Archive for the 'Kim Il Sung' Category

Propaganda Time: Saku edition - UPDATE

A big thanks to Saku for the videos because they have been entertaining. Please note a lot of the footage may be similar because clips are available on songonblogspot and are in other propaganda time postings here on DPRK Forum. It took me a while to learn how to upload these things, but it is smooth sailing now. At any rate, enjoy the video, and I will post more as I upload more to Google.

Update: This video was removed from Google video because of… get this… a copyright violation. What a huge irony.

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Rare footage from Hapo: A trip by Kim Il Sung to Poland in 1956 and the death of Kim Il Sung

Related post

Here is something I have been looking for quite a while, and as usual, hapo finds all the good stuff. Therefore, big hat tip to him for finding it. This is very unreal, and is in three parts. I cannot say if to enjoy it or not because it is very head scratching.

Part 1:

Part 2:

Part 3:

…and the trip of Kim Il Sung to Poland in 1956:

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The Path To Collapse: Hwang Jang Yop on succession

Maybe I am interested in the wrong country. Maybe I should simply give it up and not worry about it. There are so many issues facing my own country, perhaps I should worry what happens at home. However, I cannot help but to want to try and look through the dark looking glass and try to understand the silhouette of the gears turning in the feeble attempt to understand. As a person who never even stepped foot into Korea or any other part of Asia for that matter, why the interest?

Perhaps it is the human condition. Perhaps it is the taboo of trying to understand something I am not supposed to understand. Perhaps I am just weird and need to find a new hobby. Maybe I need to find an answer to these things before trying to understand something I have very little understanding of on the other side of the world. Something draws me to this mysterious place, and the succession and future possibilities are one of them:

The DailyNK has an interesting write-up about the possible succession by high level defector Hwang Jang Yop. He predicts there is no light at the end of the tunnel for the evaporation of the Kim Jong Il regime, he does predict people will not take another successor seriously. I am sure he is correct the regime will stick around for as long as possible. How long it can sustain itself is anybody’s guess, and there are many theories to suggest when the regime will topple. As for the state, that may take even longer as suggested by Projecting Pyongyang (h/t: DPRK Studies) and Marcus Noland’s Korea After Kim Jong Il (I will not go into these in detail now, since this is a subject I am still learning). There are many, many other publications, articles and other things discussing the possibilities as well as you may very well know. While it is fascinating to speculate how North Korea may go, nobody really knows how things will develop and finally be history. I am going to guess even Kim Jong Il does not really know the ultimate fate of his so-called paradise, but he may be the only one with all the variables known such as the inner workings of his government, the deals made with China (and others), the nature of his economy and what he plans to do next. I am going to venture a guess not even the closest of his inner circle of cronies may not have the entire picture. With this in mind, if close insiders may not have all the information (I am going to guess each department has information, but for the sake of keeping the people in line, not one person other than Kim know everything), if the inner circle, ordinary North Koreans and even the elite do not know everything that is going on, outsiders know even less. Not even less, almost nothing with 100% certainty.

Continue reading ‘The Path To Collapse: Hwang Jang Yop on succession’

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Propaganda Time: Official suceession tales and hero worship

Yes, it is still another very slow day in North Korea, so it is about time you imperialist jerks saw the REAL story behind the greatness of Kim Jong Il and why the Great Leader chose him to be the successor. This is in seven parts. No, it is not that long, so you have more than enough time to watch and learn. That’s right, you have been brainwashed! This is the truth!

Part1:

Part 2:

Continue reading ‘Propaganda Time: Official suceession tales and hero worship’

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North Korea is low on cash, so celebrations for the leaders are twice a year

According to AFP:

SEOUL (AFP) — Cash-strapped North Korea has cut down on its main festivities to mark founding leader Kim Il-Sung’s birthday to help save money in the impoverished Communist country, news reports said Sunday.

Choson Sinbo, a pro-Pyongyang newspaper for ethnic Koreans in Japan, reported on its online edition that North Korea had turned its annual “April Spring Friendship Art Festival” into an biennial event instead.

