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Korean collaborators with Imperial Japan

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From the late 19th century and until 1945, ethnic Koreans worked with the Empire of Japan . Some of these figures contributed to or benefitted from Japan's colonization of Korea , and some actively worked to counter the Korean independence movement . These people are now considered by much of Korea to have been collaborators with Japan, and thus traitors to Korea.

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83-958: Examples of such people include members of the Iljinhoe or Five Eulsa Traitors . Prosecution of collaborators began after the liberation of Korea , although the prosecution was interfered with by the South Korean leader Syngman Rhee . Prosecution returned after the gradual democratization during the 1980s and 1990s. The first anti-collaborator legislation was passed in 2005: the Special Law to Redeem Pro-Japanese Collaborators' Property . Chinilpa ( Korean :  친일파 ; Hanja :  親日派 ; lit.  pro-Japan faction) and bu-ilbae ( 부일배 ; 附日輩 ; lit.  people who collaborated with Japan) are words used to describe collaborators. These terms can be considered derogatory. The term " chinilpa " ( 친일파 ) first appeared in

166-468: A treaty normalizing relations with Japan , which included payment of reparations and the making of soft-loans from Japan, and led to increased trade and investment between South Korea and Japan. In July 1966 South Korea and the United States signed a Status of Forces Agreement establishing a more equal relationship between the two countries. With its growing economic strength and the security guarantee of

249-520: A Captain Kanno Hiroshi had previously partaken in the failed February 26 incident coup in Japan, and taught an analysis of the coup that Park possibly heeded. Lee evaluated this account as convincing, and theorized that, years later, Park applied the lessons to his own coup. In March 1942, Park graduated among the top five students of the academy. After graduation, he took a three-month apprenticeship in

332-609: A blood oath ( 혈서 ; 血書 ; hyŏlsŏ ) in order to demonstrate his fealty to Japan and draw publicity for his cause. Park did so. On March 31, 1939, the Manchukuo newspaper Manshū Shimbun ran an article called "Blood Oath: Desire to be an Army Officer: Young Teacher from the Peninsula". On the 29th, admissions officers of the Military Government command were deeply moved by a piece of registered mail from Park Chung Hee,

415-420: A campaign to "clean up" the streets by arresting and putting the homeless to work in "welfare centers". The American historian Carter Eckert wrote that the historiography, including his work, around Park has tended to ignore the "enormous elephant in the room" namely that the way in which Park sought kündaehwa ( modernization ) of South Korea was influenced by his distinctively militaristic way of understanding

498-548: A marriage to a different woman: Kim Ho-nam  [ ko ] . The two married in 1935 while Park was still in love with Yi. While the marriage produced a daughter, Park Jae-ok , Kim was reportedly appalled at the family's poverty, and the couple avoided each other as much as possible. After their marriage, Park had a year left to go at school, so he left her at the Park household and returned. On March 20, 1937, Park graduated from Taegu, ranked 69 out of 70 in his class. As part of

581-560: A member of the Workers' Party of South Korea , the allegations concerning his involvement in a military cell were never substantiated. Nevertheless, he was forced out of the army. While working in the Army as an unpaid civilian assistant, he came across the 8th class of the Korea Military Academy (graduated in 1950), among whom was Kim Jong-pil , and this particular class would later serve as

664-582: A number of them. On Sundays, Park attended a seodang (traditional school), where he received an education in the Confucian classics . Also around this time, he attended the Presbyterian Sangmo Church in Gumi. His family teased him for this, as they did not attend church, though he stopped at the end of elementary school. Decades later, he donated money to repair the church after it was damaged during

747-512: A pattern set by another country (e.g. Russian faction, Chinese faction, American faction, and so on). However, the term itself was not coined until 1966 by scholar Im Chongguk (1929–1989). In the immediate liberation of Korea, American General Douglas MacArthur initially requested that the Japanese colonial authorities and their Korean trainees continue to run Korea until natives could be trained to replace them. Nonetheless, Korean outrage did lead to

