Season 08 Episode 29: Go Tell Fire to the Mountain (Pt.1 of 2) - podcast episode cover

Season 08 Episode 29: Go Tell Fire to the Mountain (Pt.1 of 2)

May 09, 202530 min
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Episode description

In March 2001, as the nation of South Korea enjoyed a national holiday, five boys from Dalseo in the city of Daegu, headed off into the forest in search of adventure. 

They were never seen alive again. 

Written by Diane Hope and Richard MacLean Smith

Find us at youtube.com/@unexplainedpod, tiktok.com/@unexplainedpodcast, twitter @unexplainedpod, facebook.com/unexplainedpodcast or www.unexplainedpodcast.com for more info. Thank you for listening.

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Transcript

Speaker 1

It's March twenty sixth, nineteen ninety one, and South Korea is gripped by election fever. Local elections for district, city and county councilors are being held for the first time in thirty years. A national holiday has been declared, and many people, including military personnel and school children, have been given the day off. Pupils from the Syongsou Elementary School on the outskirts of Daegu are no exception. Among them. It's Kim Hyon dos eleven year old son Yong Jieu.

For the purpose of clarity, South Korean names begin with the family name followed by the given name. That morning, he On Dou watches Young Jiu wave goodbye before disappearing into the small maze of interconnecting concrete lined alleyways behind their house to meet up with his friends Wu Chiolwan, Joho Yon Park Chanin, Kim Yong hikh and Kim Tai Ryong. The boys, aged nine to thirteen, are all neighbours in an area known as Dlso, a modest working class neighborhood

on the western edge of Daegu city sprawl. They often play together around their houses in the nearby rice paddies or on the thickly wooded slopes of Woyong Mountain just to the north. On that morning of elections. With no classes to keep them in school, the boys have been given free reign to enjoy the spring day. Just after eight a m. A young man gets annoyed with them playing outside his apartment and tells them to go and

play somewhere else. A short time later, one of the boys returns home, as nine year old Kim te Ryong explains to his parents, he wanted to keep playing, but the others decided to head off to Woyong Mountain and he struggled to keep up with them. Having also been worried about going too far from home, he decided to cut his losses and come back. Middle school student MoU Yon is riding his bike past the entrance to the mountain trailhead when he sees his younger brother walking with

the four other boys. He calls out to him and asks where he's going. Oh Yon replies that they're heading up to the mountain to the Salamander Pond, a water hole where salamanders are known to congregate to look for eggs. MoU Yon watches for a moment as the boys head up the trail, then turns around and cycles off. It has just gone nine when a woman named Kim's son Nam, who lives at the foot of Woyong Mountain, heads out of her home to cast a vote in the elections.

The sun is shining, the spring air fresh and cool, with a thick carpet of last year's fallen leaves on the ground. When she too sees the boys as they head up the mountain. As they pass it by, they wander aloud if they can get there and back in two hours. That short, innocuous question will echo through her mind for many years to come. You're listening to Unexplained,

and I'm Richard McLean Smith. It has just gone eleven thirty when another pupil from Xiongsou Elementary School named Ham climbs alone to a grave site located on the middle slopes of Wyong Mountain. Just then he hears a series of unusual sounds, sharp and urgent, coming from the top of the mountain in roughly ten second intervals. Then he hears another sound. This one is unquestionable, a marrow melting scream, followed swiftly by another. The intensity of it seeps under

his skin. This is followed by an unnerving, eerie silence. By the end of the afternoon, the young boys have yet to return, and as dusk falls, the boys' families begin to get seriously worried. Mister Kim, father of nine year old young Chkh, knows there are some fierce dogs

kept part way up the mountain trail. He worries that the dogs might have escaped and attacked the boys, and so the parents quickly assemble and begin to search the mountain path, calling out their children's names as they climb higher up into the trees, but they find no sign of them. It is seven point fifty when they're reported missing to the police. With the help of some local officers, the parents continue to search for the boys into the early hours of the next morning, but still no sign

of them is found. The police see, I'm unconcerned. The boys are just being boysed They say they'll come home eventually. That night, at his home, a petrified Kim he Undo drifts into a fitful sleep and starts to dream. Rain pours down, sluicing off his home's roof, dripping noisily into its tiled courtyard. Heyon Deu stands on his porch and looks up to see his young son, yon Jiu, playing in the alley outside. It's a replay of the morning before,

