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Korean People's Association in Manchuria

The Korean People's Association in Manchuria (KPAM, August 1929 – September 1931) was an autonomous anarchist zone in Manchuria near the Korean borderlands,[1] populated by two million Korean migrants.[2] The society operated within the framework of a gift economy based upon mutual aid.

Korean People’s Association in Manchuria
재만한족총연합회
1929–1931
Map of Mudanjiang Prefecture
StatusHistorically unrecognized autonomous prefecture
CapitalHailin (de facto)
Common languagesKorean
Demonym(s)Korean
GovernmentAutonomous self-governing cooperative
Chairman 
• 1929-1930
Kim Chwa-chin
Historical eraInterwar period
• Established
August 1929
September 1931
Population
• 1930
2,000,000
Preceded by
Succeeded by
Today part ofChina
Korean People’s Association in Manchuria
Founding members of the KPAM in 1928
Korean name
Hangul
재만한족총연합회
Hanja
在滿韓族總聯合會
Revised RomanizationJaeman Hanjok Chongyeonhaphoe
McCune–ReischauerChaeman Hanjok Ch'ongyŏnhaphoe
Korean Anarchist Federation in Manchuria
Hangul
재만조선무정부주의자연맹
Hanja
在滿朝鮮無政府主義者聯盟
Revised RomanizationJaeman Joseon Mujeongbujuuija Yeonmaeng
McCune–ReischauerChaeman Chosŏn Mujŏngbujuŭija Yŏnmaeng
Shinmin Prefecture
Hangul
신민부
Hanja
新民府
Revised RomanizationSinminbu
McCune–ReischauerSinminbu

Background

Following the outbreak of the Donghak Peasant Revolution of 1894, the Empire of Japan intervened in Korea, which brought the peninsula under Japanese influence.[3] Meanwhile, the Japanese invasion of Manchuria had caused heightened tensions with the Russian Empire, which was itself also occupying Manchuria. Following the subsequent Russo-Japanese War, the Empire of Japan secured vast concessions in Manchuria,[4] taking control of the railways, establishing a number of imperial enclaves and eventually consolidating its military forces into the Kwantung Army.[5] Korea was itself formally annexed by the Empire of Japan in the Japan–Korea Treaty of 1910, forcing many Korean dissidents to flee into exile in Manchuria, where they established study groups and military schools in order to prepare the Korean independence movement for action.[6] Following the repression of the March 1st Movement, even more Koreans fled to Manchuria, leading to the development of the Korean anarchist movement in exile.[7]

Meanwhile, the collapse of the Empire of China had given way to the Warlord Era, during which Manchuria came under the control of Zhang Zuolin.[8] When he first rose to power, the Empire of Japan attempted to assassinate Zhang, but by 1924 they began bankrolling his activities due to his anti-communism,[9] with Zhang going on to collaborate in repressing the Korean resistance in Manchuria.[10] In June 1927, Zhang's Fengtian clique seized control of the Beiyang government and proclaimed the establishment of a military dictatorship.[11] As Zhang was pulled into engagements with the National Revolutionary Army, the Japanese government started looking to destablize his hold on power and take control of Manchuria.[12] By June 1928, the Northern Expedition had forced Zhang to flee Beijing and retreat back to Manchuria by train.[13] A few miles outside the Manchurian capital of Mukden, his train was blown up by Japanese imperial agents, killing him and sixteen other passengers.[14] He was succeeded as warlord of Manchuria by his son, Zhang Xueliang, who took a decisively anti-Japanese stance and aligned himself with the Nationalist government.[15]

History

The anti-Japanese sentiment of the new administration in Manchuria opened up space for the Korean anarchist movement to restart its activities, now safe from political repression.[6] This process culminated, on July 21, 1929, with the establishment of the Korean Anarchist Federation in Manchuria (KAFM)[a] in Hailin.[18] The KAFM was primarily focused on providing mutual aid for all Koreans in Manchuria, with the eventual goal being to establish a stateless society based on liberty and social equality, in which resources were to be distributed "from each according to their ability, to each according to their needs".[19]

 
Kim Chwa-chin, chairman of the Korean People's Association in Manchuria and commander of the Korean Independence Army [ko]