830-454: A politically neutral connotation. While it has taken on a meaning of "[national] traitor", only a minority of the early collaborators were opportunists, as most of the collaborator high officials in the beginning believed they were doing what was in the best interests of their country as it struggled to adapt to modernity; the collaborators were one of a number of factions that existed at that time which were concerned with modernizing Korea along

913-623: A series of economic reforms that eventually led to rapid and unprecedented economic growth and industrialization, a phenomenon that is now known as the Miracle on the Han River . This made South Korea one of the fastest growing economies of the 1960s and 1970s, albeit with costs to labor rights . This era also saw the formation of chaebols : family companies supported by the state similar to the Japanese zaibatsu . Examples of significant chaebols include Hyundai , LG , and Samsung . Although popular during

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996-498: A teacher at Western Mungyeong Public School in North Gyeongsang Province, Korea. Included in the mail was a passionate letter that expressed Park's desire to be an army officer, as well as an oath written in blood that read "Service Until Death" ( 一死以テ御奉公 ) ... Becoming an officer, however, is limited to those already in the army; being 23 years old, he exceeded the age limit of 19. Therefore and regretfully, his application

1079-582: A tribute group to pay condolences at Ito's funeral in 1926. On the same day, the Seoul administrative court rejected a lawsuit against the commission to erase the names of the son and grandson of Daewon-gun (father of Gojong of the Korean Empire ) from the list, who allegedly attended the signing of the Japan-Korea Annexation Treaty as representatives of the royal family. The official list during

1162-608: The Imperial Japanese Army , there was the belief that bushido would give Japanese soldiers enough "spirit" as to make them invincible in battle, as the Japanese regarded war as simply a matter of willpower with the side with the stronger will always prevailing. Reflecting his background as a man trained by Japanese officers, one of Park's favorite sayings was "we can do anything if we try" as Park argued that all problems could be overcome by sheer willpower. Eckert wrote when interviewing Park's closest friends, he always received

1245-722: The Kennedy administration . In 1963, he was elected president in his own right as the candidate of the newly created Democratic Republican Party . He appointed Park Myung-keun , the Vice Leader of the party as the chief of the President's Office. He narrowly defeated former President Yun, the candidate of the Civil Rule Party, by just over 156,000 votes—a margin of 1.5 percent. Park would be re-elected president in 1967 , defeating Yun with somewhat less difficulty. In June 1965 Park signed

1328-527: The Korean Central Intelligence Agency in order to prevent counter-coups and suppress potential enemies, both foreign and domestic. Along with being given investigative powers, the KCIA was also given the authority to arrest and detain anyone suspected of wrongdoing or having anti-government sentiments. Under its first director, retired Brigadier General Kim Jong-pil , a relative of Park and one of

1411-671: The Korean Chinese historian Ryu Yŏnsan ( 류연산 ) in 2003, posits that Park may have joined the Gando Special Force as another show of fealty. The unit was meant to suppress Korean independence activism in the Jiandao region ("Gando" in Korean, "Kantō" in Japanese) of Northeast China. However, this theory is rejected by biographers Cho Gab-je and Chong-Sik Lee, who argue that the testimony that

1494-490: The Korean War . People who knew Park as a child described him as competitive and persistent. His classmates later recalled that even after he lost in competitions of strength, such as arm wrestling or ssireum (Korean wrestling), he would taunt his opponents and demand rematches until he won. Park's friends remembered him as a voracious reader of history, who frequently talked excitedly about his historical heroes. When he

1577-775: The South Korean army . His coup brought an end to the interim Second Republic of Korea . After serving for two years as chairman of the military junta , he was elected president in 1963 , ushering in the Third Republic . A firm anti-communist , he continued to maintain close ties with the United States , which had maintained a large Army garrison in the country since the end of the Korean War . He supported American military involvement in Southeast Asia , and sent South Korean troops to Vietnam soon after seizing power. Park began

1660-653: The constabulary army under the United States Army Military Government in South Korea . The newly established South Korean government , under the leadership of Syngman Rhee , arrested Park in November 1948 on charges that he led a Communist cell in the Korean constabulary. Park was subsequently sentenced to death by a military court, but his sentence was commuted by Rhee at the urging of several high-ranking Korean military officers. While Park had been

