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Kim Il-sung

Kim Il-sung[d] (/ˈkɪm ˈɪlˈsʌŋ, -ˈsʊŋ/;[3] Korean김일성, Korean pronunciation: [kimils͈ʌŋ]; born Kim Song-ju,[4] 김성주; 15 April 1912 – 8 July 1994) was a Korean politician and the founder of North Korea, which he ruled from the country's establishment in 1948 until his death in 1994. He held the posts of Premier from 1948 to 1972 and President from 1972 to 1994. He was the leader of the Workers' Party of Korea (WPK) from 1949 to 1994 (titled as Chairman from 1949 to 1966 and as General Secretary after 1966). Coming to power after the end of Japanese rule in 1945, he authorized the invasion of South Korea in 1950, triggering an intervention in defense of South Korea by the United Nations led by the United States. Following the military stalemate in the Korean War, a ceasefire was signed on 27 July 1953. He was the third longest-serving non-royal head of state/government in the 20th century, in office for more than 45 years.

Kim Il-sung
김일성
Kim c. 1960s
General Secretary of the Workers' Party of Korea
In office
12 October 1966 – 8 July 1994
Secretary
Preceded byHimself (as Chairman)
Succeeded byKim Jong-il
President of North Korea
In office
28 December 1972 – 8 July 1994
Premier
Vice President
Preceded byOffice established[a]
Succeeded byOffice abolished[b][c]
Chairman of the Workers' Party of Korea
In office
24 June 1949 – 12 October 1966
Vice Chairman
See list
Preceded byKim Tu-bong
Succeeded byHimself (as General Secretary)
1st Premier of North Korea
In office
9 September 1948 – 28 December 1972
First Vice PremierKim Il
Vice Premier
Preceded byOffice established
Succeeded byKim Il
Supreme Commander
of the Korean People's Army
In office
5 July 1950 – 24 December 1991
Preceded byChoe Yong-gon
Succeeded byKim Jong-il
Personal details
Born
Kim Song-ju

(1912-04-15)15 April 1912

(present-day Pyongyang, North Korea)
Died8 July 1994(1994-07-08) (aged 82)
Hyangsan Residence, Hyangsan County, North Pyongan Province, North Korea
Resting place
NationalityNorth Korean
Political partyWorkers' Party of Korea
Other political
affiliations
Workers' Party of North Korea (1946–1949)
Chinese Communist Party (1931–1946)
Spouses
Children
Parent(s)Kim Hyong-jik
Kang Pan-sok
RelativesKim family
Residence(s)Pyongyang, North Korea
ProfessionPolitician
Signature
Military service
Allegiance
Branch/service Korean People's Army Ground Force
Red Army
Northeast Anti-Japanese United Army
Years of service
  • 1941–1945
  • 1948–1994
Rank Taewonsu
Unit88th Separate Rifle Brigade, Red Army
CommandsAll (Supreme Commander)
Battles/wars
Korean name
Chosŏn'gŭl
김일성
Hancha
金日成[2]
Revised RomanizationGim Il(-)seong
McCune–ReischauerKim Ilsŏng
Birth name
Chosŏn'gŭl
김성주
Hancha
金成柱[2]
Revised RomanizationGim Seong(-)ju
McCune–ReischauerKim Sŏngchu
Central institution membership
  • 1980–1994: Member, Presidium of the Political Bureau of the 6th Central Committee of the Workers' Party of Korea
  • 1970–1980: Member, Political Committee of the Central Committee of the Workers' Party of Korea
  • 1966–1994: Secretariat of the Workers' Party of Korea
  • 1966–1970: Member, Standing Committee of the Political Committee of the Central Committee of the Workers' Party of Korea
  • 1961–1970: Chairman, Political Committee of the Central Committee of the Workers' Party of Korea
  • 1956–1961: Member, Standing Committee of the Central Committee of the Workers' Party of Korea
  • 1948–1994: Deputy, 1st, 2nd, 3rd, 4th, 5th, 6th, 7th, 8th and 9th Supreme People's Assembly
  • 1946–1956: Member, Political Committee of the Central Committee of the Workers' Party of Korea
  • 1946–1994: Member, 1st, 2nd, 3rd, 4th, 5th, and 6th Central Committee of the Workers' Party of Korea

Other offices held
  • 1982–1994: Chairman, Central Military Commission of the Workers' Party of Korea
  • 1972–1992: Chairman, National Defense Commission of the Central People's Committee of the Democratic People's Republic of Korea
  • 1970–1982: Chairman, Military Commission of the Central Committee of the Workers' Party of Korea
  • 1992–1993: Chairman, National Defense Commission of the Democratic People's Republic of Korea
  • 1947–1948: Chairman, People's Committee of North Korea
  • 1946–1949: Vice Chairman, Central Committee of the Workers' Party of North Korea
  • 1946–1947: Chairman, Provisional People's Committee of North Korea
  • 1945–1946: Chairman, North Korea Bureau of the Communist Party of Korea

Under his leadership, North Korea was established as a socialist state with a centrally planned economy. It had close political and economic relations with the Soviet Union. By the late 1950s and during the 1960s and 1970s, North Korea enjoyed a higher standard of living than the South, which was suffering from political chaos and economic crises. The situation was reversed in the 1980s, as a newly stable South Korea became an economic powerhouse which was fueled by Japanese and American investment, military aid and internal economic development, while North Korea stagnated and then declined during the same period. Differences emerged between North Korea and the Soviet Union, chief among them was Kim Il-sung's philosophy of Juche, which focused on Korean nationalism, self-reliance and socialism. Despite this, the country received funds, subsidies and aid from the USSR and the Eastern Bloc until the dissolution of the USSR in 1991. The resulting loss of economic aid adversely affected the North's economy, contributing to widespread famine in 1994. During this period, North Korea also remained critical of the United States defense force's presence in the region, which it considered imperialist, having seized the American ship USS Pueblo in 1968, which was part of an infiltration and subversion campaign to reunify the peninsula under North Korea's rule. Kim outlived his allies Joseph Stalin by four decades and Mao Zedong by almost two decades, and remained in power during the terms of office of six South Korean Presidents and ten US Presidents. Known as the Great Leader (Suryong), he established a personality cult which dominates domestic politics in North Korea.

At the 6th WPK Congress in 1980, his oldest son Kim Jong-il was elected to be a Presidium member and chosen to be his successor. Kim Il-sung's birthday is a public holiday in North Korea called the "Day of the Sun". In 1998, four years after his death, Kim Il-sung was declared "Eternal President of the Republic".

Early life

Family background

 
Kim in 1927, portrait published in his autobiography With the Century

Around the time the song Star of Korea was being spread, my comrades changed my name and began to call me Han Byol ... meaning "One Star". It was Pyon Tae U and other public-minded people in Wujiazi and such young communists as Choe Il Chon who proposed to change my name into Kim Il Sung. Thus I was called by three names, Song Ju, Han Byol and Il Sung. ... I did not like to be called by another name. Still less did I tolerate the people extolling me by comparing me to a star or the sun; it did not befit me, [as a] young man. But my comrades would not listen to me, no matter how sternly I rebuked them for it or argued against it....

It was in the spring of 1931 when I spent some three weeks in prison, having been arrested by the warlords in Guyushu, that the name Kim Il Sung appeared in the press for the first time. Until that time most of my acquaintances had called me by my real name, Song Ju. It was in later years when I started the armed struggle in east Manchuria that I was called by one name, Kim Il Sung, by my comrades. These comrades upheld me as their leader, even giving me a new name and singing a song about me. Thus they expressed their innermost feelings.

—Kim Il-sung, With the Century[5]: 110–111 

Kim was born to Kim Hyong-jik and Kang Pan-sok, who gave him the name Kim Song-ju. Kim had two younger brothers, Kim Ch'ol-chu (or Kim Chul-ju) and Kim Yong-ju.[6]: 3 

Kim's family is said to have originated from Jeonju, North Jeolla Province. His great-grandfather, Kim Ung-u, settled in Mangyongdae in 1860. Kim was reportedly born in the small village of Mangyungbong (then called Namni) near Pyongyang on 15 April 1912.[7][8]: 12  According to a 1964 semi-official biography of Kim, he was born in his mother's home in Chingjong, and later grew up in Mangyungbong.[9]: 73 

According to Kim, his family was not impoverished, but was always a step away from being so. Kim said that he was raised in a Presbyterian family, that his maternal grandfather was a Protestant minister, that his father had gone to a missionary school and was an elder in the Presbyterian Church, and that his parents were very active in the religious community.[10][11] According to an official North Korean government account, Kim's family participated in anti-Japanese activities and in 1920, they fled to Manchuria. Like most Korean families, they resented Japanese occupation of the Korean peninsula (which had begun on 29 August 1910).[8]: 12  Japanese repression of Korean opposition was harsh, resulting in the arrest and detention of more than 52,000 Korean citizens in 1912 alone.[8]: 13  This repression had forced many Korean families to flee the Korean peninsula, and settle in Manchuria.[12]

Nonetheless, Kim's parents, especially Kim's mother Kang Ban-suk, played a role in the anti-Japanese struggle that was sweeping the peninsula.[8]: 16  Their exact involvement—whether their cause was missionary, nationalist, or both—is unclear.[13]: 53 

Communist and guerrilla activities

 
Members of the 88th Separate Rifle Brigade, an international military unit of the Red Army. Kim is at the front row, second from right. (1943)

In October 1926, Kim founded the Down-with-Imperialism Union.[14] He attended Whasung Military Academy in 1926, but finding the academy's training methods outdated, quit in 1927. He then attended Yuwen Middle School in China's Jilin province until 1930,[15] when he rejected the feudal traditions of older-generation Koreans and became interested in communist ideologies. Kim's formal education ended when the police arrested and jailed him for his subversive activities. At seventeen, Kim had become the youngest member of an underground Marxist organization with fewer than twenty members, led by Hŏ So, who belonged to the South Manchurian Communist Youth Association. The police discovered the group three weeks after it formed in 1929, and jailed Kim for several months.[13]: 52 [6]: 7 

In 1931, Kim joined the Chinese Communist Party—the Communist Party of Korea had been founded in 1925, but had been thrown out of the Comintern in the early 1930s for being too nationalist. He joined various anti-Japanese guerrilla groups in northern China. Feelings against the Japanese ran high in Manchuria, but as of May 1930 the Japanese had not yet occupied Manchuria. On 30 May 1930, a spontaneous violent uprising in eastern Manchuria arose in which peasants attacked some local villages in the name of resisting "Japanese aggression."[16] The authorities easily suppressed this unplanned, reckless and unfocused uprising. Because of the attack, the Japanese began to plan an occupation of Manchuria.[17] In a speech Kim allegedly made before a meeting of Young Communist League delegates on 20 May 1931 in Yenchi County in Manchuria,[18] he warned the delegates against such unplanned uprisings as the 30 May 1930 uprising in eastern Manchuria.[19]

