Korea post wwii website edition (no movies)

S
Korea Post WWII
Homework
• Report on prominent leaders of Koreas early
independent movement:
• An Chung-gun (1879-1910)
• Kim Ku (1876-1949)
• Lee Tong-hwi also Yi Tong-hui (?-1928)
• Syngman Rhee also Yi Sung-man (1875-1960)
Kim Il Sung’s Formative Years
1912-1934
• Despite Kim & N. Korean claims: Kim did not play a
prominent role either in Korea’s independence or
communist movement
• He was only 6 when the March 1 movement took place
• Not until 1929 at 17 did Kim team up with Korean
communist activities which promptly landed him in jail
Kim’s Family
• Kim Il Sung claimed descent from an impoverished
farming family
• In reality, his grandfather taught at an affluent private
school and made a good living
• As a result Kim’s father attended a private American-
Christian school in Pyongyang
• At the private school his father gained a very strong anti-
Japanese resentment which he later passed down to Kim
Il Sung
• Kim confirmed his mother was a practicing Presbyterian
& he occasionally attended church with her
• In 1920 Kim’s parents fled to S. Manchuria
• For 2 years Kim attended a Chinese elementary school
• 1921 as Japanese police resumed their search for Kim’s
father, Kim was sent back to their home village in Korea
Kim’s “Arduous” March
• Kim claims he walked alone the 250 miles in 14 days
• Kim once again begin to learn Korean language & culture
• However, after Japanese police arrested Kim’s uncle, he
returned once again to study in China
Kim Discovers Lenin
• After his father’s death in 1926 14 year old Kim claims he
began middle school in Manchuria
• He says there that he began reading The Fundamentals
of Socialism & The Biography of Lenin in Chinese
• His claims are dubious as he would of needed at least a
college education in Chinese to do so
• Chances are he learned about communism in
underground study groups
From Student to Guerilla
• N. Korea claims Kim Il Sung as its founder & that he
founded their army on 4/25/1932
• This is fiction: Kim’s greatest accomplishment from 1932
– 1940 was staying alive
• Japan wiped out the early leadership of the Korean
communist movement
• Hundreds of supporters died or were imprisoned
• Others surrendered or defected to the Japanese
• But, according to Japanese military records Kim’s star
rose steadily
• The price on his head climbed from a lowly $10,000 to
$100,000 three years later in 1936
• Some historians claim Kim & his guerilla fighters were
forced to retreat into the USSR
• Others say he traveled there on his own
• Either way, Kim found himself in the USSR with the
blessing of the Soviet military
Life in the USSR
1941-1945
• Kim Il Sung accepted training in the USSR
• While Kim’s potential rivals for power died fighting the
Japanese, Soviet officials groomed him to play a leading
political role in post-war Korea
• On Feb. 1942 Kim’s wife Chong-suk gave birth to their
first son: Kim Jong Il
Kim Who?
• When Kim returned to Pyongyang in 1945 he was not
greeted as a hero
• He was merely an obscure anti-Japanese guerilla fighter
• But Kim had the support of the local Soviet military
commanders
• Kim faced little competition in Pyongyang
• Most prominent leaders had flocked to Seoul, Korea’s
traditional capital
• Socialism had attracted many young Koreans who
attended college in Japan
• Once Japan’s impending defeat became evident, the
communist ranks swelled
Korea Occupied
• Following WWII both armies respected the 38th parallel
The Korean Cold War
• Soviets quickly put Kim in charge of an interim Korean gov
• Soviets then declared numerous Japanese factories built
in northern Korea as war redemption and dismantled and
shipped them home
• In the south many Korean leaders had returned and
behind Kim Ku (also know as Kim Gu) formed a socialist
government
• The US quickly objected and replaced it with their own
• For months the US & Soviets tried to est. a multilateral
gov. to rule Korea
• May 31, 1948 Korea had a national presidential election
but the Soviet North boycotted it
• The North then had an election voting for Kim Il Sung
Korean War Movie
• (we will watch this in class)
Korea post wwii website edition (no movies)
Korea post wwii website edition (no movies)
Korea post wwii website edition (no movies)
Korea post wwii website edition (no movies)
Korea post wwii website edition (no movies)
The Cost
• S. Korea: 1.3 million
• USA: 172,000
• N. Koreans: 900,000
• Chinese: 900,000
Post War N. Korea
• After the War, Kim Il Sung set out to achieve his 3 “R’s”
• Reconstruction, reunification, revolution
Paradise or Prison
• Kim quickly sealed off the country to nearly everyone
• Korea in the past was a “hermit kingdom” to keep out W.
powers & British opium
• Kim Il Sung closed N. Korea however to keep out any idea
other than his own
• Kim declared his domain a paradise
• Magazines full of color portrayed smiling faces, well-fed
& well-dressed N. Koreans in modern factories & emerald
green rice paddies
The truth…
• At the end of the war N. Korea was a wreck
• US had dropped more bombs during the Korean War
