는 이른바 북한의 괴상함이라는 것에 여전히 매료되어 있다”라는 말로 일축한다(39면). 그러나 “따지고 보면 북한의 기이함이라는 신화를 영속화함으로써 이익을 얻는 곳은 다름 아닌 북한 정권”이다(40면). 붕괴할 것으로 예측됐던 북한 정권은 대기근 속에서도 체제 유지를 위해 핵과 미사일 개발에 매진하며 탈냉전 이후 동북아 역내 안보를 위협했다. 주변국이 가십에 매료되어 있는 사이, 안보 위협은 높아졌고 북한 주민은 기근을 반복하며 고통스러운 삶을 살고 있다.
헤이즐 스미스는 북한의 특수성이나 보편성 어느 한쪽을 강조하며 심정적으로 이해하는 대신, 여느 나라를 분석하는 방식과 똑같이 북한을 사회과학적으로 해명할 수 있다고 본다. 현대 북한에 관한, 아직 연구자들이 잘 활용하지 않은 ‘자료’가 충분하기 때문이다. 헤이즐 스미스는 북한이탈주민을 출처로 하는 파편화된 정보나 각국 정보기관에서 발표한 추측성 정보를 최대한 배제하고, 북한에서 실제 활동한 국제기구들이 생산한 자료에 집중했다. 여기에는 유엔 식량농업기구(FAO), 세계식량계획(WFP), 유엔아동기금(UNICEF), 유엔개발계획(UNDP), 세계보건기구(WHO), 유럽연합(EU), 국제적십자사연맹(IFRC), 스위스개발협력청(SDC), 국제 까리따스(Caritas Internationalis)에서 제공한 통계자료를 비롯해, 헤이즐 스미스 자신이 1998년에서 2001년 사이 세계식량계획과 유엔아동기금 업무를 맡아 2년간 북한에 체류하며 얻은 현장자료가 포함된다. 1200여개의 주석과 580여건의 참고문헌이 이를 뒷받침한다. 현재 런던 SOAS 연구교수로 재직 중인 헤이즐 스미스는 북한과 동아시아 안보 및 식량원조를 비롯해 국제 인도주의에 관해 폭넓게 연구해왔으며, 북한에서 세계 식량계획 역사상 최대 규모의 식량 원조 사업을 감독하기도 했다.
이제까지 북한 연구에서 중요하게 여겨진 자료는 ??로동신문?? ??근로자?? 같은 정기간행물, ??김일성 전집?? ??김정일 전집?? 같은 북한이 공식적으로 발간한 문헌이었다. 사회주의적 수사에 익숙하지 않은 독자들이 북한 문헌에서 직접 행간을 읽어내기란 쉽지 않다. 그러나 헤이즐 스미스가 취합하고 엄선해 제공하는 실증 자료를 통해 북한에 대한 한층 더 밝은 이해에 도달할 수 있을 것이다. 특히 한국에서는 개성공단 폐쇄 등 제재 조치가 북핵 문제에서 실효를 거두지 못했던 데 반해, 유엔의 인도적 지원 업무 경험이 있는 외교부장관을 등용한 새 정부에서 어떤 외교 정책을 펼칠지 관심이 높다. 국제기구에서 활동하며 공식·비공식 자료를 낱낱이 조사·연구해온 헤이즐 스미스의 이 책이 오늘날 남북 외교와 정책에 큰 빛을 던져줄 것으로 기대된다.