The festival, usually around Kim’s birthday of April 15, has served as Pyongyang’s most important fete to strengthen a personality cult around Kim’s family in North Korea.

Kim’s birthday is still the biggest holiday in North Korea despite his death in 1994. His son Kim Jong-Il has since ruled the country with a similarly iron-fisted approach.

The celebration, which began in 1982 to celebrate Kim’s 70th birthday, usually invites foreign artists — with Pyongyang footing the bill for travel expenses and accommodation.

But Seoul’s Yonhap news agency, citing an unnamed North Korean defector who formerly worked for the foreign and cultural sectors, said worsening economic hardships had led Pyongyang to curtail the usually lavish celebration and most likely mean no international performers this year.

Emphasis mine. For North Korea to cut down on these types of events, it must be in dire straits. Also, does this save money on the gifts the leaders show love for the people? I think so. It does not matter. This country is falling apart, and there is little that can be done about it.

In the meantime, the #2 man is making some deals with some countries in Africa, and maybe they can send them some extra cash.

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Psychological profile of Adolf Hitler: Is there one for Kim Jong Il or Kim Il Sung?

Here is an interesting documentary about Adolf Hitler. I do not know who made the documentary, but that is not important. What this discussed was the psychological profile of Adolf Hitler. Apparently, this was never done before, but some shocking predictions were made based on his behavior and past. These were accurate from the documentary’s point of view.

One of the people discussing this profile is a man named Jerrold M. Post. Apparently, he never saw the analysis much later.

Now, what is interesting, and what I would like to know is, are there profiles of Kim Jong Il, Kim Il sung or the other cronies inside the regime? I am sure if there is such a thing, it is not for public consumption, but it would be very interesting to see something like that.

Continue reading ‘Psychological profile of Adolf Hitler: Is there one for Kim Jong Il or Kim Il Sung?’

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Video: The fable and reality of Kim Jong Il’s birth

(Hat tip: Hapo) I have written in the past how Kim Jong Il and Kim Il sung came into power, and to this day, cannot find the story of the double rainbow that appeared in the sky. If anybody knows where official sources are, that would be fantastic. Anyway, hapo found a strange video about Kim Jong Il’s birth as it is officially and from history. Granted, little is known about his early life or his father’s life for that matter, some things are known. So the question to readers is, what is the real story behind Kim Jong Il’s early life? We may never know, but is interesting to speculate all the same.

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Propaganda Time: Down-with-Imperialism Union event

I never heard of this event or the Down-with-Imperialism Union, and this event seems pretty important in the DPRK. Here is some info on the Naenara web site. I do not understand much of what the speakers are saying, but if somebody has some idea, that would be great. Here are the videos (quite long!). Now for a question for the readers, is this just as important as the Mass Games or less so? Some insight would be good. Thanks in advance.

Part 1:

Part 2:

Continue reading ‘Propaganda Time: Down-with-Imperialism Union event’

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North Korean oddities: Victorious Fatherland Liberation War Museum

War MuseumNo tour of the DPRK is complete without stopping by the Victorious Fatherland Liberation War Museum in Pyongyang. I did a little research on it, and while there is not a huge amount of information on it, I will post what I can regarding it. For those that have visited this oddity, please feel free to add your own thoughts, experiences and corrections to this posting, please do so.

On the right is the Google Earth image of the museum, and you can see the little details and a bird’s eye view of it. There are other pictures of the inside, but since almost all the pictures are copyrighted by the authors of the pictures, I will simply link the images to the page and not re-upload them here. If you are the author of some of these images and grant permission for DPRK Forum to use them, I would be grateful, and please say so in the comments. Otherwise, you will have to see them over there. However, there is a nice YouTube video of the tour, but this particular video not show the rotating war room:

Typarker gives some account of this museum:

In North Korea, the Korean War is called the Victorious Fatherland Liberation War, and our next stop was the Victorious Fatherland Liberation War Museum. The museum was interesting in that it was a physical representation of all of the anti-American feelings we War Museum had heard since being there. It was definitely worth seeing, but completely filled my quota of Korean-War-from-a-North-Korean-perspective talks I’d need for a while.