Four months later, on 18 September 1931, the "Mukden Incident" occurred, in which a relatively weak dynamite explosive charge went off near a Japanese railroad in the town of Mukden in Manchuria. Although no damage occurred, the Japanese used the incident as an excuse to send armed forces into Manchuria and to appoint a puppet government.[20] In 1935, Kim became a member of the Northeast Anti-Japanese United Army, a guerrilla group led by the Chinese Communist Party.[21] Kim was appointed the same year to serve as political commissar for the 3rd detachment of the second division, consisting of around 160 soldiers.[13]: 53  Here Kim met the man who would become his mentor as a communist, Wei Zhengmin, Kim's immediate superior officer, who served at the time as chairman of the Political Committee of the Northeast Anti-Japanese United Army. Wei reported directly to Kang Sheng, a high-ranking party member close to Mao Zedong in Yan'an, until Wei's death on 8 March 1941.[6]: 8–10 

Kim's actions during the Minsaengdan incident helped solidify his leadership.[22] Chinese communists operating in Manchuria had become suspicious that any Korean could secretly be a member of the pro-Japanese and anti-communist Minsaengdan.[23] A purge resulted: over 1,000 Koreans were expelled from the Communist Party of China, including Kim (who was arrested in late 1933 and exonerated in early 1934), and 500 were killed.[23] Kim Il Sung's memoirs - and those of the guerillas who fought alongside him – cite Kim's seizing and burning the suspect files of the Purge Committee as key to solidifying his leadership.[22] After the destruction of the suspect files and the rehabilitation of suspects, those who had fled the purge rallied around Kim.[22] As historian Suzy Kim summarizes, Kim Il Sung "emerged from the purge as a definitive leader, not only for the bold move but also for his compassion."[22]

In 1935, Kim took the name Kim Il-sung, meaning "Kim become the sun".[24]: 30  Kim was appointed commander of the 6th division in 1937, at the age of 24, controlling a few hundred men in a group that came to be known as "Kim Il-sung's division". On 4 June 1937, he led 200 guerillas in a raid on Poch'onbo, destroying the local government offices and setting fire to a Japanese police station and post office.[25] The success of the raid demonstrated Kim's talents as a military leader.[25] Even more significant than the military success itself was the political coordination and organization between the guerillas and the Korean Fatherland Restoration Association, an anti-Japanese united front group based in Manchuria.[25] These accomplishment would grant Kim some measure of fame among Chinese guerrillas, and North Korean biographies would later exploit it as a great victory for Korea.

For their part, the Japanese regarded Kim as one of the most effective and popular Korean guerrilla leaders.[26]: 160–161 [27] He appeared on Japanese wanted lists as the "Tiger".[28] The Japanese "Maeda Unit" was sent to hunt him in February 1940.[28] Later in 1940, the Japanese kidnapped a woman named Kim Hye-sun, believed to have been Kim Il-Sung's first wife. After using her as a hostage to try to convince the Korean guerrillas to surrender, she was killed. Kim was appointed commander of the 2nd operational region for the 1st Army, but by the end of 1940 he was the only 1st Army leader still alive. Pursued by Japanese troops, Kim and what remained of his army escaped by crossing the Amur River into the Soviet Union.[13]: 53–54  Kim was sent to a camp at Vyatskoye near Khabarovsk, where the Soviets retrained the Korean communist guerrillas. In August 1942, Kim and his army were assigned to a special unit known as the 88th Separate Rifle Brigade, which belonged to the Soviet Red Army. Kim's immediate superior was Zhou Baozhong.[29][30] Kim became a Major in the Soviet Red Army[6]: 50  and served in it until the end of World War II in 1945.[31]

Return to Korea

 
Kim Il-sung attending mass event with members of the Soviet Civil Administration, Pyongyang, October 1945

The Soviet Union declared war on Japan on 8 August 1945, and the Red Army entered Pyongyang on 24 August 1945. Stalin had instructed Lavrentiy Beria to recommend a communist leader for the Soviet-occupied territories and Beria met Kim several times before recommending him to Stalin.[7][32][33]

 
Kim with residents of Pyongyang, 14 October 1945

Kim arrived in the Korean port of Wonsan on 19 September 1945 after 26 years in exile.[24]: 51  According to Leonid Vassin, an officer with the Soviet MVD, Kim was essentially "created from zero". For one, his Korean was marginal at best; he only had eight years of formal education, all of it in Chinese. He needed considerable coaching to read a speech (which the MVD prepared for him) at a Communist Party congress three days after he arrived.[34]: 50 

 
Kim and general Prokofy Romanenko in December 1945

In December 1945, the Soviets installed Kim as First Secretary of the North Korean Branch Bureau of the Korean Communist Party.[24]: 56  Originally, the Soviets preferred Cho Man-sik to lead a popular front government, but Cho refused to support a UN-backed trusteeship and clashed with Kim.[35] General Terentii Shtykov, who led the Soviet occupation of northern Korea, supported Kim over Pak Hon-yong to lead the Provisional People's Committee for North Korea on 8 February 1946.[36] As chairman of the committee, Kim was "the top Korean administrative leader in the North," though he was still de facto subordinate to General Shtykov until the Chinese intervention in the Korean War.[33][24]: 56 [36]

 
Kim Il-sung (centre) and Kim Tu-bong (second from right) at the joint meeting of the New People's Party and the Workers' Party of North Korea in Pyongyang, 28 August 1946

To solidify his control, Kim established the Korean People's Army (KPA), aligned with the Communist Party, and he recruited a cadre of guerrillas and former soldiers who had gained combat experience in battles against the Japanese and later against Nationalist Chinese troops.[37] Using Soviet advisers and equipment, Kim constructed a large army skilled in infiltration tactics and guerrilla warfare. Prior to Kim's invasion of the South in 1950, which triggered the Korean War, Stalin equipped the KPA with modern, Soviet-built medium tanks, trucks, artillery, and small arms. Kim also formed an air force, equipped at first with Soviet-built propeller-driven fighters and attack aircraft. Later, North Korean pilot candidates were sent to the Soviet Union and China to train in MiG-15 jet aircraft at secret bases.[38]

Claim that Kim Il-sung was an imposter

 
Kim Il-Sung speaks at a rally for the local elections in North Korea held 3 November 1946

Several sources claim the name "Kim Il-sung" had previously been used by a prominent early leader of the Korean resistance, Kim Kyung-cheon.[34]: 44  The Soviet officer Grigory Mekler, who worked with Kim during the Soviet occupation, said that Kim took this name from a former commander who had died.[39] However, historian Andrei Lankov has argued that this is unlikely to be true. Several witnesses knew Kim before and after his time in the Soviet Union, including his superior, Zhou Baozhong, who dismissed the claim of a "second" Kim in his diaries.[13]: 55  Historian Bruce Cumings pointed out that Japanese officers from the Kwantung Army have attested to his fame as a resistance figure.[26]: 160–161  Historians generally accept the view that, while Kim's exploits were exaggerated by the personality cult which was built around him, he was a significant guerrilla leader.[40][41][42]

Leader of North Korea

Early years

 
Kim Il-sung and Peng Dehuai in 1951

Despite United Nations plans to conduct all-Korean elections, the Soviets held elections of their own in their zone on 25 August 1948 for a Supreme People's Assembly.[43] Voters were presented with a single list from the Communist-dominated Democratic Front for the Reunification of the Fatherland.[citation needed] The Democratic People's Republic of Korea was proclaimed on 9 September 1948, with Kim as the Soviet-designated premier. On 15 August 1948, the south had declared statehood as the Republic of Korea. The Communist Party was nominally led by Kim Tu-bong, though from the outset Kim Il-sung held the real power.[citation needed]

On 12 October, the Soviet Union recognized Kim's government as the sovereign government of the entire peninsula, including the south.[44] The Communist Party merged with the New People's Party of Korea to form the Workers' Party of North Korea, with Kim as vice-chairman. In 1949, the Workers' Party of North Korea merged with its southern counterpart to become the Workers' Party of Korea (WPK) with Kim as party chairman.[45] By 1949, Kim and the communists had consolidated their rule in North Korea.[34]: 53  Around this time, Kim began promoting an intense personality cult. The first of many statues of him appeared, and he began calling himself "Great Leader".[34]: 53 

In February 1946, Kim Il-sung decided to introduce a number of reforms. Over 50% of the arable land was redistributed, an 8-hour work day was proclaimed and all heavy industry was to be nationalized.[6]: 68  There were improvements in the health of the population after he nationalized healthcare and made it available to all citizens.[46]

Korean War

Archival material suggests[47][48][49] that North Korea's decision to invade South Korea was Kim's initiative, not a Soviet one. Evidence suggests that Soviet intelligence, through its espionage sources in the US government and British SIS, had obtained information on the limitations of US atomic bomb stockpiles as well as defense program cuts, leading Stalin to conclude that the Truman administration would not intervene in Korea.[50]

China acquiesced only reluctantly to the idea of Korean reunification after being told by Kim that Stalin had approved the action.[47][48][49] The Chinese did not provide North Korea with direct military support (other than logistics channels) until United Nations troops, largely US forces, had nearly reached the Yalu River late in 1950. At the outset of the war in June and July, North Korean forces captured Seoul and occupied most of the South, save for a small section of territory in the southeast region of the South that was called the Pusan Perimeter. But in September, the North Koreans were driven back by the US-led counterattack that started with the UN landing in Incheon, followed by a combined South Korean-US-UN offensive from the Pusan Perimeter. By October, UN forces had retaken Seoul and invaded the North to reunify the country under the South. On 19 October, US and South Korean troops captured P'yŏngyang, forcing Kim and his government to flee north, first to Sinuiju and eventually into Kanggye.[51][52]

On 25 October 1950, after sending various warnings of their intent to intervene if UN forces did not halt their advance,[53]: 23  Chinese troops in the thousands crossed the Yalu River and entered the war as allies of the KPA. There were nevertheless tensions between Kim and the Chinese government. Kim had been warned of the likelihood of an amphibious landing at Incheon, which was ignored. There was also a sense that the North Koreans had paid little in war compared to the Chinese who had fought for their country for decades against foes with better technology.[53]: 335–336  The UN troops were forced to withdraw and Chinese troops retook P'yŏngyang in December and Seoul in January 1951. In March, UN forces began a new offensive, retaking Seoul and advanced north once again halting at a point just north of the 38th Parallel. After a series of offensives and counter-offensives by both sides, followed by a grueling period of largely static trench warfare that lasted from the summer of 1951 to July 1953, the front was stabilized along what eventually became the permanent "Armistice Line" of 27 July 1953. Over 2.5 million people died during the Korean war.[54]

Chinese and Russian documents from that time reveal that Kim became increasingly desperate to establish a truce, since the likelihood that further fighting would successfully unify Korea under his rule became more remote with the UN and US presence. Kim also resented the Chinese taking over the majority of the fighting in his country, with Chinese forces stationed at the center of the front line, and the Korean People's Army being mostly restricted to the coastal flanks of the front.[55]

Consolidating power

 
Kim on a 1956 visit to East Germany, chatting with painter Otto Nagel and Prime Minister Otto Grotewohl

With the end of the Korean War, despite the failure to unify Korea under his rule, Kim Il-sung proclaimed the war a victory in the sense that he had remained in power in the north. However, the three-year war left North Korea devastated, and Kim immediately embarked on a large reconstruction effort. He launched a five-year national economic plan (akin to Soviet Union's 5-years plans) to establish a command economy, with all industry owned by the state and all agriculture collectivized. The economy was focused on heavy industry and arms production. By the 1960s, North Korea briefly enjoyed a standard of living higher than the South, which was fraught with political instability and economic crises.[56][57][58] Both South and North Korea retained huge armed forces to defend the 1953 Demilitarized Zone, and US forces remained in the South.[citation needed]

In the ensuing years, Kim established himself as an independent leader of international communism. In 1956, he joined Mao in the "anti-revisionist" camp, which did not accept Nikita Khrushchev's program of de-Stalinization, yet he did not become a Maoist himself. At the same time, he consolidated his power over the Korean communist movement. Rival leaders were eliminated. Pak Hon-yong, leader of the Korean Communist Party, was purged and executed in 1955. Choe Chang-ik appears to have been purged as well.[59][60] The 1955 Juche speech, which stressed Korean independence, debuted in the context of Kim's power struggle against leaders such as Pak, who had Soviet backing. This was little noticed at the time until state media started talking about it in 1963.[61][62] Kim developed the policy and ideology of Juche in opposition to the idea of North Korea as a satellite state of China or the Soviet Union.

