Kim Chaek

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Kim Chaek
김책
File:Kim Chaek 2.jpg
Official photograph of Kim Chaek used by the North Korean government
Vice Premier of the Cabinet
In office
9 September 1948 – 31 January 1951
PremierKim Il Sung
Minister of Industry
In office
9 September 1948 – 31 January 1951
PremierKim Il Sung
Preceded byPosition established
Succeeded byChong Il-yong
Personal details
BornKim Hong-gye
(1903-08-14)14 August 1903
Died31 January 1951(1951-01-31) (aged 47)
CitizenshipNorth Korean
Children
OccupationNorth Korean general and politician
AwardsNorth Korea's National Reunification Prize
Military service
AllegianceKorean People's Army
Years of service1932–1951
CommandsKPA front commander
Battles/wars
Korean name
Hangul
김책
Hanja
金策
RRGim Chaek
MRKim Ch'aek

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Kim Chaek (KoreanLua error: Internal error: The interpreter exited with status 1.; HanjaLua error: Internal error: The interpreter exited with status 1.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter exited with status 1., 14 August 1903 – 31 January 1951) was a North Korean revolutionary, military general, and politician. His birth name was Kim Hong-gye (Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter exited with status 1.; Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter exited with status 1.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter exited with status 1.).

File:김일성 수령 최용건 김책 김일 강건.jpg
Choe Yong-gon, Kim Chaek, Kim Il, and Kang Kon receiving the first domestically produced Type 49 submachine guns from President Kim Il Sung, 1949.

Kim Chaek was born in Sŏngjin, North Hamgyong, Korea, in 1903. He and his family fled to Manchuria after Korea was colonized by Japan. In 1927, Kim joined the Chinese Communist Party and the Anti-Japanese movement to oppose the Japanese occupation. He was imprisoned for his resistance activities. After his release from prison, Kim joined the Northeast Anti-Japanese United Army in 1935 and fought alongside Kim Il Sung. He fled to the Soviet Union to escape the Japanese conquest of the partisans in 1940. He lived in Khabarovsk where he met with Kim Il Sung and formed the 88th Special Brigade. After the Soviet invasion of Manchuria, he returned to Korea along with the Soviet Army in 1945. On September 9, 1948, North Korea was established, Kim became the industry minister and deputy prime minister under Kim Il Sung. He was appointed number 2 Committee Vice Chairman in the Workers' Party of Korea. In the Korean War, he was a commander of the North Korean troops on the front lines.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter exited with status 1.

A Japanese history of the Kim Il Sung family claims that Kim Chaek was purged when he was found responsible for the failure at the Inchon landing, and died in January 1951 after an American military air raid bombing or was assassinated following a power struggle.[1] Kim Il Sung's memoir With the Century states instead that Kim died of heart failure after a long night of work.[2]

Posthumous honours

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File:Revolutionary Martyrs Cemetery 28.JPG
Bust at the Revolutionary Martyrs' Cemetery
File:Views from Yanggakdo International Hotel 05.JPG
The Kim Chaek University of Technology in Otan-Kangan Street, Pyongyang

After his death, Kim Chaek's birthplace Haksong County, combined with the neighboring city of Songjin, was formally renamed to Kim Chaek City to commemorate his life and accomplishments.[3] Kim Chaek University of Technology in Pyongyang and Kim Chaek Iron and Steel Complex in Chongjin are also named after him.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter exited with status 1.

He was awarded North Korea's National Reunification Prize in 1998.[4]

  • Feature-length epic "Mt. Paektu" 《장편 대서사시 백두산》

References

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  1. ^ Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter exited with status 1.
  2. ^ Kim Il Sung (1998) With the Century vol. 8
  3. ^ Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter exited with status 1.
  4. ^ Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter exited with status 1.

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  • Korea, a century of change by Jürgen Kleiner page 275
  • Korea Web Weekly Remembering Kim Chaik
  • Kim Jong Il Biography. Pyongyang: Foreign Languages Publishing House for Literature, 2005.

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