That is all fair and good, but what is the history behind this thing? I dug around, and it was very difficult to find. There is a brief description on the KCNA page:

Pyongyang, August 17 (KCNA) — 45 years have passed since the victorious Fatherland Liberation War Museum was established. The museum systematically shows the enduring feats of the President Kim Il Sung in leading the Fatherland Liberation War (June 1950-july 1953) to victory. Its predecessor, the fatherland liberation war memorial,was opened to public on August 17, 1953, and expanded into the present victorious Fatherland Liberation War Museum in April Juche 63 (1974). It is located on the Pothong River. It has 80 odd rooms. On display there are materials showing the feats the President performed in the army building during the anti-Japanese revolutionary struggle and the democratic revolution. Exhibited are data on military achievements made by all arms and services of the Korean People’s Army on several stages of operations during the Fatherland Liberation War and materials showing the struggle of people in the rear. Also exhibited are materials on the brutal atrocities of the U.S. imperialists and their defeat. The museum has over 70 semi-panoramic pictures and model boards, among them halls with a cyclorama on the operation of liberating Taejon and a semi-panoramic picture on the battle of attack on height 351. On the occasion of the 40th anniversary of the War Victory Day, the monument to victory in the Fatherland Liberation War was built on a large scale in the vicinity of the museum. War veterans are now working as lecturers at the museum. The museum has been visited so far by nearly 17 million people since its opening.

That is some information about the history, but since this is the KCNA, of course, propaganda is interwoven. So much for fair and balanced reporting. If other readers have information on the history of this oddity, please let me know.

Some links to pictures and accounts:

Account 1

Pictures of a trip to the DPRK including the war museum

KFA pictures

Account 2

Account 3 This part was pretty funny to read:

[...]
The War Museum in Pyongyang serves to promulgate the North Korean version of the war. We were met by a stout museum guide who, like almost all of her colleagues in NK, spoke no English (our guides translated) and seemed to be delivering a memorized monologue. The tour took about 2 hours, but I think it could’ve easily have been shortened to one hour if they just said ‘Kim Il Sung’ instead of `The Supreme Leader Generalissimo Kim Il Sung’ and `America’ instead of `The Imperialist American Aggressor’.
[...]

There are other accounts, but a more comprehensive history may be a little better. On the other hand, such information may be a little hard to come by.

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If you cannot get enough DPRK propaganda…

Then I have to suggest you take a gander at http://dprk-economy.com. The web site is colorful and sort of tries to keep up with the times. Unfortunately, there are some bugs in it and I have no idea if they will be fixed (such as the header picture is broken in places), but no matter. The content is kind of interesting if you like propaganda:

1. In the bookshop, do not miss the “best sellers” Idle Pig and Japan’s War Crimes-Past and Present (Warning: this automatically downloads a PDF). Of course, one cannot pass one day without the latest mis-adventures of the Dear Leader in the state run periodicals Pyongyang Times and Korea Today. lastly, no DPRK bookstore is complete without the biographies of Kim Jong Il, Kim Il Sung and Kim Jong Suk. After all, they are the focus of everything.

2. Next, you need to take a look at the vibrant economy of the Stalinist Utopia. Nothing is broken down, things are getting produced, and they want your investment today! Make sure to take a close look at some of these products: Pyongyang Daesong Tyre Factory, Pyongyang Cosmetics Factory and the Pyongyang Essential Oil Research Centre (they have oil to research?).

3. Look, a more colorful version of the KCNA!

4. Lastly, open your wallets and buy some stuff today! I have no idea if Americans are allowed to buy things, but it sure looks like it. Why not buy a painting, a movie, bearings, or “daily necessities” such as these beautiful boxing gloves (people working the fields and near starvation need these?)!