Kim transformed North Korea into what is considered by Wonjun Song and Joseph Wright as a personalist dictatorship, where power was centralized in Kim personally.[63] Kim Il-sung's cult of personality had initially been criticized by some members of the government. The North Korean ambassador to the USSR, Li Sangjo, a member of the Yan'an faction, reported that it had become a criminal offense to so much as write on Kim's picture in a newspaper and that he had been elevated to the status of Marx, Lenin, Mao, and Stalin in the communist pantheon. He also charged Kim with rewriting history so it would appear as if his guerrilla faction had single-handedly liberated Korea from the Japanese, completely ignoring the assistance of the Chinese People's Volunteers. In addition, Li stated that in the process of agricultural collectivization, grain was being forcibly confiscated from the peasants, leading to "at least 300 suicides" and he also stated that Kim made nearly all major policy decisions and appointments himself. Li reported that over 30,000 people were in prison for completely unjust and arbitrary reasons which were as trivial as not printing Kim Il-sung's portrait on sufficient quality paper or using newspapers with his picture to wrap parcels. Grain confiscation and tax collection were also conducted with force, which consisted of violence, beatings, and threats of imprisonment.[64]

During the 1956 August Faction Incident, Kim Il-sung successfully resisted Soviet and Chinese efforts to depose him in favor of pro-Soviet Koreans or Koreans who belonged to the pro-Chinese Yan'an faction.[65][66] The last Chinese troops withdrew from the country in October 1958, which is the consensus as the latest date when North Korea became effectively independent, though some scholars believe that the 1956 August incident demonstrated North Korea's independence.[65][66]

During his rise and consolidation of power, Kim created the songbun caste system, which divided the North Korean people into three groups. Each person was classified as belonging to the "core," "wavering," or "hostile" class, based on his or her political, social, and economic background – a system which persists today.[citation needed] Songbun was used to decide all aspects of a person's existence in North Korean society, including access to education, housing, employment, food rationing, ability to join the ruling party, and even where a person was allowed to live. Large numbers of people from the so-called hostile class, which included intellectuals, land owners, and former supporters of Japan's occupying government during World War II, were forcibly relocated to the country's isolated and impoverished northern provinces. When years of famine ravaged the country in the 1990s, those people who lived in its marginalized and remote communities were hardest hit.[67]

During his rule, North Korea was responsible for widespread human rights abuses.[68][69][70] Kim Il-Sung punished real and perceived dissent through purges which included public executions and enforced disappearances. Not only dissenters but their entire extended families were reduced to the lowest songbun rank, and many of them were relocated to a secret system of political prison camps. These camps or kwanliso, a part of Kim's vast network of abusive penal and forced labor institutions, were fenced and heavily guarded colonies in mountainous areas of the country, where prisoners were forced to perform back-breaking labor such as logging, mining, and picking crops. Most prisoners were held in these camps for life, and their living and working conditions in them were often deadly. For example, prisoners were nearly starved to death, denied medical care, denied proper housing and clothes, subjected to sexual violence, regularly mistreated, tortured and executed by guards.[67]

Later rule

 
Kim greets visiting Romanian President Nicolae Ceaușescu in Pyongyang, 1971

Despite his opposition to de-Stalinization, Kim never officially severed relations with the Soviet Union, and he did not take part in the Sino-Soviet Split. After Khrushchev was replaced by Leonid Brezhnev in 1964, Kim's relations with the Soviet Union became closer. At the same time, Kim was increasingly alienated by Mao's unstable style of leadership, especially during the Cultural Revolution in the late 1960s. Kim in turn was denounced by Mao's Red Guards.[71] At the same time, Kim reinstated relations with most of Eastern Europe's communist countries, primarily with Erich Honecker's East Germany and Nicolae Ceauşescu's Romania. Ceauşescu was heavily influenced by Kim's ideology, and the personality cult which grew around him in Romania was very similar to that of Kim.[72]

In the 1960s, Kim became impressed with the efforts of North Vietnamese Leader Ho Chi Minh to reunify Vietnam through guerrilla warfare and thought that something similar might be possible in Korea.[73]: 30–31  Infiltration and subversion efforts were thus greatly stepped up against US forces and the leadership in South Korea.[73]: 32–33  These efforts culminated in an attempt to storm the Blue House and assassinate President Park Chung-hee.[73]: 32  North Korean troops thus took a much more aggressive stance toward US forces in and around South Korea, engaging US Army troops in fire-fights along the Demilitarized Zone. The 1968 capture of the crew of the spy ship USS Pueblo was a part of this campaign.[73]: 33 

Albania's Enver Hoxha (another independent-minded communist leader) was a fierce enemy of the country and Kim Il-sung, writing in June 1977 that "genuine Marxist-Leninists" will understand that the "ideology which is guiding the Korean Workers' Party and the Communist Party of China ... is revisionist" and later that month he added that "in Pyongyang, I believe that even Tito will be astonished at the proportions of the cult of his host [Kim Il-sung], which has reached a level unheard of anywhere else, either in past or present times, let alone in a country which calls itself socialist."[74][75] He further claimed that "the leadership of the Communist Party of China has betrayed [the working people]. In Korea, too, we can say that the leadership of the Korean Workers' Party is wallowing in the same waters" and claimed that Kim Il-sung was begging for aid from other countries, especially among the Eastern Bloc and non-aligned countries like Yugoslavia. As a result, relations between North Korea and Albania would remain cold and tense right up until Hoxha's death in 1985.

Although a resolute anti-communist, Zaire's Mobutu Sese Seko was also heavily influenced by Kim's style of rule.[76]

The North Korean government's practice of abducting foreign nationals, such as South Koreans, Japanese, Chinese, Thais, and Romanians, is another practice of Kim Il-Sung which persists to the present day.[citation needed] Kim Il-Sung planned these operations to seize persons who could be used to support North Korea's overseas intelligence operations, or those who had technical skills to maintain the socialist state's economic infrastructure in farms, construction, hospitals, and heavy industry. According to the Korean War Abductees Family Union (KWAFU), those abducted by North Korea after the war included 2,919 civil servants, 1,613 police, 190 judicial officers and lawyers, and 424 medical practitioners. In the hijacking and seizure of Korean Airlines flight YS-11 in 1969 by North Korean agents, the pilots and mechanics, and others with specialized skills, were the only ones never permitted to return to South Korea. The total number of foreign abductees and disappeared is still unknown, but is estimated to include more than 200,000 people. The vast majority of disappearances occurred or were linked to the Korean War, but hundreds of South Koreans and Japanese people were abducted between the 1960s and 1980s. A number of South Koreans and nationals of the People's Republic of China have also been apparently abducted in the 2000s and 2010s. At least 100,000 people remain disappeared.[67]

A new constitution was proclaimed in December 1972, which created an executive presidency. Kim gave up the premiership and was elected president[clarification needed]. On 14 April 1975, North Korea discontinued most formal use of its traditional units and adopted the metric system.[77] In 1980, he decided that his son Kim Jong-il would succeed him, and increasingly delegated the running of the government to him. The Kim family was supported by the army, due to Kim Il-sung's revolutionary record and the support of the veteran defense minister, O Chin-u. At the Sixth Party Congress in October 1980, Kim publicly designated his son as his successor. In 1986, a rumor spread that Kim had been assassinated, making the concern for Jong-il's ability to succeed his father actual. Kim dispelled the rumors, however, by making a series of public appearances. It has been argued, however, that the incident helped establish the order of succession—the first apparent patrilineal in a communist state—which eventually would occur upon Kim Il-Sung's death in 1994.[78]

From about this time, North Korea encountered increasing economic difficulties. South Korea became an economic powerhouse fueled by Japanese and American investment, military aid, and internal economic development, while North Korea stagnated and then declined in the 1980s.[79][80] The practical effect of Juche was to cut the country off from virtually all foreign trade in order to make it entirely self-reliant. The economic reforms of Deng Xiaoping in China from 1979 onward meant that trade with the moribund economy of North Korea held decreasing interest for China. The Revolutions of 1989 in Eastern Europe and the dissolution of the Soviet Union, from 1989 to 1992, completed North Korea's virtual isolation. These events led to mounting economic difficulties because Kim refused to issue any economic or political reforms.[81]

 
Kim Il-sung's calcium deposit tumor is noticeable on the back of his head in this rare newsreel still image during a diplomatic meeting between him and Chinese Communist Party Chairman Mao Zedong in Beijing, 1970.

As he aged, starting in the 1970s, Kim developed a calcium deposit growth on the right side of the back of his neck. It was long believed that its close proximity to his brain and spinal cord made it inoperable. However, Juan Reynaldo Sanchez, a defected bodyguard for Fidel Castro who met Kim in 1986 wrote later that it was Kim's own paranoia that prevented it from being operated on.[82] Because of its unappealing nature, North Korean reporters and photographers were required to photograph Kim while standing slightly to his left in order to hide the growth from official photographs and newsreels. Hiding the growth became increasingly difficult as the growth reached the size of a baseball by the late 1980s.[83]: xii 

 
Kim Il-sung's 80th birthday ceremony with international guests, April 1992

To ensure a full succession of leadership to his son and designated successor Kim Jong-il, Kim turned over his chairmanship of North Korea's National Defense Commission—the body mainly responsible for control of the armed forces as well as the supreme commandership of the country's now million-man strong military force, the Korean People's Army—to his son in 1991 and 1993. So far, the elder Kim—even though he is dead—has remained the country's president and the chairman of the Party's Central Military Commission, the party's organization that has supreme supervision and authority over military matters.