By this time, three self-governing Korean authorities had been established in Manchuria: the General Staff Headquarters on the Manchurian side of the Yalu River; the Righteous Government in the provinces of Jilin and Liaoning; and the New People's Government[b] in northern Manchuria, led by Kim Chwa-chin.[22] Although initially driven by Korean nationalism, the New People's Government increasingly began to take up anarchist principles, in order to counter the rising influence of Marxism–Leninism in the region.[23] This culminated in August 1929, when the New People's Government and the KAFM were integrated into the Korean People's Association in Manchuria (KPAM),[c][26] with Kim Chwa-chin being elected as its chairperson.[22]

The KPAM's plan was to develop systems of cooperative agriculture, free education and arms training in Manchuria.[27] Its primary goal was to meet the immediate material needs of Korean migrant workers and to protect them from exploitation, both by Chinese landlords and Korean nationalist authorities. In order to help them settle and cultivate land, it introduced collective farming, which collectivized the production and sale of agricultural produce.[28] Although Korean nationalists cooperated in the KPAM, nationalist goals of independence were subordinated to the immediate survival of Korean migrant workers, grounded in the Korean anarchists' principles of mutual aid. Activities that would have agitated for an independent and/or anarchist Korea were postponed, in favor of sustaining their economic programs.[29]

The Korean autonomous zone in Manchuria was eventually encircled by Imperial Japanese forces in the south and Soviet forces in the north, with covert operatives being sent into the territory to target prominent Korean anarchists.[30] The KPAM began to suffer a number of difficulties with the loss of many of its leading figures: on January 20, 1930, Kim Chwa-chin was assassinated by Korean communists while repairing a rice mill; in September 1930, Yi Eulgyu was arrested by Japanese imperial police and extradited back to Korea; and in July 1931, Kim Jongjin was assassinated.[31] Finally, on September 18, 1931, the Japanese invasion put a definitive end to the Korean anarchist experiment in Manchuria,[32] with the puppet state of Manchukuo being established in its place.[33] The remnants of the Korean anarchist organizations retreated to southern China, where many of them volunteered to fight in the Second Sino-Japanese War.[34]

Governance

The KPAM defined itself as an "autonomous, self-governing, cooperative organization."[26] Its representative system and administrative body were designed, according to anarchist principle of self-governance, to be a "government without [compulsory] government".[22] Decisions were largely made in village assemblies, with a decentralized federation of councils at the village, district and regional levels dealing with larger matters.[35]

The KPAM drew heavily from the economic theories of libertarian socialism and established give-away shops, worker cooperatives and democratic schools throughout their territories. Regional councils were also created.[25] In the meanwhile, they appointed higher-level staff (who only received average wage) from the top down, with lower levels of officials regionally chosen. Organization and propaganda teams worked with agitating the populace, both to get the farmer's support and to get them to create independent village assemblies and committees. Seemingly, these teams were welcome to almost everywhere they went, with no major incidents being noted.[36]

The Korean Independence Army [ko], commanded by General Kim Chwa-chin, formed the military of Shinmin Prefecture.[37] Effectively a peasant militia, the army's experienced soldiers were supplemented by guerrillas, trained in the prefecture's military academy,[34] with which the army waged guerrilla warfare against both the Empire of Japan and Soviet Union.[38] It also established a Safety Unit (Korean: 치안대, romanizedChiandae) and an Anti-Japanese Guerrilla Unit, in order to protect Koreans from local bandits and Imperial Japanese forces respectively.[28]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ The Korean Anarchist Federation in Manchuria (KAFM),[16] also known as the League of Korean Anarchists in Manchuria (LKAM),[17] is translated from the Korean: 재만조선무정부주의자연맹, romanizedJaeman Joseon Mujeongbujuuija Yeonmaeng (JJMY).
  2. ^ The New People's Government,[20] also known as Shinmin Prefecture,[21] is translated from the Korean: 신민부, romanizedSinminbu.
  3. ^ The Korean People's Association (KPA),[24] also known as the United Society of All Korean People (USAKP)[22] or the General League of Koreans (GLK),[25] is translated from the Korean: 재만한족총연합회, romanizedHanjok Chongyeon Haphoe (HCH).