북한 사회에 깊게 침투한 자본주의,
장마당과 핵무장

이 책은 ‘시장화’라는 개념으로 북한의 변화를 해석한다. 옛 소련을 비롯해 사회주의권을 이루던 국가 대부분에는, 자원을 배분하는 정부의 공식 경로 이외에 자생적으로 암시장이 형성돼 있었다. 사회주의 계획경제가 충족시키지 못하는 부분을 이런 암시장이 보완했기에 정권은 암시장을 묵인하곤 했다. 북한에도 비공식 시장이 존재해왔지만 고난의 행군을 거치면서 시장은 단지 부족한 것을 채우는 공간이 아닌, 생존을 위한 필수적 공간이 되었다. 헤이즐 스미스의 분석은 여기서 한발 더 나아간다. 북한의 시장화는 경제 영역만이 아니라 정치와 사회, 군사와 복지, 심지어 북한의 핵무장에도 영향을 주고 있다는 것이다.
사회주의권이 붕괴하면서 북한은 옛 소련의 핵우산으로부터 더이상 보호받을 수 없었고, 경제적 지원도 끊겼다. 북한은 식량난의 단계로 넘어갔고 고난의 행군이 시작됐다. 북한 주민들은 생존을 위해 자생적 시장화를 선택했다. 그리고 시장화는 정권안보에 큰 위협으로 다가왔다. 북한 정권이 이를 타개하기 위해 선택한 것이 바로 핵무장이었다. 핵무장 카드를 들고 미국과의 협상 테이블에 앉아 외부 위협을 완화하는 한편, 핵무장 포기 카드를 들고 주변국으로부터 정권 유지에 필요한 자원을 획득해 북한 사회가 시장화되는 데 제동을 걸고자 한 것이다. 그러나 미국을 비롯한 주변국의 국내정치 및 이해관계의 충돌로 협상은 난항을 겪었다. 외부로부터의 안전 보장은 물론 내부의 시장화를 막을 자원을 확보하기도 어려운 상황에서 핵무장 정책은 여전히 중요한 카드다. 결국 핵무장의 원인 가운데 하나가 북한 사회의 시장화라는 해석이 가능해진다.

아래로부터의 변화를 이끄는 주역, 북한 주민들

오늘날 북한 사회에서 눈에 띄는 흐름을 ‘시장화’로 읽어낼 때, 시장화는 경제 영역에 국한되지 않고 북한 사회 전체의 변화로 확장된다. 헤이즐 스미스는 북한의 시장화를 이끄는 주역을 권력 엘리트가 아닌 북한 주민들로 보기 때문이다.
북한 정권은 출범 이래 사회주의적 집단주의를 강조하고 광범위한 대중동원 정책을 유지해왔다. 그리고 이를 대내외적으로 선전하기 위해 북한 사회를 ‘단일한 통합’의 이미지로 포장했다. 김일성 광장을 가득 메운 사람들이 일사불란하게 펼치는 카드섹션이라든지, 김일성과 김정일의 장례 기간 중 절규하는 주민들의 모습을 보여주는 것이 대표적이다.
그러나 헤이즐 스미스는 이런 이미지 선전이 북한 정권에만 국한된 것은 아님을 지적한다. 국가 지도자의 죽음 앞에서 대중이 보이는 반응은 대체로 유사하며, 이런 이미지만으로 그 사회의 균질함을 평가할 수 없다는 주장이다. 북한 사회가 남한을 비롯한 다른 사회보다 상대적으로 더 경직되어 있는 것은 사실이겠으나, 2500만명의 주민이 모두 똑같은 사고를 하고 체제의 움직임에 모두 동의하기란 불가능하다. 만약 그랬다면 고난의 행군을 극복하려는 자생적 시장화는 시작되지 못했을 것이며, 북한은 지금 이 순간도 ‘아래로부터’ 움직이고 있다고 저자는 주장한다.

북한의 어제와 오늘을 가로지르는 한권의 바이블

핵과 미사일, 한반도의 전쟁 위협과 동북아시아 및 태평양 지역 전체의 안보 불안, 이로써 벌어지는 국내정치와 국제정치의 갈등은 모두 북한 문제에서 출발하는 것임에 틀림없다. 그러나 이런 갈등 상황 한가운데 있으며 갈등에 따른 피해를 가장 크게 입을 수 있는 한국은, 북한 문제 해결에 적극적으로 나서야 하고 어느 나라보다 북한을 정확하게 이해해야 한다. 헤이즐 스미스가 북한 연구의 기본으로 삼은 접근방식, 즉 이미 축적된 자료를 충분히 활용하고, 선입견 없이 사실에 입각해 분석하고, 주장에는 항상 근거를 붙인다는 기본 원칙을 상기할 필요가 있다. 북한을 연구하고, 정책을 입안하고, 현장에서 실무를 담당하는 전문가 그룹에게 헤이즐 스미스의 작업이 전하는 무게는 묵직하다.
더불어 이 책은 비전문가 독자를 위한 배려도 잊지 않았다. 김일성의 만주 항일무장투쟁에서 시작되는 북한의 체제 성립 과정에 대한 서술은, 한숨에 읽는 북한 현대사 텍스트로 활용하기에 충분하다. ‘북한은 어떤 나라인가’를 알고자 하는 초심자에게 친절한 길잡이가 될 것이다. 북한의 과거와 현재, 북한 문제의 원인과 현황을 한권의 책으로 가늠할 수 있을 것이다.