In early 1994, Kim began investing in nuclear power to offset energy shortages brought on by economic problems. This was the first of many "nuclear crises". On 19 May 1994, Kim ordered spent fuel to be unloaded from the already disputed nuclear research facility in Yongbyon. Despite repeated chiding from Western nations, Kim continued to conduct nuclear research and carry on with the uranium enrichment program. In June 1994, former US president Jimmy Carter travelled to Pyongyang in an effort to persuade Kim to negotiate with the Clinton Administration over its nuclear program.[84] To the astonishment of the United States and the International Atomic Energy Agency, Kim agreed to halt his nuclear research program and seemed to be embarking upon a new opening to the West.[85]

Death

On the late morning shortly before 12:00 noon on 7 July 1994, Kim Il-sung collapsed from a sudden heart attack at his residence in Hyangsan, North Pyongan. After the heart attack, Kim Jong-il ordered the team of doctors who were constantly at his father's side to leave, and arranged for the country's best doctors to be flown in from Pyongyang. After several hours, the doctors from Pyongyang arrived, but despite their efforts to save him, Kim Il-sung died at 2:00am on 8 July 1994 at age 82. After the traditional Confucian mourning period, his death was declared 34 hours later.[86]

Kim Il-sung's death resulted in nationwide mourning and a ten-day mourning period was declared by Kim Jong-il. His funeral was scheduled to be held on 17 July 1994 in Pyongyang but was delayed until 19 July.[87] It was attended by hundreds of thousands of people who were flown into the city from all over North Korea. Kim Il-sung's body was placed in a public mausoleum at the Kumsusan Palace of the Sun, where his preserved and embalmed body lies under a glass coffin for viewing purposes. His head rests on a traditional Korean pillow and he is covered by the flag of the Workers' Party of Korea. Newsreel video of the funeral at Pyongyang was broadcast on several networks, and can now be found on various websites.[88]

Contributions to political theory

Kim Il-sung's most notable contribution to political theory is his conceptualization of the Juche idea, originally described as a variant of Marxism–Leninism.

In his writings, Kim engaged with Karl Marx's metaphor that religion is the opium of the people. He did so both in the context of responding to his comrades who objected to working with religious groups (Chonbulygo and Chondoism, respectively).[89] In the first instance, Kim replies that a person is "mistaken" if he or she believes Marx's proposition regarding "opium of the people" can be applied in all instances, explaining that if a religion "prays for dealing out divine punishment to Japan and blessing the Korean nation" then it is a "patriotic religion" and its believers are patriots.[89] In the second, Kim states that Marx's metaphor "must not be construed radically and unilaterally" because Marx was warning against "the temptation of a religious mirage and not opposing believers in general."[89] Because the communist movement in Korea was fighting a struggle for "national salvation" against Japan, Kim writes that anyone with a similar agenda can join the struggle and that "even a religionist ... must be enrolled in our ranks without hesitation."[89]

Personal life

 
Kim's first wife, Kim Jŏng Suk, and his son, Kim Jong-il

Kim Il-sung married twice. His first wife, Kim Jong-suk (1917–1949), gave birth to two sons and one daughter before her death in childbirth during the delivery of a stillborn girl. Kim Jong-il was his oldest son. The other son (Kim Man-il, or Shaura Kim) of this marriage died in 1947 in a swimming accident. A daughter, Kim Kyong-hui, was born in 1946.

Kim married Kim Song-ae (1924–2014) in 1952, and it is believed that he had three children with her: Kim Yŏng-il (not to be confused with the former Premier of North Korea with the same name), Kim Kyŏng-il, and Kim Pyong-il. Kim Pyong-il was prominent in Korean politics until he became ambassador to Hungary. In 2015, Kim Pyong-il became ambassador to the Czech Republic, but officially retired in 2019 and resides once again in North Korea.

Kim was reported to have had other children with women who he was not married to.[90] They included Kim Hyŏn-nam (born 1972, head of the Propaganda and Agitation Department of the Workers' Party since 2002).[91]

Awards

According to North Korean sources, Kim Il-sung had received 230 foreign orders, medals and titles from 70 countries since the 1940s until, and after, his death.[92] They include: The Soviet Order of the Red Banner and the Order of Lenin (twice),[93][94] Star of the Republic of Indonesia (first class), the Bulgarian Order of Georgi Dimitrov (twice), the Togolese Order of Mono (Grand Cross), the Order of the Yugoslav Star (Great Star),[95] the Cuban Order of José Martí (twice), the East German Order of Karl Marx (twice), the Maltese Xirka Ġieħ ir-Repubblika, the Burkinabe Order of the Gold Star of Nahouri, Order of the Grand Star of Honour of Socialist Ethiopia, the Nicaraguan Augusto Cesar Sandino Order [es], the Vietnamese Gold Star Order,[94] the Czechoslovak Order of Klement Gottwald,[96] the Royal Order of Cambodia (Grand Cross),[97] the National Order of Madagascar (first class, Grand Cross),[98] the Mongolian Order of Sukhbaatar,[99] and the Romanian orders of Order of Victory of Socialism and Order of the Star of the Romanian Socialist Republic (first class with band).[94][100]

Legacy

Kim Il-sung was a godlike figure within North Korea, but his personality cult struggled to extend beyond the country's borders.[101] There are over 500 statues of him in North Korea, similar to the many statues and monuments that Eastern Bloc countries erected of their leaders.[102] The most prominent are at Kim Il-sung University, Kim Il-sung Stadium, Mansudae Hill, Kim Il-sung Bridge and the Immortal Statue of Kim Il-sung. Some statues have reportedly been destroyed by explosions or damaged with graffiti by North Korean dissidents.[34]: 201 [103] Yŏng Saeng ("eternal life") monuments have been erected throughout the country, each dedicated to the departed "Eternal Leader".[104]

Kim Il-sung's image is prominent in places associated with public transportation, especially his posthumous portrait released in 1994, which hangs at every North Korean train station and airport.[102] It is also placed prominently near the border crossings between China and North Korea.[105] At the border outside of Yanji, South Korean tourists could pay the local Chinese residents for a picture taken against the scenery of North Korea beyond the Tumen River, with the portrait of Kim Il-sung looming large at the background.[106]

Thousands of gifts to Kim Il-sung from foreign leaders are housed in the International Friendship Exhibition.[107]

Kim Il-sung's birthday, "Day of the Sun", is celebrated every year as a public holiday in North Korea.[108] The associated April Spring Friendship Art Festival gathers hundreds of artists from all over the world.[109]

There is a Kim Il Sung Park, a Kim Il Sung Alley, and a Kim Il Sung monument in Damascus, Syria.[110]

Works

Kim Il-sung was the author of many works. According to North Korean sources, these amount to approximately 10,800 speeches, reports, books, treatises, and others.[111] Some, such as the 100-volume Complete Collection of Kim Il-sung's Works (김일성전집), are published by the Workers' Party of Korea Publishing House.[112] Shortly before his death, he published an eight-volume autobiography, With the Century.[35]: 26 

According to official North Korean sources, Kim Il-sung was the original writer of many plays and operas.[113] One of these, a revolutionary theatrical opera called The Flower Girl, was adapted into a locally produced feature film in 1972.[114][115][5]: 178 

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Choi Yong-kun was previously head of state as the President of the Presidium of the Supreme People's Assembly.
  2. ^ Kim Yong-nam became later head of state as the President of the Presidium of the Supreme People's Assembly.
  3. ^ In 2021, the official English translation of Kim Jong-un's preferred title, Chairman, was changed to "President". However, the Korean word 위원장, meaning "Chairman", was not replaced.[1]
  4. ^ Officially transcribed as Kim Il Sung by North Korean sources, romanized also as Kim Il-seong or Gim Il-seong

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  104. ^ . Daily NK. 9 April 2010. Archived from the original on 12 April 2010. Retrieved 24 April 2010.
  105. ^ Pulford, Ed (1 August 2019). Mirrorlands: Russia, China, and Journeys in Between. Oxford University Press. p. 233. ISBN 978-1-78738-287-9. from the original on 25 November 2021. Retrieved 25 November 2021. Although periodically closed when cross-border tensions rise, Tumen's bridge over to Namyang is also an attraction, one I was initially uncertain about visiting given the proximity of uniformed border guards and beaming portraits of Kim Il Sung and Kim Jong Il on a building on the other side.
  106. ^ Chen, Xiangming (4 February 2005). As Borders Bend: Transnational Spaces on the Pacific Rim. Rowman & Littlefield Publishers. p. 167. ISBN 978-0-7425-7081-8. from the original on 25 November 2021. Retrieved 25 November 2021. Outside the city of Yanji, near the Tumen River, South Korean tourists could pay the local Chinese residents for a picture taken against the backdrop of North Korea, just across the water, with the giant portrait of the late leader, Kim Il Sung, looming large (Lawrence, 1999).
  107. ^ "North Korean museum shows off leaders' gifts". The Age. Reuters. 21 December 2006. from the original on 5 March 2013. Retrieved 9 May 2018.
  108. ^ "Birthday of Kim Il-sung". Holidays, Festivals, and Celebrations of the World Dictionary (Fourth ed.). Omnigraphics. 2010. from the original on 12 June 2022. Retrieved 3 May 2015 – via TheFreeDictionary.com.
  109. ^ Choi Song Min (16 April 2013). "Spring Art Festival Off the Schedule". Daily NK. from the original on 13 March 2015. Retrieved 3 May 2015.
  110. ^ "Kim Il Sung Park Damascus Syria". Koryo Tours. 15 April 2019. from the original on 15 April 2021. Retrieved 15 April 2021.
  111. ^ . Naenara. May 2008. Archived from the original on 2 April 2015. Retrieved 16 January 2015.
  112. ^ "'Complete Collection of Kim Il Sung's Works' Off Press". KCNA. 18 January 2012. from the original on 12 October 2014. Retrieved 16 January 2015.
  113. ^ Suk-Yong Kim (2018). "Dead Father's Living Body: Kim Il-sung's Seed Theory and North Korean Arts". In Kaminskij, Konstantin; Koschorke, Albrecht (eds.). Tyrants Writing Poetry. Budapest: Central European University Press. p. 159. ISBN 978-963-386-202-5. from the original on 14 October 2022. Retrieved 11 June 2018.
  114. ^ . NK Chosun (in Korean). Archived from the original on 1 December 2005. Retrieved 24 June 2010.
  115. ^ . Sohu Entertainment (in Chinese (China)). 26 March 2008. Archived from the original on 1 May 2011. Retrieved 24 June 2010.

Further reading

  • Baik Bong, "From Birth to Triumphant Return to Homeland," "From Building Democratic Korea to Chollima Flight," and "From Independent National Economy to 10-Point Political Programme".
  • Blair, Clay, The Forgotten War: America in Korea, Naval Institute Press (2003).
  • Kracht, Christian, The Ministry Of Truth: Kim Jong Il's North Korea, Feral House, October 2007, 132 pages, 88 color photographs, ISBN 978-1-932595-27-7.
  • Lee Chong-sik. "Kim Il-Song of North Korea." Asian Survey. University of California Press. Vol. 7, No. 6, June 1967. DOI 10.2307/2642612. Available at Jstor.
  • Sudoplatov, Pavel Anatoli, Schecter, Jerrold L., and Schecter, Leona P., Special Tasks: The Memoirs of an Unwanted Witness—A Soviet Spymaster, Little Brown, Boston (1994).
  • Szalontai, Balázs, Kim Il Sung in the Khrushchev Era: Soviet-DPRK Relations and the Roots of North Korean Despotism, 1953–1964. Stanford: Stanford University Press; Washington, D.C.: Woodrow Wilson Center Press (2005).