than it did in all of WWII
• Industrial centers were nothing more than rubble
• Transportation and power plants were destroyed
• Production of everything except some food had stopped
Helping Neighbors
• China & the USSR rushed to help N. Korea
• Both competed to turn war-torn Pyongyang into a
showcase for their different approaches to communism
• They were after the allegiance of so-called “third-world”
nations that had won their independence after WWII
• Moscow’s approach was to focus on industry and large
urban areas
• China’s approach was one focused on farming & rural living
• Kim Il Sung saw opp. In the rivalry & took advantage of it
• From the USSR he received: heavy industrial equipment,
power plants, hydroelectric dams, electric railroads, &
massive electric irrigation systems
• From Beijing Kim received crude oil, food and fertilizer
• Though Kim Il Sung was greatly benefiting from foreign
aid, he was determined not to be a satellite to China or
any other country again
• In order to make this clear he invented his own form of
communism: Juche
Homework
• (not this time sorry 2013 seniors)
Kim Solidifies His Power
• Using Education, inducements, and social pressure Kim
solidified his power in N. Korea
Education
• Kim Il Sung used the schools to erase & re-teach history
• Schools craftily used past events such as Japan’s invasion
of Korea to make parallels to Kim’s rule and the
importance of following him
• Schools also taught an unwavering allegiance to Juche
Inducements
• Kim created the Korean Worker’s Party (KWP)
• One can join the KWP if they are 100% faithful to the
party’s beliefs & ideology; and score high in civil exams
• Once in the party one has opportunity to excel
• However outside the party (apx 21 million) one is
virtually destined to a life of poverty
Social Pressure
• Much like old USSR; social norms virtually force cultural
rituals to Kim and his party
Cracking the Whip
• State Security Agency: “secret police”
• Monitor everything and everyone
• Control 12 state prisons with 200,000 inmates
• Also conduct special overseas missions or attacks
Korean Prison Movie
• Will watch in class
Korea post wwii website edition (no movies)
The Economy:
Supporting the 5th Largest Army
The Good Old Days
• N. Korea actually achieved impressive economic gains
between 1953-1985
• Aid poured into the war wasted country & they quickly
erased the Korean War’s damage
• 1990’s brought about a big change to the economy
Extensive Growth
• Following the Soviets, NK focused on “extensive” growth
– Rather than increase productivity, simply add more productivity
• However, underlying infrastructure needed for continued
“extensive” growth was decaying since so much money
was going into the military
Old Friend’s Passing
• In 1991 the USSR ceased to exist
• Aid stop coming in & several projects were left undone
such as power plants & fertilizer production centers
• Most importantly cheap crude oil stopped coming in
paralyzing everything from transport to farming
Dwindling Trade
• With the USSR a shell of its former self, trade with N.
Korea greatly dropped
• Furthermore China began to trade heavily with S. Korea
• No one wanted N. Korea’s cheap products
• Trade dropped from $5 bil in the 80’s to $1.5 bil in 90’s
Environmental Disaster
• Korean developers allowed thousands of acres of trees to
be cut down from hills & mountains
• Massive erosion soon followed
– Dikes and irrigation systems were washed away
– Chemicals mixed with the flooding water and depleted large
amounts of farmland fertility
– Wells were polluted
– Fishing greatly decreased
Nature’s Whim
• Aug 1995 torrential rains caused massive flooding
• 70% of the annual rice harvest & 50% of maize destroyed
• 100,000 families were left homeless
• 400,000 hectares of arable land destroyed
• Hunger, starvation, & disease soon followed
• Kim’s communism promised a utopia w/o bureaucracy
where all were treated equally and shared everything
• Kim’s dynasty created the opposite: a highly stratified
society dominated by haves and mostly have nots
• In order to have any wealth or opportunities one must be
part of Kim’s communist party
• Several other dividers exist as well
• Citizens in Pyongyang have much more than rural citizens
• Males always take precedent over females
• Women are not allowed to drive vehicles
• Men hardly ever carry anything, they use tractors:
Women however always have to carry heavy things
• On 8 July 1994, at age 82, Kim Il-sung collapsed from a
sudden heart attack.
• After the traditional Confucian Mourning period, his
death was declared thirty hours later.
• His funeral was attended by hundreds of thousands of
people from all over North Korea
• Many people committed suicide or were killed in the
resulting mass mourning crushes
Death of Kim Il Sung
Death of Kim Jong-il
• Died Dec. 17, 2011 of a reported heart-attack
• Replaced by Kim-Jong Un
• Please read/visit:
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-asia-pacific-
11388628
http://www.facebook.com/pages/Kim-Jong-
Un/197999793546225
1 von 58