There is only one question in all of this. Why was this site not launched on the .kp domain? I mean after all, it would make the DPRK really look like it is finally in the 21st century.

Oh wait, never mind.

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North Korean oddities: DMZ Tunnels

DMZ TunnelOne of the more interesting oddities I have read about are the tunnels under the DMZ.

According to north Korean defectors, Kim Il-Sung — president of the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea — issued a sweeping order in the early 1970s that required every Korean People’s Army division along the Demilitarized Zone to dig and maintain at least two tunnels into South Korea. The opposing United Nations Command had been aware of an earlier north Korean tunneling effort that never became an actuality, but was surprised when new evidence came up that indicated the north was hard at work underground again.

(Emphasis mine) I do not know where the source of this information is, but I am very interested in finding it. Since the DPRK side will obviously have no information on such projects, it would be interesting to read any declassified information on these tunnels. If anybody has any good source material, let me know. This goes on to say:

On November 15, 1974 (Subscription) while in operation in the western DMZ near Korangpo, allied reconnaissance troops found steam rising from the earth’s surface indicating that a tunnel was present underneath the DMZ. The tunnels depth is believed to be some 45 meters, has a total length of 3,500 meters of which 1,000 meters invaded into the DMZ. The tunnel is along a course that would have exiting soldiers heading towards Korango, Uijongbu and is some 65 km from Seoul, 8 km northeast of Korangpo. It has a prefabricated wall of concrete and slate. When discovered, there were 220-volt and 60-watt lamps, electric lines, railways, and track vehicles. The ground is inclined by 5 degrees to the north to prevent water from gathering. There are turning points on the railroad. The tunnel is large enough to allow the transit of a regiment of troops and heavy artillery every hour.

Pretty impressive if you ask me. I am not sure if people visiting the DMZ get to see these tunnels. I am pretty certain the North side does not conduct such tours, but I could be wrong. The other tunnel discoveries are found in this article (Subscription).

More information on the tunnels are here, here, here(Small blurbs and a map) and here (PDF: This also gives a list of provocations by the North. An interesting read).

I can barely imagine the man-hours, intensive labor and the horrors of working on these tunnels. The risk must of been very great, and at least the first tunnel caused loss of life when investigating these tunnel from the South side. As for the North, I can only speculate, but the work must of been very hard.

Do other readers know more about this oddity? I would be truly grateful.

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Food woes in the DPRK (Resources included)

North Korea farmThis article got me thinking a lot, and the food shortages in North Korea seem to be getting worse and worse.

[...]

According to the survey results, which were announced Thursday, North Korea’s gross production of grains such as rice, corn and wheat, was about 4.01 million tons in 2007, down about 470,000 tons from the year before.

North Korea reportedly needs 6.5 million tons of grain to meet domestic demand, meaning it is facing a shortfall of about 2.49 million tons.

Especially devastating were torrential rains in August and a typhoon in September that hit the Korean Peninsula, which resulted in the flooding of about 11 percent of rice paddies in the country. As a result, rice production was 1.53 million tons, down by 360,000 tons from the previous year.

[...]

(Emphasis mine) North Korea’s food shortages are not new, and while I am not a farmer, I have read several places the land has been so overworked and the hills so stripped bare for fuel, the floods made the crops fare even worse. This article shows an eerie foretelling of the events of August 2007:

Photographs which depict a lush, rural environment are misleading. The country needs an average of 1m metric tonnes in food aid a year.

Yes, we have heard about the model farms before, but after the flooding, even some of the best crops were eradicated. Yes, in North Korea, image is everything, but it seems to me the facade is fading fast with the walls cracking and the real face showing behind it. The more that is shown, the bleaker it becomes. After a while, no amount of “spin” will make it better. In my mind, it is only a matter of time before everything is clear to everybody, and that will not be pretty for anybody.

“North Korea is not an agrarian country,” said Kathi Zellweger, a frequent visitor to the country with aid organisation Caritas. It is mostly rugged mountain terrain, and only about 18% is arable.