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장마당과 선군정치 로쟈 ㅣ 2017-09-23 ㅣ 공감(36) ㅣ 댓글 (0)
제 시간에 버스를 탔지만 주말 고속도로 상황이 주차장을 방불케 한다. 고속도로라는 말이 무색하다. 추석을 앞둔 사전 성묘 차량 탓인지 원래 그런 것인지 모르겠지만 예정 시간보다 한 시간은 더 소요될 듯하다(그럼 꼬박 다섯 시간이 된다!). 하동에 도착하면 먹기로 한 점심도 늦어질 것 같아 휴게소에 들르면 간단한 요기라도 해야겠다.

버스가 출발하고 한 시간여 눈을 붙인 덕분에 책을 읽을 만한 컨디션은 회복했다(그래도 눈이 피로할 때 찾아오는 결막염 증세가 가라앉지 않는다. 내주에는 안과에도 가봐야겠다). 가방에 넣어온 책을 손에 쥐려다 서평기사를 몇개 읽었는데 최근 감정대립이 격화하고 있는 북미관계 때문에 헤이즐 스미스의 <장마당과 선군정치>(창비)에 눈길이 갔다.

제목은 미리 접했지만 ‘장마당‘이란 말이 낯설어서인지 기억에 남지 않았는데(그렇다고 궁금해 하지도 않았다) 이제 보니 시장(markets)이란 뜻이다. 오늘의 북한을 이해하는 데 이 장마당과 선군정치가 핵심이라는 것. 이 둘의 관계 분석에 저자의 주안점이 놓여 있다. 더불어 기존의 북한 분석과의 차별성도.

그러고 보니 대수롭지 않게 지나친 책 가운데 <조선자본주의공화국>(비아북)도 같은 맥락에서 이해가 된다. 이 역시 ‘장마당 자본주의‘를 다룬 책이라면 말이다. 정확한 건 이 두권을 읽어봐야 알겠다.

사실 북한이 핵무장과 대륙간탄도 미사일 실험에 정권의 사활까지 걸며 나서는 것은 그만큼 체제가 위기국면에 처해 있다는 방증으로 보인다. 실제적이건 심리적이건 간에 이 위기국면에 대한 다른 대안을 찾지 못하고 있다는 뜻이니까. 강고해보이는 체제에 균열이 생길 수 있을지 의문이었는데 ‘장마당‘은 혹 그런 가능성을 열어줄지도 모르겠다.

이제야 버스가 제 속도를 내고 있다...









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Yoga and meditation boost your ego, say psychology researchers — Quartz





Yoga and meditation boost your ego, say psychology researchers — Quartz



People’s egos get bigger after meditation and yoga, says a new study

Olivia Goldhill

June 17, 2018



A study found that meditation doesn't necessarily reduce ego. (Form via Unsplash)

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According to Buddhist teaching, the self is an illusion. The religion preaches a fundamentally selfless worldview, encouraging followers to renounce individual desires and distance themselves from self-concern. To advance this perspective, millions of people around the world practice yoga and meditation.



But a recently published psychological study directly contradicts that approach, finding that contemporary meditation and yoga practices can actually inflate your ego.



In the paper, published online by University of Southampton and due to be published in the journal Psychological Science, researchers note that Buddhism’s teachings that a meditation practice helps overcome the ego conflicts with US psychologist William James’s argument that practicing any skill breeds a sense of self-enhancement (the psychological term for inflated self-regard.)



There was already a fair bit of evidence supporting William James’s theory, broadly speaking, but a team of researchers from University Mannheim in Germany decided to test it specifically in the context of yoga and meditation.

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They recruited yoga 93 students and, over a period of 15 weeks, regularly evaluated their sense of self-enhancement. They used several measures to do this. First, they assessed participants’ level of self-enhancement by asking how they compared to the average yoga student in their class. (Comparisons to the average is the standard way of measuring self-enhancement.) Second, they had participants complete an inventory that assesses narcissistic tendencies, which asked participants to rate how deeply phrases like “I will be well-known for the good deeds I will have done” applied to them. And finally, they administered a self-esteem scale asking participants whether statements like, “At the moment, I have high self-esteem.”



When students were evaluated in the hour after their yoga class, they showed significantly higher self-enhancement, according to all three measures, than when they hadn’t done yoga in the previous 24 hours.