1743-577: The 1960s, Park's popularity started to plateau by the 1970s, with closer than expected victories during the 1971 presidential election and the subsequent legislative elections . In 1972, Park declared martial law after carrying out a self-coup . He then introduced the highly authoritarian Yushin Constitution , ushering in the Fourth Republic . Now ruling as a dictator , he constantly repressed political opposition and dissent and completely controlled

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1826-500: The 1966 book Chinilmunhangnon ( 친일문학론 ; lit.  Comments on Pro-Japanese Literature), written by the Korean independence activist Im Jong-Guk. Before its publication, it was common to call collaborators bu-ilbae ( 부일배 ; 附日輩 ; lit.  people who collaborated with Japan). The term was generally targeted at Korean colonial leadership. The term is distinct from ji-ilpa ( 지일파 ; 知日派 ; lit.  knowledgeable-about-Japan faction), which has

1909-513: The 1990s, his legacy had strengthened and the topic became more accepted by the South Korean public. However, the old stigma still persisted to some extent in academia, as established mainstream scholars were seemingly "reluctant to dabble in such an irrelevant and 'humiliating' subject" as collaborators, and much of the interest and writing on the topic came from junior scholars and nonacademics such as independent researchers, literary critics, and journalists. After more than 50 years have passed since

1992-651: The 5th and 7th Divisions of the South Korean army before his promotion to major general in 1958. Park was then appointed Chief of Staff of the First Army and made the head of the Korean 1st and 6th District Command, which gave him responsibility for the defense of Seoul . In 1960, Park became commander of the Pusan Logistics Command before becoming Chief of the Operations Staff of the South Korean Army and

2075-515: The II and III Artillery Corps during the war. By the time the war ended in 1953, Park had risen to become a brigadier general. After the signing of the Korean Armistice Agreement , Park was selected for six months' training at Fort Sill in the United States . After returning to Korea, Park rose rapidly in the military hierarchy. He was the head of the Army's Artillery School and commanded

2158-660: The Japanese government asking for a merger, Lee Ji-yong , who is one of the Five Eulsa Traitors, Lee Doo-hwang , who participated in the murder of Empress Myeongseong in 1895 and later became a governor of the North Jeolla Province , a novelist Yi In-jik , the author of Hyeoleuinu (Tears of Blood) , Yoo Hak-ju , a council member of the Iljinhoe , Bae Jeong-ja , foster daughter of the first Resident-General of Korea who spied on Korean independence activists and recruited comfort women , and Park Je-bin , who formed

2241-561: The Korean government before the Japan-Korea Annexation Treaty actively pushed ahead the annexation and received a title of nobility from the Japanese government in 1920. The group was disbanded on September 26, 1910, a month after the Japan-Korea Annexation Treaty . Song Byeong-jun is considered a traitor in modern day Korea. In 2006, a South Korean presidential committee announced the names of 120 people suspected of collaborating with Japan during its annexation rule of Korea. The list included 27 members of Iljinhoe, all of whom allegedly took

2324-641: The Kwantung Army's 30th Infantry Regiment in Harbin as a liaison. His talents as an officer were swiftly recognized and he was one of the few Koreans allowed to attend the Imperial Japanese Army Academy near Tokyo. He was subsequently posted to a Japanese Army regiment in Manchuria and served there until Japan's surrender at the end of World War II. After graduating fifth in the class of 1944, Park

2407-485: The Military Revolutionary Committee. When he found out that he was going to be retired within the next few months, he sped up the committee's plans. It led a military coup on May 16, 1961, which was nominally led by Army Chief of Staff Chang Do-yong after his defection on the day it started. On May 18, Chang Myon announced his resignation along with his cabinet. Yun accepted the coup and persuaded