Recomendados

Chinese civil war final von
Chinese civil war finalChinese civil war final
Chinese civil war finalAlex Thompson
1.9K views9 Folien
Max chinese civil war von
Max chinese civil warMax chinese civil war
Max chinese civil wardabix
1.8K views9 Folien
Cultural Revolution Chinese Museum von
Cultural Revolution Chinese Museum Cultural Revolution Chinese Museum
Cultural Revolution Chinese Museum rebeccacairns
1.1K views25 Folien
The Chinese Civil War: The Struggle of A Nation von
The Chinese Civil War: The Struggle of A NationThe Chinese Civil War: The Struggle of A Nation
The Chinese Civil War: The Struggle of A NationJerome Torossian
740 views16 Folien
The Cultural Revolution - Motives von
The Cultural Revolution - MotivesThe Cultural Revolution - Motives
The Cultural Revolution - MotivesRCB78
2K views9 Folien
China after Mao von
China after MaoChina after Mao
China after MaoGreg Sill
6.5K views34 Folien

Más contenido relacionado

Was ist angesagt?

Japan-China War and The Civil War Timeline von
Japan-China War and The Civil War TimelineJapan-China War and The Civil War Timeline
Japan-China War and The Civil War Timelineisabelchun
3.6K views19 Folien
Max chinese civil war von
Max chinese civil warMax chinese civil war
Max chinese civil wardabix
755 views9 Folien
The korean war von
The korean war The korean war
The korean war estherholt
2.8K views25 Folien
The Chinese Cultural Revolution: the Spirit of the People von
The Chinese Cultural Revolution: the Spirit of the PeopleThe Chinese Cultural Revolution: the Spirit of the People
The Chinese Cultural Revolution: the Spirit of the PeopleUniverselkl
1.1K views14 Folien
Korean War von
Korean WarKorean War
Korean Warkbeacom
958 views27 Folien
The First Northern Expedition and the Shanghai Massacre von
The First Northern Expedition and the Shanghai MassacreThe First Northern Expedition and the Shanghai Massacre
The First Northern Expedition and the Shanghai MassacreRCB78
2.5K views6 Folien

Was ist angesagt?(20)