turned hideously inside out. The boy pokes his head around the half open metal gates to the yard and smiles, Then, without a word, he turns and scampers off. Gripped by terror, heyon Deo runs after his son out through the gate and into the narrow alleyway beyond its concrete walls, damp and stained with rust. Up Ahead, he sees the back of his son as he runs up the alleyway. He tears after him, frantically calling out for him to stop and come back, but the boy never stops and never

looks back. As he on Deo fights desperately to keep up with him, his son recedes ever further into the distance. Then he wakes with a gasp in the dark, his eyes streaming with tears, gripped by the horrifying certainty that his beautiful son will never be coming home. When the five young boys fail to return on the second day, the frantic parents demand more help from the police, only to be told they still can't be categorized as officially missing,

and there's little they can do until then. The police also begin to wonder if the boys have run away. Perhaps they've been getting up to mischief, because that's what's expected of boys who come from lower income, working class family. But there are no problems in any of their homes and none of them have done anything like that before. The parents protest to no avail. Then one of the fathers receives an anonymous phone call. The man on the other end of the line claims to be holding the

missing children. He says that the boys are all suffering, that two are very ill, and that the parents must bring a large sum of money to a street near Daegu's main train station before it is too late. Scraping together what they can at short notice, the parents go to the location the following evening, racked with worry but also fuming with anger. They are ready to beat the perpetrator to a pulp, but also determined to sacrifice all

they own to get their boys back. Five, then ten, then twenty minutes go by as the parents wait where the caller had told them to go. They continue to wait for another hour, feeling helpless, but in the end no one comes. In the days following the boy's disappearance, People in Daegu and across South Korea glue themselves to their radios and TV sets, completely immersed in the emerging

news from the elections. There is widespread interest in the country's politics at the time, especially because of a growing pro democracy movement struggling to emerge South Koreans since there is a chance for a transition from military dictatorship to free and fair elections on the horizon. It isn't until almost a week after the disappearance of the five boys from Dalso that the media really begins to pick up the story. When one broadcast the reports that the boys

had gone to try and catch frogs. The missing children become known as the Frog Boys. As public interest in the case intensifies, the boy's parents are invited onto the popular news program The Square of Public Opinions, where they angrily lambass the police who continue to classify the boys as runaways rather than missing. The program hosts phone lines for members of the public to call if they have

any information on the boys. Suddenly, during the middle of the broadcast, one of the phone operators shouts out to the parents that they have one of the boys, Kim Yong Chikh on the line, the operator says the boy is sobbing and asking to speak with his mother. Yong Sheikh's mother rushes over, but by the time she reaches the phone, the caller has hung up. It is a prank call. Though wild rumours quickly spread about what might have happened to the boys, many believe they are still alive.

Back in nineteen seventy nine, close to the city, also about eighty kilometers southwest of Daegu, three children aged between six and seven went missing after going foraging on a nearby mountain. Rumours became widespread that a terrible fate had befallen them, but after almost a month, the children turned up malnourished but alive, having simply got lost despite their young age that used their knowledge of foraging to survive,

having done relatively little to help. On May fifth, six weeks after the boys disappeared, President Rode Tewu issues a special order mobilizing the police and military in a massive search operation. In July, an investigation headquarters is established by the Daegu Provincial Police Agency, and thousands of police and military officers are drafted in to help search teams form lines and use sticks to probe the ground as they go exhaust over the region surrounding the Salamander pond, and

then in widening circles around the entire mountain. The undergrowth on the mountain is short at that time, leaving few places for the boys or their bodies to remain hidden. But still nothing is found in lieu of any concrete answers. The case attracts many false reports and prank calls. Meanwhile, theories about what has happened to the Frog Boys get

more and more extravagant. Back in the nineteen seventies, North Korean agents kidnaps some South Korean high school students to help them train North Korean spies to blend into life in the South. Some people wonder if the Frog Boys were taken under similar circumstances. Some wonder if the boys have been abducted by aliens. Others that a group of patients suffering from leprosy have taken the boys to help treat their disease. At one point, even visit a leper

colony just in case the rumor is true. No end of self described psychics and fortune tellers also join the ranks of people claiming to have insights as to what has happened to the boys and where they are, but no one can provide any information that brings the children back, so the boys fathers decide to take matters into their own hands. In the summer of nineteen ninety one, the fathers of the missing boys quit their jobs and rent