References

  1. ^ Schmidt 2013, pp. 46–47.
  2. ^ MacSimoin 2002, p. 1.
  3. ^ Behr 1987, p. 51.
  4. ^ Behr 1987, p. 59.
  5. ^ Behr 1987, p. 137.
  6. ^ a b Hwang 2016, p. 49.
  7. ^ Ki-Rak 1986, pp. 28–29; MacSimoin 2002, pp. 1–2.
  8. ^ Behr 1987, pp. 145–146.
  9. ^ Behr 1987, p. 164.
  10. ^ Hwang 2016, p. 48.
  11. ^ Behr 1987, p. 161.
  12. ^ Behr 1987, p. 165.
  13. ^ Behr 1987, p. 168.
  14. ^ Behr 1987, pp. 168–169.
  15. ^ Behr 1987, pp. 169–170; Hwang 2016, p. 49.
  16. ^ Ki-Rak 1986, p. 30; Schmidt 2013, p. 73.
  17. ^ Hwang 2016, pp. 49–50.
  18. ^ Hwang 2016, pp. 49–50; Ki-Rak 1986, p. 30; Schmidt 2013, p. 73.
  19. ^ Hwang 2016, pp. 50–51.
  20. ^ Hwang 2016, p. 51; Schmidt 2013, p. 73.
  21. ^ Schmidt 2013, pp. 73–74.
  22. ^ a b c d Hwang 2016, p. 51.
  23. ^ Hwang 2016, p. 51; MacSimoin 2002, pp. 4–5.
  24. ^ Hirsch & van der Walt 2010, p. l; MacSimoin 2002, p. 5; Schmidt 2013, p. 73.
  25. ^ a b Schmidt 2013, p. 73.
  26. ^ a b Hwang 2016, p. 51; MacSimoin 2002, p. 5.
  27. ^ Hirsch & van der Walt 2010, p. l; Hwang 2016, pp. 51–52; MacSimoin 2002, p. 4.
  28. ^ a b Hwang 2016, p. 52.
  29. ^ Hwang 2016, pp. 52–53.
  30. ^ MacSimoin 2002, p. 6.
  31. ^ Hwang 2016, pp. 51–52.
  32. ^ Hwang 2016, p. 54.
  33. ^ Behr 1987, pp. 182–184.
  34. ^ a b Schmidt 2013, p. 74.
  35. ^ Gelderloos 2010, p. 49.
  36. ^ MacSimoin 2002, p. 5.
  37. ^ Hirsch & van der Walt 2010, p. l; Schmidt 2013, p. 73.
  38. ^ Gelderloos 2010, p. 50.

Bibliography

  • Behr, Edward (1987). The Last Emperor. New York: Bantam Books. ISBN 0-553-34474-9. OCLC 489010018.
  • Gelderloos, Peter (2010). "How will decisions be made?". Anarchy Works. San Francisco: Ardent Press. pp. 48–66. OCLC 748435918.
  • Hirsch, Steven; van der Walt, Lucien (2010). "Rethinking Anarchism and Syndicalism: the Colonial and Postcolonial Experience, 1870–1940". Anarchism and Syndicalism in the Colonial and Postcolonial World, 1870–1940. Studies in Global Social History. Vol. 6. Leiden: Brill. pp. xxxi–lxxiii. ISBN 978-90-04-18849-5. ISSN 1874-6705. OCLC 1200925424.
  • Hwang, Dongyoun (2016). "Experimenting Place-Based Anarchism in Manchuria". Anarchism in Korea: Independence, Transnationalism, and the Question of National Development, 1919-1984 (PDF). Albany, New York: SUNY Press. pp. 48–55. ISBN 978-1-4384-6167-0. OCLC 1039293708.
  • Ki-Rak, Ha (1986). History of the Korean anarchist movement (PDF). Taegu: Anarchist Publishing Committee. OCLC 937149346.
  • MacSimoin, Alan (2002) [1991]. The Korean Anarchist Movement. Braamfontein: Zabalaza. OCLC 999512376.
  • Schmidt, Michael (2013). Cartography of Revolutionary Anarchism. Edinburgh: AK Press. ISBN 9781849351386. OCLC 881111188. Retrieved 2 March 2017.

Further reading

  • Gu, Seung-hoe (2004). 한국 아나키즘 100년 (in Korean). Seoul: Ihaksa. p. 221. ISBN 8987350754. OCLC 1183137027.
  • Kim, Ch'ang-sun (1999). 韓國共產主義運動史 (in Korean). Seoul: Pukhan Yŏn'guso. pp. 144–146. OCLC 43149157.
  • Lee, Chong-Sik; Gim, Hag-jun; Kim, Yong-ho (2005). 혁명가들의항일회상 (in Korean). Seoul: Minŭmsa. pp. 367, 501. ISBN 8937425483. OCLC 1020567226.
  • Lee, Ho-ryong (2008). 아나키스트들 의 민족 해방 운동 (in Korean). Cheonan: Independence Hall. pp. 27–29, 225. ISBN 978-8993026450. OCLC 1013105816.
  • Yi, Hyŏn-hŭi (1990). 光復鬪爭의선구자 (in Korean). Seoul: Tongbang Tosŏ Chusik Hoesa. pp. 170–171. OCLC 680610592.
  • Yi, Mun-chʻang (2008). 해방 공간 의 아나키스트 (in Korean). Seoul: Ihaksa. pp. 108–109. ISBN 978-8961471183. OCLC 676382798.