2490-706: The Supreme Court suspended their execution in March 1950, just before the Korean War . The dictator at that time, Syngman Rhee , sabotaged and dissolved the banmin teugwi . Under Rhee's regime and in subsequent governments before the Sixth Republic , many of them enjoyed the same wealth and power they had under Japanese rule. Rhee employed many former collaborators in government and military in order to combat North Korea and communist sympathizers in South Korea. The next of South Korea's prominent dictators, Park Chung Hee ,

2573-529: The United States Eighth Army and the commanders of various ROK army units not to interfere with the new government. Initially, a new administration was formed from among those military officers who supported Park. The reformist military Supreme Council for National Reconstruction was nominally led by General Chang. Following Chang's arrest in July 1961, Park took overall control of the council. The coup

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2656-656: The United States, the threat of a conventional invasion from North Korea seemed increasingly remote. Following the escalation of the Vietnam War with the deployment of ground combat troops in March 1965, South Korea sent the Capital Division and the 2nd Marine Brigade to South Vietnam in September 1965, followed by the White Horse Division in September 1966. Throughout the 1960s, Park made speeches in which he blamed

2739-553: The academy fondly. At a state dinner in Tokyo in November 1961, Park made a point to find and thank General Nagumo Shinichirō ( 南雲慎一郎 ), the former commandant of the academy, for his time there. Nagumo revealed that Park had been sending him gifts of ginseng . At the time, Manchukuo was seen as a haven for Japanese political extremists of both the left and right, and the academy similarly had instructors who were then and later associated with significant controversy. According to one account,

2822-636: The backbone of the May 16 coup . Right after the Korean War began and with help from Paik Sun-Yup , Park returned to active service as a major in the South Korean Army . He was promoted to lieutenant colonel in September 1950 and to colonel in April 1951. As a colonel, Park was the deputy director of the Army Headquarters Intelligence Bureau in 1952 before switching to artillery and commanded

2905-532: The committee has made a list of 452 pro-Japanese collaborators and examined the land of 109 among them. The total size of the land is estimated at 13.1 million square meters, worth almost 100 billion won. The confiscated properties will be appropriated, with priority, to reward Koreans who contributed to the independence of Korea from Japan. Iljinhoe The Iljinhoe (一進會; 일진회) was a nationwide organization in Korea formed on August 8, 1904. A Japanese record states

2988-460: The competent admiral was treated poorly by these groups during his lifetime. Lee speculated that this later influenced Park's authoritarian leadership style. In 1932, Park was admitted to Taegu Normal School  [ ko ] , a secondary school that trained elementary school teachers. Admissions were highly competitive, as it was the third such school in Korea, tuition was free, and teaching positions were historically seen as prestigious. Park

3071-636: The conditions of his schooling, he was required to teach for at least two years, and was placed in the Mungyeong Public Normal School  [ ko ] . The school was in Mungyeong , then an isolated coal mining town. He finally began receiving a comfortable salary, which he sent part of to his family. But just as he had once done, his students walked to the school daily often from far away and struggled to afford meals. He offered assistance to several of them in order to have them keep coming to

3154-485: The country (especially after 1971) and for prioritizing economic growth and social order at the expense of civil liberties and human rights . A Gallup Korea poll in October 2021 showed Park, Kim Dae-jung (an old opponent of Park whom he tried to have executed), and Roh Moo-hyun as the most highly rated presidents of South Korean history in terms of leaving a positive legacy, especially among South Korean conservatives and

3237-516: The deputy commander of the Second Army. As such, he was one of the most powerful and influential figures in the military. On April 26, 1960, Syngman Rhee , the authoritarian inaugural President of South Korea , was forced out of office and into exile following the April Revolution , a student-led uprising. Yun Po-sun was elected as president later that year on July 29, although the real power

3320-450: The descendants of nine pro-Japanese collaborators. On August 13, 2007, the commission decided to confiscate about 1 million square meters of land valued at 25.7 billion won that is now owned by the descendants of another ten pro-Japanese collaborators. On September 17, 2007, the commission revealed the second list of 202 collaborators focused on pro-Japanese figures between 1919 and 1937. The list includes Song Byeong-jun who sent letters to