External links

  • Nicolae Ceausescu's visit to Pyongyang, North Korea, in 1971
  • "Conversations with Kim Il Sung" at the Wilson Center Digital Archive
  • Kim Il-sung at Curlie
Government offices
New title Premier of North Korea
1948–1972
Succeeded by
Preceded byas President of the Presidium of the Supreme People's Assembly President of North Korea
1972–1994
Succeeded byas Chairman of the Standing Committee of the Supreme People's Assembly
New title Chairman of the National Defence Commission
1972–1993
Succeeded by
Party political offices
New title Chairman of the Workers' Party of Korea
1949–1966
Himself as General Secretary
Chairman of the WPK Organization Bureau
1949–1951
Succeeded by
Pak Yong-bin
Chairman of the WPK Central Military Commission
1950–1994
Vacant
Title next held by
Kim Jong-il
General Secretary of the Workers' Party of Korea
1966–1994
Military offices
Preceded by Supreme Commander of the Korean People's Army
1950–1991
Succeeded by

sung, this, korean, name, family, name, korean, 김일성, korean, pronunciation, kimils, ʌŋ, born, song, 김성주, april, 1912, july, 1994, korean, politician, founder, north, korea, which, ruled, from, country, establishment, 1948, until, death, 1994, held, posts, prem. In this Korean name the family name is Kim Kim Il sung d ˈ k ɪ m ˈ ɪ l ˈ s ʌ ŋ ˈ s ʊ ŋ 3 Korean 김일성 Korean pronunciation kimils ʌŋ born Kim Song ju 4 김성주 15 April 1912 8 July 1994 was a Korean politician and the founder of North Korea which he ruled from the country s establishment in 1948 until his death in 1994 He held the posts of Premier from 1948 to 1972 and President from 1972 to 1994 He was the leader of the Workers Party of Korea WPK from 1949 to 1994 titled as Chairman from 1949 to 1966 and as General Secretary after 1966 Coming to power after the end of Japanese rule in 1945 he authorized the invasion of South Korea in 1950 triggering an intervention in defense of South Korea by the United Nations led by the United States Following the military stalemate in the Korean War a ceasefire was signed on 27 July 1953 He was the third longest serving non royal head of state government in the 20th century in office for more than 45 years Eternal PresidentGrand MarshalKim Il sung김일성Kim c 1960sGeneral Secretary of the Workers Party of KoreaIn office 12 October 1966 8 July 1994SecretarySee list Choe Yong gonKim IlPak Kum cholRi Hyo sonKim Kwang hyopSok SanHo Pong hakKim Yong juPak Yong gukKim To manRi Kuk jinKim Jung rinYang Hyong sopO Jin uKim Tong gyuHan Ik suHyon Mu gwangKim Jong ilHwang Jang yopKim Yong namKim HwanYon Hyong mukYun Ki bokHong Si hakPreceded byHimself as Chairman Succeeded byKim Jong ilPresident of North KoreaIn office 28 December 1972 8 July 1994PremierSee list Kim IlPak Song cholRi Jong okKang Song sanRi Kun moYon Hyong mukKang Song sanVice PresidentSee list Choe Yong gonKang Ryang ukKim Tong kyuKim IlPak Song cholRim Chun chuRi Jong okKim Pyong sikPreceded byOffice established a Succeeded byOffice abolished b c Chairman of the Workers Party of KoreaIn office 24 June 1949 12 October 1966Vice ChairmanSee list Ho Ka iPak Hon yongKim IlPak Chang okPak Chong aePak Kum cholPak Yong binChoe Yong gonJong Il yongKim Chang manRi Hyo sonPreceded byKim Tu bongSucceeded byHimself as General Secretary 1st Premier of North KoreaIn office 9 September 1948 28 December 1972First Vice PremierKim IlVice PremierSee list Pak Hon yongHong Myong huiKim ChaekKim IlJong Il ryongNam IlPak Ui wanJong Jun thaekKim Kwang hyopKim Chang manRi Jong okRi Ju yonPak Song cholChoe Yong jinPreceded byOffice establishedSucceeded byKim IlSupreme Commander of the Korean People s ArmyIn office 5 July 1950 24 December 1991Preceded byChoe Yong gonSucceeded byKim Jong ilPersonal detailsBornKim Song ju 1912 04 15 15 April 1912Heijō Heian nan dō Korea present day Pyongyang North Korea Died8 July 1994 1994 07 08 aged 82 Hyangsan Residence Hyangsan County North Pyongan Province North KoreaResting placeKumsusan Palace of the Sun PyongyangNationalityNorth KoreanPolitical partyWorkers Party of KoreaOther politicalaffiliationsWorkers Party of North Korea 1946 1949 Chinese Communist Party 1931 1946 SpousesKim Jong suk m 1941 died 1949 wbr Kim Song ae m 1952 wbr ChildrenKim Jong ilKim Man ilKim Kyong huiKim Kyong jinKim Pyong ilKim Yong ilParent s Kim Hyong jikKang Pan sokRelativesKim familyResidence s Pyongyang North KoreaProfessionPoliticianSignatureMilitary serviceAllegianceNorth Korea Soviet UnionCommunist ChinaBranch service Korean People s Army Ground Force Red Army Northeast Anti Japanese United ArmyYears of service1941 19451948 1994RankTaewonsuUnit88th Separate Rifle Brigade Red ArmyCommandsAll Supreme Commander Battles warsWorld War IIKorean WarKorean nameChosŏn gŭl김일성Hancha金日成 2 Revised RomanizationGim Il seongMcCune ReischauerKim IlsŏngBirth nameChosŏn gŭl김성주Hancha金成柱 2 Revised RomanizationGim Seong juMcCune ReischauerKim SŏngchuCentral institution membership 1980 1994 Member Presidium of the Political Bureau of the 6th Central Committee of the Workers Party of Korea1970 1980 Member Political Committee of the Central Committee of the Workers Party of Korea1966 1994 Secretariat of the Workers Party of Korea1966 1970 Member Standing Committee of the Political Committee of the Central Committee of the Workers Party of Korea1961 1970 Chairman Political Committee of the Central Committee of the Workers Party of Korea1956 1961 Member Standing Committee of the Central Committee of the Workers Party of Korea1948 1994 Deputy 1st 2nd 3rd 4th 5th 6th 7th 8th and 9th Supreme People s Assembly1946 1956 Member Political Committee of the Central Committee of the Workers Party of Korea1946 1994 Member 1st 2nd 3rd 4th 5th and 6th Central Committee of the Workers Party of Korea Other offices held 1982 1994 Chairman Central Military Commission of the Workers Party of Korea1972 1992 Chairman National Defense Commission of the Central People s Committee of the Democratic People s Republic of Korea1970 1982 Chairman Military Commission of the Central Committee of the Workers Party of Korea1992 1993 Chairman National Defense Commission of the Democratic People s Republic of Korea1947 1948 Chairman People s Committee of North Korea1946 1949 Vice Chairman Central Committee of the Workers Party of North Korea1946 1947 Chairman Provisional People s Committee of North Korea1945 1946 Chairman North Korea Bureau of the Communist Party of Korea Leader of the Democratic People s Republic of Korea Inaugural holder Kim Jong il Under his leadership North Korea was established as a socialist state with a centrally planned economy It had close political and economic relations with the Soviet Union By the late 1950s and during the 1960s and 1970s North Korea enjoyed a higher standard of living than the South which was suffering from political chaos and economic crises The situation was reversed in the 1980s as a newly stable South Korea became an economic powerhouse which was fueled by Japanese and American investment military aid and internal economic development while North Korea stagnated and then declined during the same period Differences emerged between North Korea and the Soviet Union chief among them was Kim Il sung s philosophy of Juche which focused on Korean nationalism self reliance and socialism Despite this the country received funds subsidies and aid from the USSR and the Eastern Bloc until the dissolution of the USSR in 1991 The resulting loss of economic aid adversely affected the North s economy contributing to widespread famine in 1994 During this period North Korea also remained critical of the United States defense force s presence in the region which it considered imperialist having seized the American ship USS Pueblo in 1968 which was part of an infiltration and subversion campaign to reunify the peninsula under North Korea s rule Kim outlived his allies Joseph Stalin by four decades and Mao Zedong by almost two decades and remained in power during the terms of office of six South Korean Presidents and ten US Presidents Known as the Great Leader Suryong he established a personality cult which dominates domestic politics in North Korea At the 6th WPK Congress in 1980 his oldest son Kim Jong il was elected to be a Presidium member and chosen to be his successor Kim Il sung s birthday is a public holiday in North Korea called the Day of the Sun In 1998 four years after his death Kim Il sung was declared Eternal President of the Republic Contents 1 Early life 1 1 Family background 1 2 Communist and guerrilla activities 1 3 Return to Korea 1 4 Claim that Kim Il sung was an imposter 2 Leader of North Korea 2 1 Early years 2 2 Korean War 2 3 Consolidating power 2 4 Later rule 2 5 Death 3 Contributions to political theory 4 Personal life 5 Awards 6 Legacy 7 Works 8 See also 9 Notes 10 References 11 Further reading 12 External linksEarly lifeFamily background Kim in 1927 portrait published in his autobiography With the Century Around the time the song Star of Korea was being spread my comrades changed my name and began to call me Han Byol meaning One Star It was Pyon Tae U and other public minded people in Wujiazi and such young communists as Choe Il Chon who proposed to change my name into Kim Il Sung Thus I was called by three names Song Ju Han Byol and Il Sung I did not like to be called by another name Still less did I tolerate the people extolling me by comparing me to a star or the sun it did not befit me as a young man But my comrades would not listen to me no matter how sternly I rebuked them for it or argued against it It was in the spring of 1931 when I spent some three weeks in prison having been arrested by the warlords in Guyushu that the name Kim Il Sung appeared in the press for the first time Until that time most of my acquaintances had called me by my real name Song Ju It was in later years when I started the armed struggle in east Manchuria that I was called by one name Kim Il Sung by my comrades These comrades upheld me as their leader even giving me a new name and singing a song about me Thus they expressed their innermost feelings Kim Il sung With the Century 5 110 111 Kim was born to Kim Hyong jik and Kang Pan sok who gave him the name Kim Song ju Kim had two younger brothers Kim Ch ol chu or Kim Chul ju and Kim Yong ju 6 3 Kim s family is said to have originated from Jeonju North Jeolla Province His great grandfather Kim Ung u settled in Mangyongdae in 1860 Kim was reportedly born in the small village of Mangyungbong then called Namni near Pyongyang on 15 April 1912 7 8 12 According to a 1964 semi official biography of Kim he was born in his mother s home in Chingjong and later grew up in Mangyungbong 9 73 According to Kim his family was not impoverished but was always a step away from being so Kim said that he was raised in a Presbyterian family that his maternal grandfather was a Protestant minister that his father had gone to a missionary school and was an elder in the Presbyterian Church and that his parents were very active in the religious community 10 11 According to an official North Korean government account Kim s family participated in anti Japanese activities and in 1920 they fled to Manchuria Like most Korean families they resented Japanese occupation of the Korean peninsula which had begun on 29 August 1910 8 12 Japanese repression of Korean opposition was harsh resulting in the arrest and detention of more than 52 000 Korean citizens in 1912 alone 8 13 This repression had forced many Korean families to flee the Korean peninsula and settle in Manchuria 12 Nonetheless Kim s parents especially Kim s mother Kang Ban suk played a role in the anti Japanese struggle that was sweeping the peninsula 8 16 Their exact involvement whether their cause was missionary nationalist or both is unclear 13 53 Communist and guerrilla activities Members of the 88th Separate Rifle Brigade an international military unit of the Red Army Kim is at the front row second from right 1943 In October 1926 Kim founded the Down with Imperialism Union 14 He attended Whasung Military Academy in 1926 but finding the academy s training methods outdated quit in 1927 He then attended Yuwen Middle School in China s Jilin province until 1930 15 when he rejected the feudal traditions of older generation Koreans and became interested in communist ideologies Kim s formal education ended when the police arrested and jailed him for his subversive activities At seventeen Kim had become the youngest member of an underground Marxist organization with fewer than twenty members led by Hŏ So who belonged to the South Manchurian Communist Youth Association The police discovered the group three weeks after it formed in 1929 and jailed Kim for several months 13 52 6 7 In 1931 Kim joined the Chinese