Japan-China War and The Civil War Timeline von isabelchun
Japan-China War and The Civil War TimelineJapan-China War and The Civil War Timeline
Japan-China War and The Civil War Timeline
isabelchun3.6K views
Max chinese civil war von dabix
Max chinese civil warMax chinese civil war
Max chinese civil war
dabix755 views
The korean war von estherholt
The korean war The korean war
The korean war
estherholt2.8K views
The Chinese Cultural Revolution: the Spirit of the People von Universelkl
The Chinese Cultural Revolution: the Spirit of the PeopleThe Chinese Cultural Revolution: the Spirit of the People
The Chinese Cultural Revolution: the Spirit of the People
Universelkl1.1K views
Korean War von kbeacom
Korean WarKorean War
Korean War
kbeacom958 views
The First Northern Expedition and the Shanghai Massacre von RCB78
The First Northern Expedition and the Shanghai MassacreThe First Northern Expedition and the Shanghai Massacre
The First Northern Expedition and the Shanghai Massacre
RCB782.5K views
The Northern Expeditions von RCB78
The Northern ExpeditionsThe Northern Expeditions
The Northern Expeditions
RCB783.4K views
Civil War - 1945-49 von RCB78
Civil War - 1945-49Civil War - 1945-49
Civil War - 1945-49
RCB782.2K views
IB History: Historiography Mao von YCIS Beijing
IB History: Historiography MaoIB History: Historiography Mao
IB History: Historiography Mao
YCIS Beijing41.5K views
Guomingdang von RCB78
GuomingdangGuomingdang
Guomingdang
RCB781.8K views
Chairman mao von quillinn
Chairman maoChairman mao
Chairman mao
quillinn1.2K views
Chinese revolution ppt von Andy Witten
Chinese revolution pptChinese revolution ppt
Chinese revolution ppt
Andy Witten7.3K views
Civil War Part 4 von pmagner
Civil War Part 4Civil War Part 4
Civil War Part 4
pmagner606 views
IB History: Sino-Soviet Split von YCIS Beijing
IB History: Sino-Soviet SplitIB History: Sino-Soviet Split
IB History: Sino-Soviet Split
YCIS Beijing30.5K views
War with Japan von RCB78
War with JapanWar with Japan
War with Japan
RCB782.7K views
The Role of Women von RCB78
The Role of WomenThe Role of Women
The Role of Women
RCB781.5K views
The Rise & Fall of the Gang of Four von RCB78
The Rise & Fall of the Gang of FourThe Rise & Fall of the Gang of Four
The Rise & Fall of the Gang of Four
RCB782.8K views
Soviet afghan war part one review of cause & effect, geography, global learni... von Daniel Windham
Soviet afghan war part one review of cause & effect, geography, global learni...Soviet afghan war part one review of cause & effect, geography, global learni...
Soviet afghan war part one review of cause & effect, geography, global learni...
Daniel Windham2.9K views

Destacado

¿Qué son las Quijotadas? von
¿Qué son las Quijotadas?¿Qué son las Quijotadas?
¿Qué son las Quijotadas?quijotadasdelsanjose
396 views8 Folien
U.S. Government fabrications4 von
U.S. Government fabrications4U.S. Government fabrications4
U.S. Government fabrications4Cocoselul Inaripat
249 views25 Folien
Franta conducatori von
Franta   conducatoriFranta   conducatori
Franta conducatorigruianul
738 views6 Folien
Trabajo universidad de la vida final 1 von
Trabajo universidad de la vida final 1Trabajo universidad de la vida final 1
Trabajo universidad de la vida final 1Juan Carlos Bazan Cabello
268 views15 Folien
Buscar la felicidad von
Buscar la felicidadBuscar la felicidad
Buscar la felicidad21 Gotas
804 views22 Folien
Rio para colori2r von
Rio para colori2rRio para colori2r
Rio para colori2rMaria Andreia Alves Andreia
245 views1 Folie

Destacado(20)

Franta conducatori von gruianul
Franta   conducatoriFranta   conducatori
Franta conducatori
gruianul738 views
Buscar la felicidad von 21 Gotas
Buscar la felicidadBuscar la felicidad
Buscar la felicidad
21 Gotas804 views
curso de administração rj von Derison Cunha
curso de administração rjcurso de administração rj
curso de administração rj
Derison Cunha205 views
Republica Dominicana - Na pláži (On the beach) von Marcela D
Republica Dominicana - Na pláži (On the beach)Republica Dominicana - Na pláži (On the beach)
Republica Dominicana - Na pláži (On the beach)
Marcela D258 views
Winter 2015 Dean’s List Certificate von Megan Nayler
Winter 2015 Dean’s List CertificateWinter 2015 Dean’s List Certificate
Winter 2015 Dean’s List Certificate
Megan Nayler108 views
Current technology presentation von Kingx4
Current technology presentationCurrent technology presentation
Current technology presentation
Kingx4240 views
Proyecto serenparking[1] von dorianamo
Proyecto serenparking[1]Proyecto serenparking[1]
Proyecto serenparking[1]
dorianamo182 views
Trabajo segundo 6.2 von Alejo Saenz
Trabajo segundo 6.2Trabajo segundo 6.2
Trabajo segundo 6.2
Alejo Saenz236 views
JPods China Overview von Bill James
JPods China OverviewJPods China Overview
JPods China Overview
Bill James391 views

Similar a Korea post wwii website edition (no movies)