It is dependent on fertilizer and machinery to make that land productive, both of which are expensive.

Fertilizer and spare parts seem to be a very serious problem. With a growing population, the demand for more food rises (and you guessed it), the State cannot deliver when there is little to farm the land with. As the article goes on to suggest not only natural disasters takes its toll on food production, but decades of political central mismanagement of the Kims made things even worse (Among other things: see One Free Korea’s review of Marcus Noland and Stephen Haggard’s book on the famine - Markets, Aid and Reform as must read):

[...]

“If their farm produces five times as much, they don’t get five times as much food,” he said. Instead, they concentrate on their own private plots, which they use to feed themselves and to produce food for the markets.

The problem with this system is that market reforms, instituted in 2002, have sent prices soaring at a higher rate than wages. “Who can afford this stuff in the markets?” asked Mr French.

The answer: only the elite. Government officials, senior managers of state enterprises, security forces, and the leadership of the army are all unlikely to go hungry.

But a typical urban family can now only afford to buy 4kg of maize - the cheapest commodity - a month.

[...]

As Children of the Secret State suggested, the poor are only left with crumbs. The article only goes further to show a bleaker picture:

The urban diet is partly made up of a ration provided by the government, but this has dropped from 300-250g of cereals per person per day. North Korean officials have told the WFP they expect it to slump to 200g a day.

“The rural folk have already learned how to cope,” said Tim Peters, director of aid agency Helping Hands Korea. “But the urban people are so dependent on the government for distribution.”

As a result, foreign donations that have helped to prop North Korea up in previous years are doubly important this year.

To date, only 270,000 of the 500,000 tonnes of food needed for 2005 has arrived, the WFP says.

Then the prediction comes:

And there is always the risk of natural disaster.

Floods exacerbated the extreme food shortages 10 years ago, and North Korea’s ability to cope with them “is now probably worse”, said Mr French.

Ongoing land clearance has destroyed natural water breaks, “so it all just comes flooding down”.

…and that is precisely what happened with the major floods of August 2007. Then a little while later, a typhoon hits making the situation even worse. Not a lot has been said as to the result of the 2006 floods and how many people are perishing as a result of it, but the ROK did deliver tons and tons of food/medicine aid to the stricken North. If that helped, I am not sure of. However, one thing is clear. North Korea cannot continue to go on like this, and the people at some point are going to rebel especially if the food shortages hit the elite and/or KPA. It seems like it is happening already.

The DailyNK also paints the same shortfall with some reservations. What was the reservation?

[...]

A North Korean expert observed, “Due to the flood this year, the overall crop yield was reduced, but the products from North Korea’s paddy fields which are spread all over the place do not count in official statistics. When considering the food support from the outside world, the food shortage is not at a worrisome level.”

[...]

So this quote suggests the aid seems to be helping some, but I have to say this is still only a band-aid. I simply cannot see this level of suffering going on much longer without a lot of problems. However, I could be wrong, and have been wrong before. Also:

A majority of defectors insisted that the agricultural production level from North Korea’s individually cultivated lands (including paddy fields and fields attached to homes) will surpass the cooperative farms’ 30% standard.

So again, time will only tell, but along with the other news and rumors floating around including a lot of “firsts” for the reclusive regime tells me volumes. Something is changing in North Korea, and it may be bittersweet.

Also, see:

Country Studies

Food Security in North Korea: Designing Realistic Possibilities (PDF)

Famine and Reform in North Korea (PDF - Marcus Noland)

Hunger and Human Rights- The Politics of Famine in North Korea (PDF Haggard, Noland)

Edit: See One Free Korea

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Avanti Politiikka! concert to play music of the Great and Dear Leaders in Finland

kim-yong-ilfull.jpg(Hat Tip and translation hapo) Original story here

The Avanti Politiikka! concert is breaking barriers again. Compositions by the North Korean leader are performed for the first time in Finland.