Communist Party the Communist Party of Korea had been founded in 1925 but had been thrown out of the Comintern in the early 1930s for being too nationalist He joined various anti Japanese guerrilla groups in northern China Feelings against the Japanese ran high in Manchuria but as of May 1930 the Japanese had not yet occupied Manchuria On 30 May 1930 a spontaneous violent uprising in eastern Manchuria arose in which peasants attacked some local villages in the name of resisting Japanese aggression 16 The authorities easily suppressed this unplanned reckless and unfocused uprising Because of the attack the Japanese began to plan an occupation of Manchuria 17 In a speech Kim allegedly made before a meeting of Young Communist League delegates on 20 May 1931 in Yenchi County in Manchuria 18 he warned the delegates against such unplanned uprisings as the 30 May 1930 uprising in eastern Manchuria 19 Four months later on 18 September 1931 the Mukden Incident occurred in which a relatively weak dynamite explosive charge went off near a Japanese railroad in the town of Mukden in Manchuria Although no damage occurred the Japanese used the incident as an excuse to send armed forces into Manchuria and to appoint a puppet government 20 In 1935 Kim became a member of the Northeast Anti Japanese United Army a guerrilla group led by the Chinese Communist Party 21 Kim was appointed the same year to serve as political commissar for the 3rd detachment of the second division consisting of around 160 soldiers 13 53 Here Kim met the man who would become his mentor as a communist Wei Zhengmin Kim s immediate superior officer who served at the time as chairman of the Political Committee of the Northeast Anti Japanese United Army Wei reported directly to Kang Sheng a high ranking party member close to Mao Zedong in Yan an until Wei s death on 8 March 1941 6 8 10 Kim s actions during the Minsaengdan incident helped solidify his leadership 22 Chinese communists operating in Manchuria had become suspicious that any Korean could secretly be a member of the pro Japanese and anti communist Minsaengdan 23 A purge resulted over 1 000 Koreans were expelled from the Communist Party of China including Kim who was arrested in late 1933 and exonerated in early 1934 and 500 were killed 23 Kim Il Sung s memoirs and those of the guerillas who fought alongside him cite Kim s seizing and burning the suspect files of the Purge Committee as key to solidifying his leadership 22 After the destruction of the suspect files and the rehabilitation of suspects those who had fled the purge rallied around Kim 22 As historian Suzy Kim summarizes Kim Il Sung emerged from the purge as a definitive leader not only for the bold move but also for his compassion 22 In 1935 Kim took the name Kim Il sung meaning Kim become the sun 24 30 Kim was appointed commander of the 6th division in 1937 at the age of 24 controlling a few hundred men in a group that came to be known as Kim Il sung s division On 4 June 1937 he led 200 guerillas in a raid on Poch onbo destroying the local government offices and setting fire to a Japanese police station and post office 25 The success of the raid demonstrated Kim s talents as a military leader 25 Even more significant than the military success itself was the political coordination and organization between the guerillas and the Korean Fatherland Restoration Association an anti Japanese united front group based in Manchuria 25 These accomplishment would grant Kim some measure of fame among Chinese guerrillas and North Korean biographies would later exploit it as a great victory for Korea For their part the Japanese regarded Kim as one of the most effective and popular Korean guerrilla leaders 26 160 161 27 He appeared on Japanese wanted lists as the Tiger 28 The Japanese Maeda Unit was sent to hunt him in February 1940 28 Later in 1940 the Japanese kidnapped a woman named Kim Hye sun believed to have been Kim Il Sung s first wife After using her as a hostage to try to convince the Korean guerrillas to surrender she was killed Kim was appointed commander of the 2nd operational region for the 1st Army but by the end of 1940 he was the only 1st Army leader still alive Pursued by Japanese troops Kim and what remained of his army escaped by crossing the Amur River into the Soviet Union 13 53 54 Kim was sent to a camp at Vyatskoye near Khabarovsk where the Soviets retrained the Korean communist guerrillas In August 1942 Kim and his army were assigned to a special unit known as the 88th Separate Rifle Brigade which belonged to the Soviet Red Army Kim s immediate superior was Zhou Baozhong 29 30 Kim became a Major in the Soviet Red Army 6 50 and served in it until the end of World War II in 1945 31 Return to Korea Kim Il sung attending mass event with members of the Soviet Civil Administration Pyongyang October 1945 The Soviet Union declared war on Japan on 8 August 1945 and the Red Army entered Pyongyang on 24 August 1945 Stalin had instructed Lavrentiy Beria to recommend a communist leader for the Soviet occupied territories and Beria met Kim several times before recommending him to Stalin 7 32 33 Kim with residents of Pyongyang 14 October 1945 Kim arrived in the Korean port of Wonsan on 19 September 1945 after 26 years in exile 24 51 According to Leonid Vassin an officer with the Soviet MVD Kim was essentially created from zero For one his Korean was marginal at best he only had eight years of formal education all of it in Chinese He needed considerable coaching to read a speech which the MVD prepared for him at a Communist Party congress three days after he arrived 34 50 Kim and general Prokofy Romanenko in December 1945 In December 1945 the Soviets installed Kim as First Secretary of the North Korean Branch Bureau of the Korean Communist Party 24 56 Originally the Soviets preferred Cho Man sik to lead a popular front government but Cho refused to support a UN backed trusteeship and clashed with Kim 35 General Terentii Shtykov who led the Soviet occupation of northern Korea supported Kim over Pak Hon yong to lead the Provisional People s Committee for North Korea on 8 February 1946 36 As chairman of the committee Kim was the top Korean administrative leader in the North though he was still de facto subordinate to General Shtykov until the Chinese intervention in the Korean War 33 24 56 36 Kim Il sung centre and Kim Tu bong second from right at the joint meeting of the New People s Party and the Workers Party of North Korea in Pyongyang 28 August 1946 To solidify his control Kim established the Korean People s Army KPA aligned with the Communist Party and he recruited a cadre of guerrillas and former soldiers who had gained combat experience in battles against the Japanese and later against Nationalist Chinese troops 37 Using Soviet advisers and equipment Kim constructed a large army skilled in infiltration tactics and guerrilla warfare Prior to Kim s invasion of the South in 1950 which triggered the Korean War Stalin equipped the KPA with modern Soviet built medium tanks trucks artillery and small arms Kim also formed an air force equipped at first with Soviet built propeller driven fighters and attack aircraft Later North Korean pilot candidates were sent to the Soviet Union and China to train in MiG 15 jet aircraft at secret bases 38 Claim that Kim Il sung was an imposter Kim Il Sung speaks at a rally for the local elections in North Korea held 3 November 1946 Several sources claim the name Kim Il sung had previously been used by a prominent early leader of the Korean resistance Kim Kyung cheon 34 44 The Soviet officer Grigory Mekler who worked with Kim during the Soviet occupation said that Kim took this name from a former commander who had died 39 However historian Andrei Lankov has argued that this is unlikely to be true Several witnesses knew Kim before and after his time in the Soviet Union including his superior Zhou Baozhong who dismissed the claim of a second Kim in his diaries 13 55 Historian Bruce Cumings pointed out that Japanese officers from the Kwantung Army have attested to his fame as a resistance figure 26 160 161 Historians generally accept the view that while Kim s exploits were exaggerated by the personality cult which was built around him he was a significant guerrilla leader 40 41 42 Leader of North KoreaEarly years Kim Il sung and Peng Dehuai in 1951 Despite United Nations plans to conduct all Korean elections the Soviets held elections of their own in their zone on 25 August 1948 for a Supreme People s Assembly 43 Voters were presented with a single list from the Communist dominated Democratic Front for the Reunification of the Fatherland citation needed The Democratic People s Republic of Korea was proclaimed on 9 September 1948 with Kim as the Soviet designated premier On 15 August 1948 the south had declared statehood as the Republic of Korea The Communist Party was nominally led by Kim Tu bong though from the outset Kim Il sung held the real power citation needed On 12 October the Soviet Union recognized Kim s government as the sovereign government of the entire peninsula including the south 44 The Communist Party merged with the New People s Party of Korea to form the Workers Party of North Korea with Kim as vice chairman In 1949 the Workers Party of North Korea merged with its southern counterpart to become the Workers Party of Korea WPK with Kim as party chairman 45 By 1949 Kim and the communists had consolidated their rule in North Korea 34 53 Around this time Kim began promoting an intense personality cult The first of many statues of him appeared and he began calling himself Great Leader 34 53 In February 1946 Kim Il sung decided to introduce a number of reforms Over 50 of the arable land was redistributed an 8 hour work day was proclaimed and all heavy industry was to be nationalized 6 68 There were improvements in the health of the population after he nationalized healthcare and made it available to all citizens 46 Korean War Main article Korean War Kim signs the Korean Armistice Agreement Archival material suggests 47 48 49 that North Korea s decision to invade South Korea was Kim s initiative not a Soviet one Evidence suggests that Soviet intelligence through its espionage sources in the US government and British SIS had obtained information on the limitations of US atomic bomb stockpiles as well as defense program cuts leading Stalin to conclude that the Truman administration would not intervene in Korea 50 China acquiesced only reluctantly to the idea of Korean reunification after being told by Kim that Stalin had approved the action 47 48 49 The Chinese did not provide North Korea with direct military support other than logistics channels until United Nations troops largely US forces had nearly reached the Yalu River late in 1950 At the outset of the war in June and July North Korean forces captured Seoul and occupied most of the South save for a small section of territory in the southeast region of the South that was called the Pusan Perimeter But in September the North Koreans were driven back by the US led counterattack that started with the UN landing in Incheon followed by a combined South Korean US UN offensive from the Pusan Perimeter By October UN forces had retaken Seoul and invaded the North to reunify the country under the South On 19 October US and South Korean troops captured P yŏngyang forcing Kim and his government to flee north first to Sinuiju and eventually into Kanggye 51 52 On 25 October 1950 after sending various warnings of their intent to intervene if UN forces did not halt their advance 53 23 Chinese troops in the thousands crossed the Yalu River and entered the war as allies of the KPA There were nevertheless tensions between Kim and the Chinese government Kim had been warned of the likelihood of an amphibious landing at Incheon which was ignored There was also a sense that the North Koreans had paid little in war compared to the Chinese who had fought for their country for decades against foes with better technology 53 335 336 The UN troops were forced to withdraw and Chinese troops retook P yŏngyang in December and Seoul in January 1951 In March UN forces began a new offensive retaking Seoul and advanced north once again halting at a point just north of the 38th Parallel After a series of offensives and counter offensives by both sides followed by a grueling period of largely static trench warfare that lasted from the summer of 1951 to July 1953 the front was stabilized along what eventually became the permanent Armistice Line of 27 July 1953 Over 2 5 million people died during the Korean war 54 Chinese and Russian documents from that time reveal that Kim became increasingly desperate to establish a