3403-460: The elderly. Park's daughter Park Geun-hye later served as the 11th president of South Korea from 2013 until she was impeached and convicted of various corruption charges in 2017. Park was born around 11 am on November 14, 1917, in Sangmo-dong  [ ko ] , Gumi , Korea, Empire of Japan to father Pak Sŏngbin  [ ko ] and mother Paek Namŭi  [ ko ] . He

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3486-570: The end of prosecution of collaborators under the Syngman Rhee administration, the prosecution restarted abruptly as a political agenda of President Roh Moo-hyun. The newly enacted Special Law on the Inspection of Collaborations for the Japanese Imperialism defines "pro-Japanese and anti-national actions" ( chinilpa ) as follows. The law is concerned about the independence movement, unlike

3569-482: The entire school participated in enshū ( 演習 ) —military training programs. According to Lee, Park enjoyed and excelled in these aspects of the school. He took up kendo and became a trumpeter. His enthusiasm caught the eye of Lt. Col. Arikawa Keiichi ( 有川圭一 , 1891–1945) of the Kwantung Army , who ran the military training programs and became fond of Park. Park became interested in quitting teaching and joining

3652-546: The ex-Nazi prosecution which concentrates on the war crimes. Most remarkable are items 8 and 9. Being a law-maker during that time qualifies one as a "pro-Japanese and anti-national Collaborator" regardless of what one did as a law-maker. On August 29, 2005, a civic organization, the Institute for Research in Collaborationist Activities disclosed a list of 3094 Korean collaborator suspects including Park Chung Hee ,

3735-529: The family. According to Lee, Park's family was about to go through their worst economic struggles yet. Around this time, Asia was experiencing the effects of the Great Depression and Japanese colonial policies mandated that Koreans send to Japan a significant portion of their agricultural output for what was seen as inadequate compensation. Park's schooling at Taegu was militaristic, especially as Japanese military officers were involved in running it. In fall,

3818-518: The former Korean president, Kim Seong-su , a former publisher of The Dong-A Ilbo and the founder of Korea University , and Bang Eung-mo  [ ko ] , a former president of The Chosun Ilbo . On December 6, 2006, a South Korean presidential commission, the Investigative Commission on Pro-Japanese Collaborators' Property revealed the first official collaborators list of 106 persons during 1904 to March First Movement in 1919

3901-630: The former being purged, but many of the latter collaborators were able to hold onto their positions. Similar to the United States' incomplete denazification of Germany and reverse course in Japan, the United States Military Government of Korea saw these right-wing collaborator officials as useful in light of the nascent Cold War and deteriorating situation in the Korean Peninsula . The Special Committee for Prosecution of Anti-National Offenders ( 반민특위 ; banmin teugwi )

3984-420: The lead in suppressing Korean troops and supporting Japan-Korea annexation. The people on the list will face investigation on suspicion of conducting traitorous pro-Japanese activities during the 1904–1919 period, although no prosecutions will take place as the people implicated have long since died. Park Chung Hee Park Chung Hee ( Korean :  박정희 ; November 14, 1917 – October 26, 1979)

4067-534: The military. But to his contemporaries, his chances seemed slim; entrance into the Japanese Military Academy was highly competitive for Koreans, and Park's grades were plummeting. In 1935, he was ranked last among the 73 students in his class and missed more days of school each year. Park's teachers attributed this to his dire economic situation. Lee theorizes that the absences were caused by his parents' inability to gather enough money for his expenses at

4150-540: The military. He also had much control over the media and expressions of art . In 1979, Park was assassinated by his close friend Kim Jae-gyu , director of the KCIA , following the Busan–Masan Uprising . Whether the assassination was spontaneous or premeditated remains unclear to this day. Economic growth continued in spite of the 1979 coup d'état and considerable political turmoil in the wake of his assassination . He

4233-521: The most controversial period (1937–1945) that may contain persons who played important roles in South Korean development after the independence and enlisted in the 2005 list of the Institute for Research in Collaborationist Activities had not been revealed as of September 2007. Since the enactment of the Special Law on the Inspection of Collaboration with Japanese Imperialism in 2004 and the special law to redeem pro-Japanese collaborators' property in 2005,