Korean Modern History PowerPoint von
Korean Modern History PowerPointKorean Modern History PowerPoint
Korean Modern History PowerPointAuKaGaFreedom
1.1K views9 Folien
Theme 3 & 4.pptx history von
Theme 3 & 4.pptx  historyTheme 3 & 4.pptx  history
Theme 3 & 4.pptx historyNjabulo khubeka
331 views188 Folien
North korea von
North koreaNorth korea
North koreaDavid Hancock
75 views48 Folien
30.3 communism s pread in east asia von
30.3 communism s pread in east asia30.3 communism s pread in east asia
30.3 communism s pread in east asiaMrAguiar
1.7K views13 Folien
Mahogany_vs._the_asian_tiger von
  Mahogany_vs._the_asian_tiger  Mahogany_vs._the_asian_tiger
Mahogany_vs._the_asian_tigeratreasuredsecret
246 views23 Folien
Korea ppt-what americans need to know-connor von
Korea ppt-what americans need to know-connorKorea ppt-what americans need to know-connor
Korea ppt-what americans need to know-connorJini Shim
446 views59 Folien

Similar a Korea post wwii website edition (no movies)(20)

Korean Modern History PowerPoint von AuKaGaFreedom
Korean Modern History PowerPointKorean Modern History PowerPoint
Korean Modern History PowerPoint
AuKaGaFreedom1.1K views
30.3 communism s pread in east asia von MrAguiar
30.3 communism s pread in east asia30.3 communism s pread in east asia
30.3 communism s pread in east asia
MrAguiar1.7K views
Korea ppt-what americans need to know-connor von Jini Shim
Korea ppt-what americans need to know-connorKorea ppt-what americans need to know-connor
Korea ppt-what americans need to know-connor
Jini Shim446 views
Korea ppt-post korean war von Jini Shim
Korea ppt-post korean warKorea ppt-post korean war
Korea ppt-post korean war
Jini Shim1.6K views
China’s recent history von Cathy Walker
China’s recent historyChina’s recent history
China’s recent history
Cathy Walker777 views
Korea the fulcrum of power in east asia von Hugh_07
Korea the fulcrum of power in east asiaKorea the fulcrum of power in east asia
Korea the fulcrum of power in east asia
Hugh_07661 views
Why could the Khmer Rouge seize power on 17th April 1975? Dr Henri Locard von Center for Khmer Studies
Why could the Khmer Rouge seize power on 17th April 1975? Dr Henri LocardWhy could the Khmer Rouge seize power on 17th April 1975? Dr Henri Locard
Why could the Khmer Rouge seize power on 17th April 1975? Dr Henri Locard
Chapter 31 and 18 von slittrell1
Chapter 31 and 18Chapter 31 and 18
Chapter 31 and 18
slittrell1857 views
Chinese Revolution von wtidwell
Chinese RevolutionChinese Revolution
Chinese Revolution
wtidwell7.4K views
H12 ch 14_china_2013 von jkoryan
H12 ch 14_china_2013H12 ch 14_china_2013
H12 ch 14_china_2013
jkoryan2K views

Último

Kadapa_pdf58.pdf von
Kadapa_pdf58.pdfKadapa_pdf58.pdf
Kadapa_pdf58.pdfnarsireddynannuri1
5 views2 Folien
How Would a Crypto Privacy Pool Work? von
How Would a Crypto Privacy Pool Work?How Would a Crypto Privacy Pool Work?
How Would a Crypto Privacy Pool Work?InvestingTips
5 views20 Folien
NE Nov 27.pdf von
NE Nov 27.pdfNE Nov 27.pdf
NE Nov 27.pdfwesmontfloresgfx
19 views16 Folien
nysd-1-2015-cr-00379-443608-00635 (1).pdf von
nysd-1-2015-cr-00379-443608-00635 (1).pdfnysd-1-2015-cr-00379-443608-00635 (1).pdf
nysd-1-2015-cr-00379-443608-00635 (1).pdfTu Nota
2.7K views3 Folien
Twitter Ads For Influencer Marketing von
Twitter Ads For Influencer MarketingTwitter Ads For Influencer Marketing
Twitter Ads For Influencer MarketingLetsESocialize .
5 views1 Folie
Nicholas Bruneau Presentation at StratCom 2023 von
Nicholas Bruneau Presentation at StratCom 2023Nicholas Bruneau Presentation at StratCom 2023
Nicholas Bruneau Presentation at StratCom 2023Nicholas Bruneau
56 views18 Folien