a small truck. Together. They deck it out with posters containing pleas for information about their sons, as well as a large portrait of each boy. Then the desperate fathers drive across South Korea, beseeching fellow citizens to help them find their sons. Often, the fathers find a busy spot in a city or town where they park and hand out leaflets appealing for information. The men watch on hopefully as one middle aged woman in a hurry pauses briefly to grab a flyer, only to then use it to

wipe chewing gum off the sole of her shoe. On the first anniversary of the disappearance, in March nineteen ninety two, the parents hold a press conference involving media representatives from across South Korea. At some point, people begin to notice a number of men in the audience who don't look like journalists taking notes. Whenever the parents speak. It later transpires that the men are from an unnamed intelligence agency. For several months, they have shadowed the fathers, recording every

detail of what they do and where they go. Some have even turned up at the boy's homes, claiming they are there for the parent's protection. It is the final indignity that the boy's own fathers are now in the frame for the disappearance of their children. As month after month rolls by, the fathers continue to drive across South Korea, pleading for any information that will help find the missing boys.

They continue for three long years, but finally, disheartened and in serious debt, the fathers hold another press conference in the nation's capital, Soul to announce that they are giving up their search. They will go back to what is left with their families and attempt to restore some measure of normality to their daily lives. For their part, the police continue their efforts. Twenty thousand leaflets containing computer generated images of how the children might look now are distributed.

One thousand welfare facilities and religious organizations, along with eleven thousand households and forty eight mountain areas are searched. Eighteen hundred elementary school pupils are questioned, along with around nineteen thousand industrial complex workers. Around five hundred and seventy reports as to the boys whereabouts are received from all across the nation, even from fishing boats along South Korea's extensive coastline.

Several large Korean companies also join in the effort to help the search, with details about the case and requests for information being printed on all manner of products, from cigarettes to milk cartons, sweet wrappers and telephone cards. Po Hag Steel and Korean Airways also provide money for the police to distribute tens of thousands of flyers with employees and customers. But finally, after five years of fruitless searching, in nineteen ninety six, the Frog Boys Investigation Department of

the Daegu Police Agency is disbanded. The search is transferred to the local Dalso Police station, where the local police chief takes over the investigations with the team of just ten men. For the missing boy's parents, who are still under intense public and media scrutiny, the years since their boy's disappearance have been interminably hard. Not only are they dealing with the heartbreak of losing their children, Any sign of happiness in the fleeting moment that they might experience,

it must be fiercely suppressed. If not, the press might use it as evidence that the parents never really cared about their boys and that they are the ones truly had fault for them going missing. Some members of the media continue to harass the families on occasion, manipulating their words and even publishing fake stories about them. But eventually even the media grow tired of the story and it can completely drops from their headlines. Then one day, the

parents receive an unexpected calls out of the blue. The families are contacted by military personnel from the fiftieth Division of the South Korean Army, who happen to have a base close to where the five boys went missing. The parents are told that military personnel want to see them all without the police knowing. Rain lashes down and water sluices along the drains in the narrow concrete alleyways as the parents gather outside their homes before being escorted by

soldiers into minibuses. The parents are driven the short distance to the military base and through the gates. Commissioned army officers greet them and lead them through the rain into a large tent where more officers and some regular soldiers are waiting for them. Mystified and alarmed, the parents come even more confused when one of the officers steps forward to speak. He tells them that one of his soldiers

is a medium who has special talents. In fact, continues the officer, this soldier will be able to give the parents supernatural powers which will help them find their children. Before the bemused parents can ask any questions, a man steps forward and proceeds to solemnly place his hands on each side of Kim Kiondu's head, father of missing boy