korean, people, association, manchuria, kpam, august, 1929, september, 1931, autonomous, anarchist, zone, manchuria, near, korean, borderlands, populated, million, korean, migrants, society, operated, within, framework, gift, economy, based, upon, mutual, kore. The Korean People s Association in Manchuria KPAM August 1929 September 1931 was an autonomous anarchist zone in Manchuria near the Korean borderlands 1 populated by two million Korean migrants 2 The society operated within the framework of a gift economy based upon mutual aid Korean People s Association in Manchuria재만한족총연합회1929 1931FlagMap of Mudanjiang PrefectureStatusHistorically unrecognized autonomous prefectureCapitalHailin de facto Common languagesKoreanDemonym s KoreanGovernmentAutonomous self governing cooperativeChairman 1929 1930Kim Chwa chinHistorical eraInterwar period EstablishedAugust 1929 DisestablishedSeptember 1931Population 19302 000 000Preceded by Succeeded byRepublic of China State of ManchuriaToday part ofChinaKorean People s Association in ManchuriaFounding members of the KPAM in 1928Korean nameHangul재만한족총연합회Hanja在滿韓族總聯合會Revised RomanizationJaeman Hanjok ChongyeonhaphoeMcCune ReischauerChaeman Hanjok Ch ongyŏnhaphoeKorean Anarchist Federation in ManchuriaHangul재만조선무정부주의자연맹Hanja在滿朝鮮無政府主義者聯盟Revised RomanizationJaeman Joseon Mujeongbujuuija YeonmaengMcCune ReischauerChaeman Chosŏn Mujŏngbujuŭija YŏnmaengShinmin PrefectureHangul신민부Hanja新民府Revised RomanizationSinminbuMcCune ReischauerSinminbu Contents 1 Background 2 History 3 Governance 4 See also 5 Notes 6 References 7 Bibliography 8 Further readingBackground EditFollowing the outbreak of the Donghak Peasant Revolution of 1894 the Empire of Japan intervened in Korea which brought the peninsula under Japanese influence 3 Meanwhile the Japanese invasion of Manchuria had caused heightened tensions with the Russian Empire which was itself also occupying Manchuria Following the subsequent Russo Japanese War the Empire of Japan secured vast concessions in Manchuria 4 taking control of the railways establishing a number of imperial enclaves and eventually consolidating its military forces into the Kwantung Army 5 Korea was itself formally annexed by the Empire of Japan in the Japan Korea Treaty of 1910 forcing many Korean dissidents to flee into exile in Manchuria where they established study groups and military schools in order to prepare the Korean independence movement for action 6 Following the repression of the March 1st Movement even more Koreans fled to Manchuria leading to the development of the Korean anarchist movement in exile 7 Meanwhile the collapse of the Empire of China had given way to the Warlord Era during which Manchuria came under the control of Zhang Zuolin 8 When he first rose to power the Empire of Japan attempted to assassinate Zhang but by 1924 they began bankrolling his activities due to his anti communism 9 with Zhang going on to collaborate in repressing the Korean resistance in Manchuria 10 In June 1927 Zhang s Fengtian clique seized control of the Beiyang government and proclaimed the establishment of a military dictatorship 11 As Zhang was pulled into engagements with the National Revolutionary Army the Japanese government started looking to destablize his hold on power and take control of Manchuria 12 By June 1928 the Northern Expedition had forced Zhang to flee Beijing and retreat back to Manchuria by train 13 A few miles outside the Manchurian capital of Mukden his train was blown up by Japanese imperial agents killing him and sixteen other passengers 14 He was succeeded as warlord of Manchuria by his son Zhang Xueliang who took a decisively anti Japanese stance and aligned himself with the Nationalist government 15 History EditThe anti Japanese sentiment of the new administration in Manchuria opened up space for the Korean anarchist movement to restart its activities now safe from political repression 6 This process culminated on July 21 1929 with the establishment of the Korean Anarchist Federation in Manchuria KAFM a in Hailin 18 The KAFM was primarily