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4316-506: The non-Japanese students. He was fluent in Japanese, comparatively well-educated, and already accustomed to military drills and regimented dormitory life from his time at Taegu Normal School. He adopted and went by the Japanese name Takagi Masao ( 高木正雄 ) . Park was made to assist other students. Several of his Chinese and Korean classmates later described him as arrogant, and recalled that other students picked fights with him. In spite of this, according to Lee, Park remembered his time at

4399-541: The number of party members was about 800,000, but another survey record by the Japanese Resident-General of Korea in 1910 shows the number was about 90,000. After seeing the failure of Korea's isolationism, the party claimed that Korea could not develop capitalism on its own, and demanded a merger with the Japanese Empire . Song Byeong-jun ( 송병준 ), the leader of the group and a high-ranking official in

4482-515: The original planners of the coup, the KCIA would extend its power to economic and foreign affairs. President Yun remained in office, giving the military regime legitimacy. After Yun resigned on March 24, 1962, Lt. General Park, who remained chairman of the Supreme Council for National Reconstruction, consolidated his power by becoming acting president; he was also promoted to full general. Park agreed to restore civilian rule following pressure from

4565-486: The salary and benefits, is a subject of academic debate. However, the Japanese military was wary of accepting Koreans due to concerns over their loyalty, and thus only accepted a fraction of the applicants each year. If a Korean could demonstrate unshakable patriotism, they were considered to have a better chance of being accepted. In 1938, Park applied to join the Manchukuo Army Military Academy, which

4648-411: The same answer when he asked them what was the important influence on Park, namely his officer training by the Japanese in Manchukuo. All of Park's friends told Eckert that to understand him, one needed to understand his Ilbonsik sagwan kyoyuk (Japanese officer training) as they all maintained Park's values were those of an Imperial Japanese Army officer. On June 19, 1961, the military council created

4731-531: The school in time, which caused him to miss the first several weeks of each term. In addition, Park's older brother Sang Hee lost his job (and two children to disease) in 1935, making him unable to assist the rest of the family. By contrast, many of Park's classmates came from financially comfortable families. Several of them recalled that Park felt humiliated by his situation. When they pooled their money to buy snacks, Park would excuse himself and sulk alone. One classmate recalled finding Park in tears one evening. He

4814-489: The school. While Park was remembered by his students as a caring and enthusiastic teacher, Lee speculates that, in such a small town, Park was lonely and understimulated. He and his roommate reportedly drank large amounts of makgeolli —Korean rice wine—to pass the time. Shortly after Park began teaching, Japan launched the Second Sino-Japanese War , and began making significant victories in quick succession. Park

4897-479: The theory is based on does not align with the chronology of widely accepted events in Park's life. The schooling environment at the Manchukuo Academy was tense, in part due to its significant ethnic, linguistic, and political diversity. Its student body was composed of around 10 Korean, 223 Chinese, and 107 Japanese people. According to Chong-sik Lee, Park excelled at the academy, especially in comparison to

4980-470: The world, and the degree in which the Japanophile Park was influenced by Japanese militarism as he created what South Korean historians call a "developmental dictatorship". Eckert called South Korea under Park's leadership one of the most militarized states in the entire world, writing that Park sought to militarize South Korean society in a way that no other South Korean leader has ever attempted. In

5063-452: Was 6 kilometers (3.7 mi) away from his home. The long daily walk and his hunger took a toll on his body. Park wrote of this in his memoirs: [Class started at 8 a.m...] If I suspected I was late, I'd run the [6 km] to school... During the winter, food in my school lunch box would freeze. If I ate it anyway, my stomach would become upset, and I'd sometimes vomit. During these times, I'd sometimes go [without eating for days]... Park