truce since the likelihood that further fighting would successfully unify Korea under his rule became more remote with the UN and US presence Kim also resented the Chinese taking over the majority of the fighting in his country with Chinese forces stationed at the center of the front line and the Korean People s Army being mostly restricted to the coastal flanks of the front 55 Consolidating power Kim on a 1956 visit to East Germany chatting with painter Otto Nagel and Prime Minister Otto Grotewohl With the end of the Korean War despite the failure to unify Korea under his rule Kim Il sung proclaimed the war a victory in the sense that he had remained in power in the north However the three year war left North Korea devastated and Kim immediately embarked on a large reconstruction effort He launched a five year national economic plan akin to Soviet Union s 5 years plans to establish a command economy with all industry owned by the state and all agriculture collectivized The economy was focused on heavy industry and arms production By the 1960s North Korea briefly enjoyed a standard of living higher than the South which was fraught with political instability and economic crises 56 57 58 Both South and North Korea retained huge armed forces to defend the 1953 Demilitarized Zone and US forces remained in the South citation needed In the ensuing years Kim established himself as an independent leader of international communism In 1956 he joined Mao in the anti revisionist camp which did not accept Nikita Khrushchev s program of de Stalinization yet he did not become a Maoist himself At the same time he consolidated his power over the Korean communist movement Rival leaders were eliminated Pak Hon yong leader of the Korean Communist Party was purged and executed in 1955 Choe Chang ik appears to have been purged as well 59 60 The 1955 Juche speech which stressed Korean independence debuted in the context of Kim s power struggle against leaders such as Pak who had Soviet backing This was little noticed at the time until state media started talking about it in 1963 61 62 Kim developed the policy and ideology of Juche in opposition to the idea of North Korea as a satellite state of China or the Soviet Union Kim transformed North Korea into what is considered by Wonjun Song and Joseph Wright as a personalist dictatorship where power was centralized in Kim personally 63 Kim Il sung s cult of personality had initially been criticized by some members of the government The North Korean ambassador to the USSR Li Sangjo a member of the Yan an faction reported that it had become a criminal offense to so much as write on Kim s picture in a newspaper and that he had been elevated to the status of Marx Lenin Mao and Stalin in the communist pantheon He also charged Kim with rewriting history so it would appear as if his guerrilla faction had single handedly liberated Korea from the Japanese completely ignoring the assistance of the Chinese People s Volunteers In addition Li stated that in the process of agricultural collectivization grain was being forcibly confiscated from the peasants leading to at least 300 suicides and he also stated that Kim made nearly all major policy decisions and appointments himself Li reported that over 30 000 people were in prison for completely unjust and arbitrary reasons which were as trivial as not printing Kim Il sung s portrait on sufficient quality paper or using newspapers with his picture to wrap parcels Grain confiscation and tax collection were also conducted with force which consisted of violence beatings and threats of imprisonment 64 During the 1956 August Faction Incident Kim Il sung successfully resisted Soviet and Chinese efforts to depose him in favor of pro Soviet Koreans or Koreans who belonged to the pro Chinese Yan an faction 65 66 The last Chinese troops withdrew from the country in October 1958 which is the consensus as the latest date when North Korea became effectively independent though some scholars believe that the 1956 August incident demonstrated North Korea s independence 65 66 During his rise and consolidation of power Kim created the songbun caste system which divided the North Korean people into three groups Each person was classified as belonging to the core wavering or hostile class based on his or her political social and economic background a system which persists today citation needed Songbun was used to decide all aspects of a person s existence in North Korean society including access to education housing employment food rationing ability to join the ruling party and even where a person was allowed to live Large numbers of people from the so called hostile class which included intellectuals land owners and former supporters of Japan s occupying government during World War II were forcibly relocated to the country s isolated and impoverished northern provinces When years of famine ravaged the country in the 1990s those people who lived in its marginalized and remote communities were hardest hit 67 During his rule North Korea was responsible for widespread human rights abuses 68 69 70 Kim Il Sung punished real and perceived dissent through purges which included public executions and enforced disappearances Not only dissenters but their entire extended families were reduced to the lowest songbun rank and many of them were relocated to a secret system of political prison camps These camps or kwanliso a part of Kim s vast network of abusive penal and forced labor institutions were fenced and heavily guarded colonies in mountainous areas of the country where prisoners were forced to perform back breaking labor such as logging mining and picking crops Most prisoners were held in these camps for life and their living and working conditions in them were often deadly For example prisoners were nearly starved to death denied medical care denied proper housing and clothes subjected to sexual violence regularly mistreated tortured and executed by guards 67 Later rule Kim greets visiting Romanian President Nicolae Ceaușescu in Pyongyang 1971 Despite his opposition to de Stalinization Kim never officially severed relations with the Soviet Union and he did not take part in the Sino Soviet Split After Khrushchev was replaced by Leonid Brezhnev in 1964 Kim s relations with the Soviet Union became closer At the same time Kim was increasingly alienated by Mao s unstable style of leadership especially during the Cultural Revolution in the late 1960s Kim in turn was denounced by Mao s Red Guards 71 At the same time Kim reinstated relations with most of Eastern Europe s communist countries primarily with Erich Honecker s East Germany and Nicolae Ceausescu s Romania Ceausescu was heavily influenced by Kim s ideology and the personality cult which grew around him in Romania was very similar to that of Kim 72 In the 1960s Kim became impressed with the efforts of North Vietnamese Leader Ho Chi Minh to reunify Vietnam through guerrilla warfare and thought that something similar might be possible in Korea 73 30 31 Infiltration and subversion efforts were thus greatly stepped up against US forces and the leadership in South Korea 73 32 33 These efforts culminated in an attempt to storm the Blue House and assassinate President Park Chung hee 73 32 North Korean troops thus took a much more aggressive stance toward US forces in and around South Korea engaging US Army troops in fire fights along the Demilitarized Zone The 1968 capture of the crew of the spy ship USS Pueblo was a part of this campaign 73 33 Albania s Enver Hoxha another independent minded communist leader was a fierce enemy of the country and Kim Il sung writing in June 1977 that genuine Marxist Leninists will understand that the ideology which is guiding the Korean Workers Party and the Communist Party of China is revisionist and later that month he added that in Pyongyang I believe that even Tito will be astonished at the proportions of the cult of his host Kim Il sung which has reached a level unheard of anywhere else either in past or present times let alone in a country which calls itself socialist 74 75 He further claimed that the leadership of the Communist Party of China has betrayed the working people In Korea too we can say that the leadership of the Korean Workers Party is wallowing in the same waters and claimed that Kim Il sung was begging for aid from other countries especially among the Eastern Bloc and non aligned countries like Yugoslavia As a result relations between North Korea and Albania would remain cold and tense right up until Hoxha s death in 1985 Although a resolute anti communist Zaire s Mobutu Sese Seko was also heavily influenced by Kim s style of rule 76 The North Korean government s practice of abducting foreign nationals such as South Koreans Japanese Chinese Thais and Romanians is another practice of Kim Il Sung which persists to the present day citation needed Kim Il Sung planned these operations to seize persons who could be used to support North Korea s overseas intelligence operations or those who had technical skills to maintain the socialist state s economic infrastructure in farms construction hospitals and heavy industry According to the Korean War Abductees Family Union KWAFU those abducted by North Korea after the war included 2 919 civil servants 1 613 police 190 judicial officers and lawyers and 424 medical practitioners In the hijacking and seizure of Korean Airlines flight YS 11 in 1969 by North Korean agents the pilots and mechanics and others with specialized skills were the only ones never permitted to return to South Korea The total number of foreign abductees and disappeared is still unknown but is estimated to include more than 200 000 people The vast majority of disappearances occurred or were linked to the Korean War but hundreds of South Koreans and Japanese people were abducted between the 1960s and 1980s A number of South Koreans and nationals of the People s Republic of China have also been apparently abducted in the 2000s and 2010s At least 100 000 people remain disappeared 67 A new constitution was proclaimed in December 1972 which created an executive presidency Kim gave up the premiership and was elected president clarification needed On 14 April 1975 North Korea discontinued most formal use of its traditional units and adopted the metric system 77 In 1980 he decided that his son Kim Jong il would succeed him and increasingly delegated the running of the government to him The Kim family was supported by the army due to Kim Il sung s revolutionary record and the support of the veteran defense minister O Chin u At the Sixth Party Congress in October 1980 Kim publicly designated his son as his successor In 1986 a rumor spread that Kim had been assassinated making the concern for Jong il s ability to succeed his father actual Kim dispelled the rumors however by making a series of public appearances It has been argued however that the incident helped establish the order of succession the first apparent patrilineal in a communist state which eventually would occur upon Kim Il Sung s death in 1994 78 From about this time North Korea encountered increasing economic difficulties South Korea became an economic powerhouse fueled by Japanese and American investment military aid and internal economic development while North Korea stagnated and then declined in the 1980s 79 80 The practical effect of Juche was to cut the country off from virtually all foreign trade in order to make it entirely self reliant The economic reforms of Deng Xiaoping in China from 1979 onward meant that trade with the moribund economy of North Korea held decreasing interest for China The Revolutions of 1989 in Eastern Europe and the dissolution of the Soviet Union from 1989 to 1992 completed North Korea s virtual isolation These events led to mounting economic difficulties because Kim refused to issue any economic or political reforms 81 Kim Il sung s calcium deposit tumor is noticeable on the back of his head in this rare newsreel still image during a diplomatic meeting between him and Chinese Communist Party Chairman Mao Zedong in Beijing 1970 As he aged starting in the 1970s Kim developed a calcium deposit growth on the right side of the back of his neck It was long believed that its close proximity to his brain and spinal cord made it inoperable However Juan Reynaldo Sanchez a defected bodyguard for Fidel Castro who met Kim in 1986 wrote later that it was Kim s own paranoia that prevented it from being operated on 82 Because of its unappealing nature North Korean reporters and photographers were required to photograph Kim while standing slightly to his left in order to hide the growth from official photographs and newsreels Hiding