focused on providing mutual aid for all Koreans in Manchuria with the eventual goal being to establish a stateless society based on liberty and social equality in which resources were to be distributed from each according to their ability to each according to their needs 19 Kim Chwa chin chairman of the Korean People s Association in Manchuria and commander of the Korean Independence Army ko By this time three self governing Korean authorities had been established in Manchuria the General Staff Headquarters on the Manchurian side of the Yalu River the Righteous Government in the provinces of Jilin and Liaoning and the New People s Government b in northern Manchuria led by Kim Chwa chin 22 Although initially driven by Korean nationalism the New People s Government increasingly began to take up anarchist principles in order to counter the rising influence of Marxism Leninism in the region 23 This culminated in August 1929 when the New People s Government and the KAFM were integrated into the Korean People s Association in Manchuria KPAM c 26 with Kim Chwa chin being elected as its chairperson 22 The KPAM s plan was to develop systems of cooperative agriculture free education and arms training in Manchuria 27 Its primary goal was to meet the immediate material needs of Korean migrant workers and to protect them from exploitation both by Chinese landlords and Korean nationalist authorities In order to help them settle and cultivate land it introduced collective farming which collectivized the production and sale of agricultural produce 28 Although Korean nationalists cooperated in the KPAM nationalist goals of independence were subordinated to the immediate survival of Korean migrant workers grounded in the Korean anarchists principles of mutual aid Activities that would have agitated for an independent and or anarchist Korea were postponed in favor of sustaining their economic programs 29 The Korean autonomous zone in Manchuria was eventually encircled by Imperial Japanese forces in the south and Soviet forces in the north with covert operatives being sent into the territory to target prominent Korean anarchists 30 The KPAM began to suffer a number of difficulties with the loss of many of its leading figures on January 20 1930 Kim Chwa chin was assassinated by Korean communists while repairing a rice mill in September 1930 Yi Eulgyu was arrested by Japanese imperial police and extradited back to Korea and in July 1931 Kim Jongjin was assassinated 31 Finally on September 18 1931 the Japanese invasion put a definitive end to the Korean anarchist experiment in Manchuria 32 with the puppet state of Manchukuo being established in its place 33 The remnants of the Korean anarchist organizations retreated to southern China where many of them volunteered to fight in the Second Sino Japanese War 34 Governance EditThe KPAM defined itself as an autonomous self governing cooperative organization 26 Its representative system and administrative body were designed according to anarchist principle of self governance to be a government without compulsory government 22 Decisions were largely made in village assemblies with a decentralized federation of councils at the village district and regional levels dealing with larger matters 35 The KPAM drew heavily from the economic theories of libertarian socialism and established give away shops worker cooperatives and democratic schools throughout their territories Regional councils were also created 25 In the meanwhile they appointed higher level staff who only received average wage from the top down with lower levels of officials regionally chosen Organization and propaganda teams worked with agitating the populace both to get the farmer s support and to get them to create independent village assemblies and committees Seemingly these teams were welcome to almost everywhere they went with no major incidents being noted 36 The Korean Independence Army ko commanded by General Kim Chwa chin formed the military of Shinmin Prefecture 37 Effectively a peasant militia the army s experienced