While
North Korea is ethnically and linguistically homogeneous, some minorities in North Korea exist. They include groups of repatriated
Koreans, small religious communities, and migrants from neighboring
China and
Japan. The historical
Jaegaseung ethnic group of descendants of
Jurchen people used to inhabit villages of their own, under lay monastic orders, until the 1960s. These monastic communities were perceived as
antisocialist and the Jaegaseung people were assimilated with the Korean people. There is also a community of ethnic Chinese people, known as
huaqiao, that is in decline due to migration to China. While in the 1980s, Chinese people living in North Korea enjoyed privileged access to trips abroad, today many of them have permanently moved to China. The Japanese community in North Korea has diverse origins. Former
Japanese prisoners of war in the Soviet Union, Japanese spouses of repatriated
Zainichi Koreans, defecting members of the
Japanese Red Army, and
Japanese people abducted by North Korea live in the country. There are small communities of Indians and
Americans in North Korea. Religious communities, such as
Chondoists,
Buddhists and
Christians, exist in the country. The
Chondoist are also portrayed as the embodiment of the 19th century
Donghak Peasant Revolution with their
Chondoist Chongu Party, a minor party closely collaborating with the ruling
Workers' Party of Korea. A number of communities consist of ethnic Koreans who have repatriated to the Korean peninsula. Some 50,000 to 70,000 ethnic Koreans living in China migrated to North Korea in the wake of the famine following
Mao Zedong's
Great Leap Forward and repression of ethnic minorities during the
Cultural Revolution. The influx forced the
North Korean government to construct refugee camps to house the immigrants. Between 100,000 and 150,000 ethnic Koreans formerly living in Japan, and their descendants, form the community of repatriated
Zainichi Koreans in North Korea. Their repatriation took place between 1959 and 1980. During the 1960s and 1970s, they maintained affluence from their Japanese stay, but their wealth was consumed by the
North Korean famine of the 1990s. Their communities remain tight, with marriages mostly from within the group, and separate from the rest of the North Korean society. The
Soviet Union had
one of the largest Korean minorities abroad, but less than 10,000 of them have repatriated to North Korea, where they have been assimilated into the rest of the society. ==South Korea==