Último(7)

Korea post wwii website edition (no movies)

  • 2. Homework • Report on prominent leaders of Koreas early independent movement: • An Chung-gun (1879-1910) • Kim Ku (1876-1949) • Lee Tong-hwi also Yi Tong-hui (?-1928) • Syngman Rhee also Yi Sung-man (1875-1960)
  • 3. Kim Il Sung’s Formative Years 1912-1934 • Despite Kim & N. Korean claims: Kim did not play a prominent role either in Korea’s independence or communist movement • He was only 6 when the March 1 movement took place • Not until 1929 at 17 did Kim team up with Korean communist activities which promptly landed him in jail
  • 4. Kim’s Family • Kim Il Sung claimed descent from an impoverished farming family • In reality, his grandfather taught at an affluent private school and made a good living • As a result Kim’s father attended a private American- Christian school in Pyongyang
  • 5. • At the private school his father gained a very strong anti- Japanese resentment which he later passed down to Kim Il Sung • Kim confirmed his mother was a practicing Presbyterian & he occasionally attended church with her
  • 6. • In 1920 Kim’s parents fled to S. Manchuria • For 2 years Kim attended a Chinese elementary school • 1921 as Japanese police resumed their search for Kim’s father, Kim was sent back to their home village in Korea
  • 7. Kim’s “Arduous” March • Kim claims he walked alone the 250 miles in 14 days • Kim once again begin to learn Korean language & culture • However, after Japanese police arrested Kim’s uncle, he returned once again to study in China
  • 8. Kim Discovers Lenin • After his father’s death in 1926 14 year old Kim claims he began middle school in Manchuria • He says there that he began reading The Fundamentals of Socialism & The Biography of Lenin in Chinese • His claims are dubious as he would of needed at least a college education in Chinese to do so • Chances are he learned about communism in underground study groups
  • 9. From Student to Guerilla • N. Korea claims Kim Il Sung as its founder & that he founded their army on 4/25/1932 • This is fiction: Kim’s greatest accomplishment from 1932 – 1940 was staying alive
  • 10. • Japan wiped out the early leadership of the Korean communist movement • Hundreds of supporters died or were imprisoned • Others surrendered or defected to the Japanese
  • 11. • But, according to Japanese military records Kim’s star rose steadily • The price on his head climbed from a lowly $10,000 to $100,000 three years later in 1936
  • 12. • Some historians claim Kim & his guerilla fighters were forced to retreat into the USSR • Others say he traveled there on his own • Either way, Kim found himself in the USSR with the blessing of the Soviet military
  • 13. Life in the USSR 1941-1945 • Kim Il Sung accepted training in the USSR • While Kim’s potential rivals for power died fighting the Japanese, Soviet officials groomed him to play a leading political role in post-war Korea • On Feb. 1942 Kim’s wife Chong-suk gave birth to their first son: Kim Jong Il
  • 14. Kim Who? • When Kim returned to Pyongyang in 1945 he was not greeted as a hero • He was merely an obscure anti-Japanese guerilla fighter • But Kim had the support of the local Soviet military commanders
  • 15. • Kim faced little competition in Pyongyang • Most prominent leaders had flocked to Seoul, Korea’s traditional capital • Socialism had attracted many young Koreans who attended college in Japan • Once Japan’s impending defeat became evident, the communist ranks swelled
  • 16. Korea Occupied • Following WWII both armies respected the 38th parallel
  • 17. The Korean Cold War • Soviets quickly put Kim in charge of an interim Korean gov • Soviets then declared numerous Japanese factories built in northern Korea as war redemption and dismantled and shipped them home
  • 18. • In the south many Korean leaders had returned and behind Kim Ku (also know as Kim Gu) formed a socialist government • The US quickly objected and replaced it with their own
  • 19. • For months the US & Soviets tried to est. a multilateral gov. to rule Korea • May 31, 1948 Korea had a national presidential election but the Soviet North boycotted it • The North then had an election voting for Kim Il Sung
  • 20. Korean War Movie • (we will watch this in class)
  • 26. The Cost • S. Korea: 1.3 million • USA: 172,000 • N. Koreans: 900,000 • Chinese: 900,000
  • 27. Post War N. Korea • After the War, Kim Il Sung set out to achieve his 3 “R’s” • Reconstruction, reunification, revolution