A second study of 162 people who practiced meditation, recruited through Facebook groups devoted to meditation, found that the practice had similar impacts on self-enhancement as yoga. In this study, participants were asked to evaluate themselves based on statements like, “In comparison to the average participant of this study, I am free from bias.” The study found that participants had higher self-enhancement in the hour following meditation, than when they hadn’t meditated for 24 hours.



Researchers also evaluated participants’ well-being using two measures, the satisfaction with life scale and the eudemonic well-being measure, which evaluates satisfaction with autonomy, environmental mastery, personal growth, positive relations with others, purpose in life, and self-acceptance.



They found that well-being increased along with self-enhancement, suggesting that self-enhancement is linked with the increased sense of well-being that many get from meditation.



These findings suggest that spiritual Buddhist practices like yoga and meditation may not do what proponents typically say they do, according to the study authors. “Ego-quieting is a central element of yoga philosophy and Buddhism alike. That element, and its presumed implications, require serious rethinking,” they write. “Moreover, ego-quieting is often called upon to explain mind-body practices’ well-being benefits. In contrast, we observed that mind-body practices boost self-enhancement and this boost—in turn—elevates well-being.”



There is an alternative explanation, though. It’s possible the study participants were doing meditation and yoga wrong. All of the participants were based in Germany, and various academics have theorized that western practitioners of Buddhism fail to practice with an eye towards the selflessness that should characterize the goals of these efforts. Though yoga and meditation were originally intended as ways to calm the ego, many non-Buddhist practitioners do these activities with an eye to self-improvement or calming personal anxieties.



Meditation can indeed be narcissistic, notes Buddhist writer Lewis Richmond in The Huffington Post. “The act of sitting in silence, eyes closed or facing a wall, attention focused on the inner landscape of breath, body, and mental activity, could at least be characterized as self-absorbed,” he says. Those who practice meditation with a self-centered perspective will likely become more self-interested, not less.



The notion that yoga can feed rather than diminish the ego won’t be surprising to those who’ve met holier-than-thou yoga devotees clad in designer athlesiure. But the psychological study didn’t examine whether Buddhist teachings themselves influenced this ego boost. Yoga alone may not be enough to dissolve the ego, but one psychological study does not invalidate thousands of years of Buddhist teaching and practice.



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2018/06/09

몽골제국과 세계사의 탄생 (김호동) : 좀 실망했다



몽골제국과 세계사의 탄생 (김호동) : 네이버 블로그



2015년 읽은 책

몽골제국과 세계사의 탄생 (김호동)

새나

2016. 3. 5. 15:41
이웃추가
본문 기타 기능




몽골제국과 세계사의 탄생
작가김호동
출판돌베개
발매2010.08.20.
리뷰보기zz





다들 격찬하는 책이 내게 별로였던 것은 지금 여기에 대한 함의가 없어서일까.


그렇다. 솔직히 나는 이 책을 읽고 좀 실망했다. 여러 사람들이 추천했고, 교양 역사서로서는 드물게 7쇄까지 나올 정도로 많이 팔린 책인데도 말이다. 왜 그랬을까. 세 가지 정도로 요약할 수 있을 듯하다.


첫째, 지금 여기에 대한 함의를 찾기가 쉽지 않았다. 과거 몽골제국과 현대 한국 사이에 접점이 별로 없다는 얘기다. 이는 현재 몽골이라는 나라/민족이 존재감이 없을 정도로 축소되었으며 한국의 사회/문화에 몽골의 흔적이 별로 남아있지 않았기 때문이라고 생각한다. 한국이 (일본과는 달리) 몽골과 같은 '제국'을 경영할 의도가 별로 없어 보인다는 점도 지적할 수 있겠다.


둘째, 놀라움을 주는 내용이 별로 없었다. 이 책이 제시한 '새로운' 주장들, 즉 유목민 문화도 농경민 문화 못지 않게 중요하다든가, 몽골이 씨족, 부족 사회가 아니었다든가, 몽골 제국이 칭기즈칸 사후 분열된 것이 아니며 연대감과 일치감을 유지하고 있었다는 등의 얘기, 그리고 무엇보다도 몽골 제국이 '대여행의 시대'를 통해 '세계사'를 탄생시켰다는 이 책의 핵심 주장이 내게는 강한 인상을 주지 못했다. 내가 이미 '열린 사고방식'을 가지고 있어서일까? 세계가 오래 전부터 긴밀하게 연결되어 있었다는 주장은 내게는 그리 신선하지 않다. 아니면, 이 새로운 주장들이 별로 설득력이 없기 때문일까? 이를테면, 나는 아직도 농경민 문화가 유목민 문화보다 우위에 있다고 생각한다.