Young Jieu. The man feels nothing, but then his wife, with a boldness none of her neighbors have ever seen her display, suddenly demands that everyone follow her outside and into the deluge. The woman begins striding up the mountain as if totally convinced where she is going, and everyone hurriedly follows. It's hard to walk, as the heavy rain has turned the mountain slopes into a quagmire, and most of the parents have only their regular shoes on. They

stagger uphill, slipping and sliding on the muddy terrain. Then missus Kim suddenly stops and screams while pointing at a spot in front of her. The children are there, she yells, I can see them. Unnerved, everyone looks around, their flashlights cutting through the drenching rain, but to their immense distress, there is no sign of the children. Eventually, the search is suspended and the disconsolate parents are returned home without

a further word of explanation. It is January nineteen ninety six when a well groomed, respectable man dressed in a black suit comes to speak with some of the parents. The man is not from the government, but a psychology professor named Kim Garwan, who tells them that he's spent some time studying criminal psychology in the USA. As the professor goes on to explain to the desperate parents, having reviewed the available evidence, he believes he knows exactly what

happened to the five missing boys. He tells them first that it is his firm belief that they never actually went up into the mountain. For a long time, he's been developing doubts about the alibi of Kim chio Du, father of Yong Sheikh, one of the missing boys, who's been somewhat vague about his whereabouts for three hours on the afternoon the boys went missing. The reason, according to the professor, is clear. Mister Kim is the killer, and if his suspicions are correct, they will find the remains

of all five boys underneath mister Kim's own house. Very few criminal psychologists in South Korea in the mid nineteen nineties, Professor Kim's rarity, combined with the utter confidence with which he announces his reasoning, are enough to convince the police

that his claims were at least worth investigating. Several of the boy's parents openly tell the professor that he is completely wrong, but some also begin to wander, and so one weekday, afternoon, police officers accompanied by workmen armed with sledge hammers, pickaxes and shovels, all watched on by the parents of the missing boys and other curious neighbors, turn up at the Kim family home. Before long, the media

have arrived too, to film the unfolding events. Inside the home, police find an area at the back where a new toilet and cement floor have quite clearly only recently been installed. The accused Fatherill Gioux, watches on with anguish as the workmen get to work, swinging their sledgehammers and pickaxes at the back wall of the house. Then others quickly join

in excavating the area around the toilet. As police investigators warm all over the family's belongings, They move furniture and scatter the belongings into the yard as they search for clues. After hours of searching, with only a five foot trench dug into the back of the Kim property to chow frit only then do people begin to question the psychology

professor's logic. Even if the were three hours unaccounted for in the father's schedule, how would he have had the time to kill all five children, including his own son, then bury them and completely hide the evidence of his crime. Finally, after a day of searching, with some embarrassment, the police announce they have drawn a blank. Nothing at all incriminating is found. As the professor tries to make an inconspicuous exit, enraged onlookers begin chanting to catch him and attempt to

rush at him. The police are forced to make a cordon shielding the disgraced psychologist and hurry him into a police car before driving off at speed. The following day, under the full glare of the media, Professor Kim is forced to make a full apology to the parents, but especially to the wrongly accused father, Chure Giu. Before the boys went missing, Kim chi or Giu was a robust and healthy man, but after this incident, his health goes downhill fast. He turns to drink to numb the pain

of it all. Within a year, he is diagnosed with liver cancer and dies shortly after, still in his forties, having never found out the truth about his son's disappearance. Though the official cause was his cancer, those closest to him know that the stress of everything that had happened was a major contributing factor. Other parents also lose themselves in drink or become severely depressed. They find it hard

to hold down jobs. Part Gun Sou, father of chan In, who was ten when he went missing, is consumed with unresolved anger. He repeatedly gets into fights with the police and is eventually placed in a detention center for a while. Only one thing keeps him and the remaining parents going, the hope that they might finally one day find their sons. You've been listen link to Unexplained Season eight, episode twenty nine.

Go tell fire to the Mountain Part one. The second and final part will be released next Friday, May sixteenth. This episode was written by Diane Hope and Richard McClain smith. Diane is an audio producer and sound recordist in her own right. You can find out more about her work at Dianehope dot com and on Instagram at in the sound Field. Unexplained is an Avy Club Productions podcast created by Richard McClain Smith. All other elements of the podcast,

including the music, are also produced by me Richard McClain smith. Unexplained. The book and audiobook is now available to buy worldwide. You can purchase from Amazon, Barnes and Noble, Waterstones, and other bookstores. Please subscribe to and rate the show wherever you get your podcasts, and feel free to get in touch with any thoughts or ideas regarding the stories you've heard on the show. Perhaps you have an explanation of

your own you'd like to share. You can find out more at Unexplained podcast dot com and reach us online through Twitter at Unexplained Pod and Facebook at Facebook dot com. Forward Slash Unexplained Podcast.

Speaker 2

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