the growth became increasingly difficult as the growth reached the size of a baseball by the late 1980s 83 xii Kim Il sung s 80th birthday ceremony with international guests April 1992 To ensure a full succession of leadership to his son and designated successor Kim Jong il Kim turned over his chairmanship of North Korea s National Defense Commission the body mainly responsible for control of the armed forces as well as the supreme commandership of the country s now million man strong military force the Korean People s Army to his son in 1991 and 1993 So far the elder Kim even though he is dead has remained the country s president and the chairman of the Party s Central Military Commission the party s organization that has supreme supervision and authority over military matters In early 1994 Kim began investing in nuclear power to offset energy shortages brought on by economic problems This was the first of many nuclear crises On 19 May 1994 Kim ordered spent fuel to be unloaded from the already disputed nuclear research facility in Yongbyon Despite repeated chiding from Western nations Kim continued to conduct nuclear research and carry on with the uranium enrichment program In June 1994 former US president Jimmy Carter travelled to Pyongyang in an effort to persuade Kim to negotiate with the Clinton Administration over its nuclear program 84 To the astonishment of the United States and the International Atomic Energy Agency Kim agreed to halt his nuclear research program and seemed to be embarking upon a new opening to the West 85 Death Main article Death and state funeral of Kim Il sung On the late morning shortly before 12 00 noon on 7 July 1994 Kim Il sung collapsed from a sudden heart attack at his residence in Hyangsan North Pyongan After the heart attack Kim Jong il ordered the team of doctors who were constantly at his father s side to leave and arranged for the country s best doctors to be flown in from Pyongyang After several hours the doctors from Pyongyang arrived but despite their efforts to save him Kim Il sung died at 2 00am on 8 July 1994 at age 82 After the traditional Confucian mourning period his death was declared 34 hours later 86 Kim Il sung s death resulted in nationwide mourning and a ten day mourning period was declared by Kim Jong il His funeral was scheduled to be held on 17 July 1994 in Pyongyang but was delayed until 19 July 87 It was attended by hundreds of thousands of people who were flown into the city from all over North Korea Kim Il sung s body was placed in a public mausoleum at the Kumsusan Palace of the Sun where his preserved and embalmed body lies under a glass coffin for viewing purposes His head rests on a traditional Korean pillow and he is covered by the flag of the Workers Party of Korea Newsreel video of the funeral at Pyongyang was broadcast on several networks and can now be found on various websites 88 Contributions to political theoryMain article Juche Kim Il sung s most notable contribution to political theory is his conceptualization of the Juche idea originally described as a variant of Marxism Leninism In his writings Kim engaged with Karl Marx s metaphor that religion is the opium of the people He did so both in the context of responding to his comrades who objected to working with religious groups Chonbulygo and Chondoism respectively 89 In the first instance Kim replies that a person is mistaken if he or she believes Marx s proposition regarding opium of the people can be applied in all instances explaining that if a religion prays for dealing out divine punishment to Japan and blessing the Korean nation then it is a patriotic religion and its believers are patriots 89 In the second Kim states that Marx s metaphor must not be construed radically and unilaterally because Marx was warning against the temptation of a religious mirage and not opposing believers in general 89 Because the communist movement in Korea was fighting a struggle for national salvation against Japan Kim writes that anyone with a similar agenda can join the struggle and that even a religionist must be enrolled in our ranks without hesitation 89 Personal lifeSee also Kim family North Korea Kim s first wife Kim Jŏng Suk and his son Kim Jong il Kim Il sung married twice His first wife Kim Jong suk 1917 1949 gave birth to two sons and one daughter before her death in childbirth during the delivery of a stillborn girl Kim Jong il was his oldest son The other son Kim Man il or Shaura Kim of this marriage died in 1947 in a swimming accident A daughter Kim Kyong hui was born in 1946 Kim married Kim Song ae 1924 2014 in 1952 and it is believed that he had three children with her Kim Yŏng il not to be confused with the former Premier of North Korea with the same name Kim Kyŏng il and Kim Pyong il Kim Pyong il was prominent in Korean politics until he became ambassador to Hungary In 2015 Kim Pyong il became ambassador to the Czech Republic but officially retired in 2019 and resides once again in North Korea Kim was reported to have had other children with women who he was not married to 90 They included Kim Hyŏn nam born 1972 head of the Propaganda and Agitation Department of the Workers Party since 2002 91 AwardsMain article Awards and decorations received by Kim Il sung According to North Korean sources Kim Il sung had received 230 foreign orders medals and titles from 70 countries since the 1940s until and after his death 92 They include The Soviet Order of the Red Banner and the Order of Lenin twice 93 94 Star of the Republic of Indonesia first class the Bulgarian Order of Georgi Dimitrov twice the Togolese Order of Mono Grand Cross the Order of the Yugoslav Star Great Star 95 the Cuban Order of Jose Marti twice the East German Order of Karl Marx twice the Maltese Xirka Ġieħ ir Repubblika the Burkinabe Order of the Gold Star of Nahouri Order of the Grand Star of Honour of Socialist Ethiopia the Nicaraguan Augusto Cesar Sandino Order es the Vietnamese Gold Star Order 94 the Czechoslovak Order of Klement Gottwald 96 the Royal Order of Cambodia Grand Cross 97 the National Order of Madagascar first class Grand Cross 98 the Mongolian Order of Sukhbaatar 99 and the Romanian orders of Order of Victory of Socialism and Order of the Star of the Romanian Socialist Republic first class with band 94 100 LegacyFurther information North Korean cult of personality Kim Il sung A mural in Pyongyang of a young Kim Il sung giving a speech The original statue of Kim Il sung on Mansudae Hill 1972 2012 The one of Kim Jong il was added much later The current official portrait of Kim Il sung often seen in public areas Kim Il sung was a godlike figure within North Korea but his personality cult struggled to extend beyond the country s borders 101 There are over 500 statues of him in North Korea similar to the many statues and monuments that Eastern Bloc countries erected of their leaders 102 The most prominent are at Kim Il sung University Kim Il sung Stadium Mansudae Hill Kim Il sung Bridge and the Immortal Statue of Kim Il sung Some statues have reportedly been destroyed by explosions or damaged with graffiti by North Korean dissidents 34 201 103 Yŏng Saeng eternal life monuments have been erected throughout the country each dedicated to the departed Eternal Leader 104 Kim Il sung s image is prominent in places associated with public transportation especially his posthumous portrait released in 1994 which hangs at every North Korean train station and airport 102 It is also placed prominently near the border crossings between China and North Korea 105 At the border outside of Yanji South Korean tourists could pay the local Chinese residents for a picture taken against the scenery of North Korea beyond the Tumen River with the portrait of Kim Il sung looming large at the background 106 Thousands of gifts to Kim Il sung from foreign leaders are housed in the International Friendship Exhibition 107 Kim Il sung s birthday Day of the Sun is celebrated every year as a public holiday in North Korea 108 The associated April Spring Friendship Art Festival gathers hundreds of artists from all over the world 109 There is a Kim Il Sung Park a Kim Il Sung Alley and a Kim Il Sung monument in Damascus Syria 110 WorksMain article Kim Il sung bibliography Kim Il sung was the author of many works According to North Korean sources these amount to approximately 10 800 speeches reports books treatises and others 111 Some such as the 100 volume Complete Collection of Kim Il sung s Works 김일성전집 are published by the Workers Party of Korea Publishing House 112 Shortly before his death he published an eight volume autobiography With the Century 35 26 According to official North Korean sources Kim Il sung was the original writer of many plays and operas 113 One of these a revolutionary theatrical opera called The Flower Girl was adapted into a locally produced feature film in 1972 114 115 5 178 See also Biography portal North Korea portal Socialism portalKimilsungia Kim Tu bong Residences of North Korean leaders Song of General Kim Il sung List of things named after Kim Il sung Korean independence movement Jeongju Gim Kim Communism in KoreaNotes Choi Yong kun was previously head of state as the President of the Presidium of the Supreme People s Assembly Kim Yong nam became later head of state as the President of the Presidium of the Supreme People s Assembly In 2021 the official English translation of Kim Jong un s preferred title Chairman was changed to President However the Korean word 위원장 meaning Chairman was not replaced 1 Officially transcribed as Kim Il Sung by North Korean sources romanized also as Kim Il seong or Gim Il seongReferences Koh Byung joon 17 February 2021 N K state media use president as new English title for 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Il Sung s Works Off Press KCNA 18 January 2012 Archived from the original on 12 October 2014 Retrieved 16 January 2015 Suk Yong Kim 2018 Dead Father s Living Body Kim Il sung s Seed Theory and North Korean Arts In Kaminskij Konstantin Koschorke Albrecht eds Tyrants Writing Poetry Budapest Central European University Press p 159 ISBN 978 963 386 202 5 Archived from the original on 14 October 2022 Retrieved 11 June 2018 가극 작품 NK Chosun in Korean Archived from the original on 1 December 2005 Retrieved 24 June 2010 金日成原创 卖花姑娘 5月上海唱响 卖花歌 Sohu Entertainment in Chinese China 26 March 2008 Archived from the original on 1 May 2011 Retrieved 24 June 2010 Further readingBaik Bong From Birth to Triumphant Return to Homeland From Building Democratic Korea to Chollima Flight and From Independent National Economy to 10 Point Political Programme Blair Clay The Forgotten War America in Korea Naval Institute Press 2003 Kracht Christian The Ministry Of Truth Kim Jong Il s North Korea Feral House October 2007 132 pages 88 color photographs ISBN 978 1 932595 27 7 Lee Chong sik Kim Il Song of North Korea Asian Survey University of California Press Vol 7 No 6 June 1967 DOI 10 2307 2642612 Available at Jstor NKIDP Crisis and Confrontation on the Korean Peninsula 1968 1969 A Critical Oral History Sudoplatov Pavel Anatoli Schecter Jerrold L and Schecter Leona P Special Tasks The Memoirs of an Unwanted Witness A Soviet Spymaster Little Brown Boston 1994 Szalontai Balazs Kim Il Sung in the Khrushchev Era Soviet DPRK Relations and the Roots of North Korean Despotism 1953 1964 Stanford Stanford University Press Washington D C Woodrow Wilson Center Press 2005 External links Wikiquote has quotations related to Kim Il sung Wikimedia Commons has media related to Kim Il sung Nicolae Ceausescu s visit to Pyongyang North Korea in 1971 Conversations with Kim Il Sung at the Wilson Center Digital Archive Kim Il sung at Curlie Government officesNew title Premier of North Korea1948 1972 Succeeded byKim IlPreceded byChoe Yong gonas President of the Presidium of the Supreme People s Assembly President of North Korea1972 1994 Succeeded byYang Hyong sopas Chairman of the Standing Committee of the Supreme People s AssemblyNew title Chairman of the National Defence Commission1972 1993 Succeeded byKim Jong ilParty political officesNew title Chairman of the Workers Party of Korea1949 1966 Himself as General SecretaryChairman of the WPK Organization Bureau1949 1951 Succeeded byPak Yong binChairman of the WPK Central Military Commission1950 1994 VacantTitle next held byKim Jong ilGeneral Secretary of the Workers Party of Korea1966 1994Military officesPreceded byChoe Yong gon Supreme Commander of the Korean People s Army1950 1991 Succeeded byKim Jong il Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Kim Il sung amp oldid 1132652205, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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