soldiers were supplemented by guerrillas trained in the prefecture s military academy 34 with which the army waged guerrilla warfare against both the Empire of Japan and Soviet Union 38 It also established a Safety Unit Korean 치안대 romanized Chiandae and an Anti Japanese Guerrilla Unit in order to protect Koreans from local bandits and Imperial Japanese forces respectively 28 See also EditMakhnovshchina People s Republic of Korea Revolutionary Catalonia Yanbian Korean Autonomous PrefectureNotes Edit The Korean Anarchist Federation in Manchuria KAFM 16 also known as the League of Korean Anarchists in Manchuria LKAM 17 is translated from the Korean 재만조선무정부주의자연맹 romanized Jaeman Joseon Mujeongbujuuija Yeonmaeng JJMY The New People s Government 20 also known as Shinmin Prefecture 21 is translated from the Korean 신민부 romanized Sinminbu The Korean People s Association KPA 24 also known as the United Society of All Korean People USAKP 22 or the General League of Koreans GLK 25 is translated from the Korean 재만한족총연합회 romanized Hanjok Chongyeon Haphoe HCH References Edit Schmidt 2013 pp 46 47 MacSimoin 2002 p 1 Behr 1987 p 51 Behr 1987 p 59 Behr 1987 p 137 a b Hwang 2016 p 49 Ki Rak 1986 pp 28 29 MacSimoin 2002 pp 1 2 Behr 1987 pp 145 146 Behr 1987 p 164 Hwang 2016 p 48 Behr 1987 p 161 Behr 1987 p 165 Behr 1987 p 168 Behr 1987 pp 168 169 Behr 1987 pp 169 170 Hwang 2016 p 49 Ki Rak 1986 p 30 Schmidt 2013 p 73 Hwang 2016 pp 49 50 Hwang 2016 pp 49 50 Ki Rak 1986 p 30 Schmidt 2013 p 73 Hwang 2016 pp 50 51 Hwang 2016 p 51 Schmidt 2013 p 73 Schmidt 2013 pp 73 74 a b c d Hwang 2016 p 51 Hwang 2016 p 51 MacSimoin 2002 pp 4 5 Hirsch amp van der Walt 2010 p l MacSimoin 2002 p 5 Schmidt 2013 p 73 a b Schmidt 2013 p 73 a b Hwang 2016 p 51 MacSimoin 2002 p 5 Hirsch amp van der Walt 2010 p l Hwang 2016 pp 51 52 MacSimoin 2002 p 4 a b Hwang 2016 p 52 Hwang 2016 pp 52 53 MacSimoin 2002 p 6 Hwang 2016 pp 51 52 Hwang 2016 p 54 Behr 1987 pp 182 184 a b Schmidt 2013 p 74 Gelderloos 2010 p 49 MacSimoin 2002 p 5 Hirsch amp van der Walt 2010 p l Schmidt 2013 p 73 Gelderloos 2010 p 50 Bibliography EditBehr Edward 1987 The Last Emperor New York Bantam Books ISBN 0 553 34474 9 OCLC 489010018 Gelderloos Peter 2010 How will decisions be made Anarchy Works San Francisco Ardent Press pp 48 66 OCLC 748435918 Hirsch Steven van der Walt Lucien 2010 Rethinking Anarchism and Syndicalism the Colonial and Postcolonial Experience 1870 1940 Anarchism and Syndicalism in the Colonial and Postcolonial World 1870 1940 Studies in Global Social History Vol 6 Leiden Brill pp xxxi lxxiii ISBN 978 90 04 18849 5 ISSN 1874 6705 OCLC 1200925424 Hwang Dongyoun 2016 Experimenting Place Based Anarchism in Manchuria Anarchism in Korea Independence Transnationalism and the Question of National Development 1919 1984 PDF Albany New York SUNY Press pp 48 55 ISBN 978 1 4384 6167 0 OCLC 1039293708 Ki Rak Ha 1986 History of the Korean anarchist movement PDF Taegu Anarchist Publishing Committee OCLC 937149346 MacSimoin Alan 2002 1991 The Korean Anarchist Movement Braamfontein Zabalaza OCLC 999512376 Schmidt Michael 2013 Cartography of Revolutionary Anarchism Edinburgh AK Press ISBN 9781849351386 OCLC 881111188 Retrieved 2 March 2017 Further reading EditGu Seung hoe 2004 한국 아나키즘 100년 in Korean Seoul Ihaksa p 221 ISBN 8987350754 OCLC 1183137027 Kim Ch ang sun 1999 韓國共產主義運動史 in Korean Seoul Pukhan Yŏn guso pp 144 146 OCLC 43149157 Lee Chong Sik Gim Hag jun Kim Yong ho 2005 혁명가들의항일회상 in Korean Seoul Minŭmsa pp 367 501 ISBN 8937425483 OCLC 1020567226 Lee Ho ryong 2008 아나키스트들 의 민족 해방 운동 in Korean Cheonan Independence Hall pp 27 29 225 ISBN 978 8993026450 OCLC 1013105816 Yi Hyŏn hŭi 1990 光復鬪爭의선구자 in Korean Seoul Tongbang Tosŏ Chusik Hoesa pp 170 171 OCLC 680610592 Yi Mun chʻang 2008 해방 공간 의 아나키스트 in Korean Seoul Ihaksa pp 108 109 ISBN 978 8961471183 OCLC 676382798 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Korean People 27s Association in Manchuria amp oldid 1138268375, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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