세째, '거대담론'이 없었다. 사람들은 흔히 '거대담론은 이제 질렸다'라고 얘기하면서도, 평이한 역사서보다는 뭔가 '거대담론'으로 치장된 역사서를 더 선호한다. 최근 인기를 끄는 '사피엔스'는 아예 종교, 정치, 경제 등의 거대담론을 전면에 등장시킨 역사서이다. 이 책에도 이런 거대담론을 양념으로라도 집어넣었다면 교양서 독자 입장에서 뭔가 더 재미를 느끼지 않았을까 하는 아쉬움을 말해 본다.


이제 책의 내용을 요약해 본다.


1장 '실크로드와 유목제국'은 실크로드를 선이 아니라 면, 즉 하나의 역동적인 역사 세계로 파악해야 하며, 실크로드의 메카니즘에서 유목민의 중요성을 인식해야 한다고 주장한다. 유목이나 목축이 농경보다 미개한 생산방식이 결코 아니라는 얘기도 등장한다. (여기서, 소위 '농경 혁명'에 유목도 포함되는가 하는 질문이 제기된다. 일단 유목도 포함시키는 것 같기는 하지만, 현재 남아있는 문명권 중 농경이 아닌 유목을 기원으로 하는 곳이 없어 보인다는 문제가 있다. 아무리 봐도 내 눈에는 농경이 유목보다 우월해 보인다.) 중국의 실크로드 진출이 정치적, 군사적 이유였던 반면 유목 국가들의 진출은 경제적인 이유에서였다고 한다. (농업 국가인 중국은 경제적인 자립이 가능했던 반면 유목 국가들은 실크로드를 장악해서 농업 국가에서 나오는 물자를 확보해야 했다는 것이다.)


2장 '세계를 제패한 몽골제국'에서는 칭기스 칸 등장 이전의 몽골 사회, 즉 '울루스'가 씨족, 부족과 같은 '국가에 선행하는 조직'이 아니라 귀족제의 원리가 관철되는 '머리 없는 국가'였다고 주장한다. (나라도 없는 '미개 사회'가 아니었다는 얘기로 들린다.) 칭기스 칸에 의한 몽골 통일 과정 역시 혈연관계와는 상관 없는, 그 자신의 '정치력'에 의한 것이었다고 한다. 몽골 제국의 뼈대를 이루었다는 '천호제'는 그 후 청 제국의 '팔기제'로 이어진 듯하다. 칭기스 칸 사후 몽골 제국이 원, 차가타이 칸국, 킵착 한국, 일 한국의 4개 칸국으로 나누어졌다는 전통적인 해석 대신, 일종의 느슨한 '울루스'의 연맹으로 제국적 연대감을 계속 보존하고 있었다는 새로운 해석을 제시하기도 한다. 원나라의 '대칸'이 정치적 우위를 보존하고 있었다는 얘기이기도 하다.


3장 '팍스 몽골리카'는 몽골 제국의 기간 네트워크 역할을 한 역참 제도를 자세히 설명한다. '모든 길은 로마로 통한다'는 말에서 드러나듯 로마 제국에서도 역참 제도는 제국 유지에 큰 역할을 했지만, 몽골 제국의 역참 제도는 무엇보다도 그 규모에 있어서 여타 제국을 압도한다. 중국을 중심으로 한 대칸의 직할령(원)에서만 6만 5천 킬로미터의 도로에 1,400개의 역참이 있었다고 한다. 몽골이 역참으로 유지되었지만 또 역참의 과도한 팽창 때문에 쇠퇴했다는 해석도 인상적이다. 러시아의 역참 제도가 몽골에서 유래했음은 물론이다.


몽골인은 기본적으로 그 숫자가 많지 않았기 때문에 제국 통치를 위해서는 '다원적 세계관'을 받아들여야 했을 것이다. 몽골 제국에서 큰 역할을 했던 '색목인'이 우리가 흔히 생각하듯 '눈에 색깔이 있는 사람'이 아니라 '제색목인'의 준말로서 '몽골인도 중국인도 아닌 제3의 집단'이었다는 것이 나름 인상적이었다. 당시 색목인은 몽골인과 중국인 사이의 지위를 차지하고 있었으며, 고려인들이 중국인이 아닌 색목인의 지위를 획득하기 위해 노력했다는 얘기도 나온다. 몽골이 다민족, 다언어 제국이었기 때문에 번역과 통역이 중요했다는 사실, 은본위제를 기반으로 한 교초라는 지폐의 채택으로 이슬람권을 포함한 유라시아 대부분이 은본위제에 입각한 거대한 통상권을 이루었다는 사실도 중요해 보인다.