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5146-416: Was a South Korean politician and army officer who served as the third president of South Korea from 1962 until his assassination in 1979, after he seized power in the May 16 coup of 1961. He is regarded as one of the most consequential leaders in Korean history, although his legacy as a military dictator continues to cause controversy. Before his presidency, Park was the second-highest-ranking officer in

5229-413: Was accepted from among 1,070 applicants into a class of 10 Japanese and 90 Korean students; he was ranked 50th at time of admission. Despite the prestige and free tuition, his mother had hoped that he would not be accepted. The living expenses his education incurred (at a time when currency was scarce and bartering was the norm), as well as the loss of his help on the farm, created a significant burden for

5312-403: Was around 13, Park became an admirer of the French leader Napoleon . Around this time, he also came to idolize the famed Korean Admiral Yi Sun-sin (who fought the Japanese during the Imjin War ). Park read a biography about the admiral by Yi Gwangsu which moved him deeply. According to Lee, a significant part of the biography is disparaging toward politicians and even Koreans in general, as

5395-405: Was around 43 at the time of Park's birth. Due to her advanced age and disastrous economic situation, she tried to abort the pregnancy on a number of occasions. When her son was eventually born, however, she was reportedly deeply affectionate toward him. Park had a number of health concerns in his youth. For much of his early life, he did not eat well and was often described as sickly. When he

5478-518: Was being sent home to collect money for his living expenses, despite knowing that his family would not have it. Lee speculates that Park became more pragmatic and calculating during this time, as they were traits that were needed for not only staying enrolled, but also to avoid starving. In 1934, Park began secretly dating Yi Chŏngok ( 이정옥 ), who was attending a girls school in the same city. Park's father wished to see Park married as soon as possible, and not knowing about his son's relationship, arranged

5561-423: Was commissioned as a lieutenant into the army of Manchukuo , a Japanese puppet-state , and served during the final stages of World War II as aide-de-camp to a regimental commander. Park returned to Korea after the war and enrolled at the Korea Military Academy . He graduated in the second class of 1946 (one of his classmates was Kim Jae-gyu , his close friend and later assassin) and became an officer in

5644-481: Was consistently among the shortest students at each school he attended, and was often described as sickly in his school records. In sixth grade, he was 135.8 cm (4 ft 5 + 1 ⁄ 2  in) tall and weighed 30 kg (66 lb). In spite of his physical challenges, he was a diligent student who got good grades. Park was made class leader for several years; his classmates later recalled that he could be overbearing in enforcing discipline, even slapping

5727-620: Was done by "maverick scholar" Im Chongguk (1929–1989), whose 1966 work Ch'inil Munhak-ron (친일문학 론 Treatise on Pro-Japanese Literature) broke the silence on the subject matter. Although it was obscure in its day and didn't have a wide readership, a smattering of articles on the subject appeared in the late 1970s and by the 1980s, Im took his quarter-century's worth of study on the subject and began to publish more systemic works about collaborators in general, not just literary studies. Chongguk's personal zeal about honestly examining darker pages from national history were not very popular in his day, but by

5810-429: Was given a small plot of land. According to later interviews, he did not work the land with his wife and instead drank alcohol and wandered around. Biographer of Park Chong-Sik Lee speculates that the elder Park did not wish to be seen working to avoid showing acceptance of his lost yangban status. Park's mother was seen by her contemporaries as diligent and focused. She managed both the household and farming. She

5893-409: Was held by Prime Minister Chang Myon . Problems arose immediately because neither man could command loyalty from any majority of the Democratic Party or reach agreement on the composition of the cabinet. Prime Minister Chang attempted to hold the tenuous coalition together by reshuffling cabinet positions three times within five months. Meanwhile, the new government was caught between an economy that

5976-550: Was himself a collaborator who served in the Imperial Japanese military system. During the Cold War , collaborators were seen as a somewhat taboo subject given that many authorities were at one time collaborators themselves, and thus criticism of collaborators could be seen as questioning the legitimacy of the regime. Similar pressure to silence was also applied to some collaborator literary figures. An early study into collaborators