Songs that tell about the late leader Kim Il-Sung and the current leader Kim Jong-Il can be found plentifully in the Internet, but their own music has rarely been heard outside North Korea, if ever.

It required a lot of work to find any notes for the concert.

- Usually it’s a routine to get notes. However, finding North Korean compositions became a small advanture, tells clarinette performer Kari Kriikku about the quest that took a year.

He doesn’t want to reveal everything about the matter before the concert.

- It was a fairly new situation for the Koreans. I don’t know if anyone has thought of asking them for notes before.

I’ve multiple times been thinking whether works by known persons like Franklin D. Roosevelt would be shared without problems if they had composed music, thinks Kriikku.

Kriikku started his quest for compositions by the North Korean leaders after he heard they had renewed opera and classical music. The works performed in the Avanti Politiikka! concert are Asian basic works by their nature.

- The songs that are performed are local, simple folk music. The interesting thing is that they’re like from a psalm book.

They have a melody, tone signs and lyrics, Kriikku describes.

- We have the information we have received from these songs. They’re intended for average singers. By their type they’re verse songs, in the other of which the important of the mother is and then they tell in the end how important the leader is, says Kriikku.

The songs are performed in Korean. The text is lyrical language that can be understood in many ways. Translating it into English would have required more time than the arrangers of the concert had.

More information about Kim Jong-Il’s interest in also other areas like making movies can be found at the website IMDd (sic).

Avanti! performs the music by the leaders on 25th November in the grand Avanti Politiikka! concert at the Old Student House. The programming also has music by Henry VIII, Ivan IV of Russia and Frederick II of Prussia.

There’s also music that has burning ideas in the pace of Haydn and Sibelius.

11/25/2007 at 7 PM, Old Student House, Helsinki. Chamber orchestra Avanti, lead by Hannu Lintu; the choirs Otaniemen Kaiku, Dominante and Murtosointu; Petri Bäckström, narrator; Pasi Heikura, announcer

Tickets 20/10 euros

Thanks for the translation, and this is indeed some interesting news. I have never seen North Korean songs played elsewhere to my knowledge. I wonder if there would be footage later on somewhere.

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A closer look at propaganda Part 2: Utopian dreams

Kim Jong Il

In the last part of the series, I discussed public relations and the story of Edward Bernays. His idea was to control the masses by appealing to the wants, feelings and inner desires. He renamed the profession to public relations because the word “propaganda” has such a negative tone in America, and he was right. Here, when the word propaganda is used, from what I have seen, is perceived as something insulting. However, in my view, propaganda is not necessarily a bad word, but became a bad word because the truth is skewed very radically. In America, propaganda is still a very powerful tool, and we see it everyday. As I said before, propaganda may have some similarities to other regime ideals and the like, but the similarities end on how they go about the strategy. The difference I have noticed with the public relations of freer nations like America vs. a totalitarian regime for example like Nazi Germany or North Korea, is that in freer nations, we can counter propaganda with skepticism and even rejection, while in more authoritarian societies, the propaganda cannot be questioned openly. Today, we focus on the possible propaganda strategies of North Korea and how it may have similarities in the art/science of public relations, but I am going to venture a wild guess it is not based on the ideas of Edward Bernays.

As usual: Please be aware this is an ongoing research project, and information contained in this post may have glaring factual or missing information that I may not be aware of. If anybody has any insight that will make me better understand it, please say so in the comments and I will love to take your views into consideration and learn something. That is the whole goal of this blog.

Continue reading ‘A closer look at propaganda Part 2: Utopian dreams’

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Kim Jong Il and North Korea: The Leader and The System

If you are interested in an overview of North Korea, here is an interesting PDF for you. It’s a pretty quick read, and while I do not agree with all of it (well, who can all agree on everything when it comes to North Korea), it is still pretty good.

Original site here

PDF document here

North Korea specific results here

I am continuing to wade through the documents, and should be interesting and good research material. Enjoy the archives.

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