몽골 제국은 또 '대여행의 시대'를 낳았다. 15-16세기 '대항해의 시대'가 바로 몽골 제국 당시인 13-14세기의 '대여행의 시대' 때문에 가능했다는 주장이 나름 신선하다. 결국 몽골 제국이 역참 제도를 시행함은 물론 유라시아 거의 전역에 '몽골의 평화'를 가져왔기 때문에 유라시아 대륙을 포괄하는 장거리 여행이 가능했다는 것이다. 잘 알려진 마르코 폴로의 중국 여행, 이븐 바투타의 세계 대여행과 함께 상대적으로 덜 알려진 랍반 사우마의 유럽 여행까지도 제시하고 있다.


4장 '세계사의 탄생' 역시 몽골 제국 아래 '대여행의 시대'가 '대항해의 시대'로 이어졌다는 주장의 연속이다. 쿠빌라이 시대에 만들어졌던 세계 지도가 아프리카 대륙 전체의 모습이 들어간 조선의 '혼일강리도'는 물론 동방(중국)의 정보가 자세히 나온 유럽의 '카탈루니아 지도'에도 영향을 미쳤다는 점을 제시한다. 그리고, 라시드 앗 딘이 '최초의 세계사'인 '집사'를 저술할 수 있었던 것 역시 몽골 제국이 성취한 정치적 통합과 이로 인한 세계관의 확대 때문이라고 주장한다.


마지막에 비로소 이 책에서 유일하게 '논쟁적'일 수 있는 내용이 등장한다. 몽골 제국에 의한 세계관의 확대가 서양의 콜럼버스 항해와 중국의 정화 원정을 가져왔지만, 왜 서양에서만 '대항해 시대'가 나타났는가 하는 질문 말이다. 여기에 대해 저자는 '유럽은 해양 지향적이었던 반면 아시아 여러 나라는 내륙 지향적이었다'는 대답을 내놓는다. 그리고 이렇게 된 근본적 이유가 또 몽골 제국이라고 한다. 아시아의 대국들(중국, 페르시아, 투르크)은 내륙에 있는 몽골 등의 유목민들에게 끊임없이 위협당하고 실제로 몽골 제국의 형태로 지배까지 받았기 때문에 해양에 신경쓸 틈이 없었던 반면, 유럽의 스페인, 포르투갈, 네덜란드, 영국 등의 나라들은 내륙의 유목민에 신경쓸 필요가 별로 없었다는 말이다. '유럽의 성공은 몽골 제국이 남긴 정치적, 군사적 부담인 내륙 콤플렉스를 느끼지 않으면서도 몽골의 시대가 남긴 '세계사의 탄생'이라는 축복은 누릴 수 있었기 때문에 가능했다고 말할 수 있다'고 하면서 저자는 이 책을 끝맺는다.


나름 설득력이 있을 수도 있지만, 솔직히 마음에 그리 들지는 않는 설명이다. 내게는 결국 로마 제국이 몽골 제국보다 우위에 있다는 말로 들린다. 로마 제국의 후신인 유럽은 '게르만족의 대이동'에도 불구하고 자신의 문화를 지켜내고 몽골 제국의 침략도 성공적으로 막아낸 결과 내륙에 신경쓸 필요 없이 마음놓고 해양으로 진출할 수 있었던 반면, 몽골 제국은 중국을 완전히 지배하는 데 실패함은 물론 중국의 해양 진출을 방해하여 '동양이 서양에 뒤쳐지는 데' 결정적인 역할을 했다고 해석할 수 있으니 말이다. 물론 역사 해석에는 언제나 문제점이 있게 마련이지만, 내게는 특히 문제점이 더 크게 느껴졌다는 얘기다.


개설서 내지 교양서를 너무 강하게 비판한 것 같기도 하다. 전문적인 학술서였다면 읽기는 훨씬 어려웠겠지만 만족감은 더 컸을지도 모르겠다. 저자가 쓴 '좀 더 심각한 책'을 한 번 찾아봐야겠다. 찾아보니 '몽골제국과 고려'라는 책이 눈에 띈다. 아니면 그가 직접 번역한 '집사'를 읽거나.