6059-480: Was including four of the Five Eulsa Traitors . On August 18, 2006, the commission started the investigation before seizing the property obtained by collaborators during Japanese colonization. On May 2, 2007, the South Korean government announced its plan to seize assets gained by pro-Japanese collaborators during Japanese colonial rule amounting 3.6 billion won (US$ 3.9 million, €2.8 million) worth of land from

6142-485: Was inspired by the success of the Japanese. He even wrote a stageplay that his students acted out, entitled [The Korean] Volunteer Soldiers Go to War ( 『지원병출정』 ). The play reflected contemporary events, as around February 1938, the colonial government had instituted the Special Volunteer Enlistment System. Thousands of Korean youths applied, although whether most applied willingly, or even just for

6225-401: Was largely welcomed by a general populace exhausted by political chaos. Soon after the coup, Park was promoted to Lieutenant General . The South Korean historian Hwang Moon Kyung described Park's rule as very "militaristic", noting right from the start Park aimed to mobilize South Korean society along "militaristically disciplined lines". One of Park's very first acts upon coming to power was

6308-429: Was otherwise fairly happy. According to Cho, Park had many close friends, his parents got along well, and his family was affectionate toward him. Park was the second person in his family, after his older brother Park Sang Hee  [ ko ] , to attend elementary school. He enrolled on April 1, 1927, at age 9 and eventually graduated on March 25, 1932. His school, Gumi Elementary School  [ ko ] ,

6391-409: Was politely rejected. In spite of this second rejection, Park was somehow eventually accepted to the academy. The circumstances surrounding his acceptance are not known with certainty, and are a source of controversy. The leading theory is that Arikawa, then a colonel in the Kwantung Army, personally asked the commandant of the academy Major General Nagumo to let Park in. Another theory, proposed by

6474-465: Was set up in 1948 to prosecute the collaborators. It handled 682 cases; 559 cases were handed over to a special prosecutor's office, which handed down indictments in 221 cases. A special tribunal tried 38 cases, sentenced guilty verdicts and punishments in 12 cases including one death sentence. Eighteen others had their civil rights suspended, six others were declared innocent and the remaining two were found guilty but were exempted from punishment. However,

6557-611: Was soon afterwards succeeded by Choi Kyu-hah , who ruled for only a year before being deposed by career army officer Chun Doo-Hwan . The country eventually democratized with the June Democratic Struggle in 1987. Park remains a controversial figure in modern South Korean political discourse and among the South Korean populace in general, making a detached evaluation of his tenure difficult. While some credit him for sustaining economic growth, which reshaped and modernized South Korea, others criticize his authoritarian way of ruling

6640-605: Was suffering from a decade of mismanagement and corruption under the Rhee presidency and the students who had instigated Rhee's ousting. Protesters regularly filled the streets making numerous and wide-ranging demands for political and economic reforms. Public security had deteriorated while the public had distrusted the police, which was long under the control of the Rhee government, and the ruling Democratic Party lost public support after long factional fighting. Against this backdrop of social instability and division, Major General Park formed

6723-517: Was the youngest of five brothers and two sisters. He was of the Goryeong Park clan  [ ko ] . Park's family was extremely poor and consistently lacked food. According to Park, his father was upper-class ( yangban ) and set to inherit the family's moderate holdings, but the clan banished him after he participated in the 1894–95 Donghak Peasant Revolution . In 1916, the elder Park moved to his wife's village of Sangmo-dong, where he

6806-466: Was to open the following year. However, he was three years over the maximum age limit of 19 for candidates; he wrote a request for the admissions office to overlook his age, but was rejected. Park sought out Kang Chaeho, an ethnic Korean captain in the Manchukuo Army and a native of Daegu, for advice. Kang offered to use his connections to try and get an exception for Park. He also advised Park to swear

6889-404: Was two years old, he crawled off a raised floor and landed in a smouldering fire pit. He was quickly rescued from the pit, but his forearms were significantly burned. For the rest of his life, he reportedly intentionally wore shirts with long sleeves to hide his scars. A significant biographer of Park, Cho Gab-je , interviewed many people who knew him and got the impression that Park's childhood

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