  • 28. Paradise or Prison • Kim quickly sealed off the country to nearly everyone • Korea in the past was a “hermit kingdom” to keep out W. powers & British opium • Kim Il Sung closed N. Korea however to keep out any idea other than his own
  • 29. • Kim declared his domain a paradise • Magazines full of color portrayed smiling faces, well-fed & well-dressed N. Koreans in modern factories & emerald green rice paddies
  • 30. The truth… • At the end of the war N. Korea was a wreck • US had dropped more bombs during the Korean War than it did in all of WWII • Industrial centers were nothing more than rubble • Transportation and power plants were destroyed • Production of everything except some food had stopped
  • 31. Helping Neighbors • China & the USSR rushed to help N. Korea • Both competed to turn war-torn Pyongyang into a showcase for their different approaches to communism • They were after the allegiance of so-called “third-world” nations that had won their independence after WWII
  • 32. • Moscow’s approach was to focus on industry and large urban areas • China’s approach was one focused on farming & rural living
  • 33. • Kim Il Sung saw opp. In the rivalry & took advantage of it • From the USSR he received: heavy industrial equipment, power plants, hydroelectric dams, electric railroads, & massive electric irrigation systems
  • 34. • From Beijing Kim received crude oil, food and fertilizer
  • 35. • Though Kim Il Sung was greatly benefiting from foreign aid, he was determined not to be a satellite to China or any other country again • In order to make this clear he invented his own form of communism: Juche
  • 36. Homework • (not this time sorry 2013 seniors)
  • 37. Kim Solidifies His Power • Using Education, inducements, and social pressure Kim solidified his power in N. Korea
  • 38. Education • Kim Il Sung used the schools to erase & re-teach history • Schools craftily used past events such as Japan’s invasion of Korea to make parallels to Kim’s rule and the importance of following him • Schools also taught an unwavering allegiance to Juche
  • 39. Inducements • Kim created the Korean Worker’s Party (KWP) • One can join the KWP if they are 100% faithful to the party’s beliefs & ideology; and score high in civil exams • Once in the party one has opportunity to excel • However outside the party (apx 21 million) one is virtually destined to a life of poverty
  • 40. Social Pressure • Much like old USSR; social norms virtually force cultural rituals to Kim and his party
  • 41. Cracking the Whip • State Security Agency: “secret police” • Monitor everything and everyone • Control 12 state prisons with 200,000 inmates • Also conduct special overseas missions or attacks
  • 42. Korean Prison Movie • Will watch in class
  • 44. The Economy: Supporting the 5th Largest Army
  • 45. The Good Old Days • N. Korea actually achieved impressive economic gains between 1953-1985 • Aid poured into the war wasted country & they quickly erased the Korean War’s damage
  • 46. • 1990’s brought about a big change to the economy
  • 47. Extensive Growth • Following the Soviets, NK focused on “extensive” growth – Rather than increase productivity, simply add more productivity • However, underlying infrastructure needed for continued “extensive” growth was decaying since so much money was going into the military
  • 48. Old Friend’s Passing • In 1991 the USSR ceased to exist • Aid stop coming in & several projects were left undone such as power plants & fertilizer production centers • Most importantly cheap crude oil stopped coming in paralyzing everything from transport to farming
  • 49. Dwindling Trade • With the USSR a shell of its former self, trade with N. Korea greatly dropped • Furthermore China began to trade heavily with S. Korea • No one wanted N. Korea’s cheap products • Trade dropped from $5 bil in the 80’s to $1.5 bil in 90’s
  • 50. Environmental Disaster • Korean developers allowed thousands of acres of trees to be cut down from hills & mountains • Massive erosion soon followed – Dikes and irrigation systems were washed away – Chemicals mixed with the flooding water and depleted large amounts of farmland fertility – Wells were polluted – Fishing greatly decreased
  • 51. Nature’s Whim • Aug 1995 torrential rains caused massive flooding • 70% of the annual rice harvest & 50% of maize destroyed • 100,000 families were left homeless • 400,000 hectares of arable land destroyed • Hunger, starvation, & disease soon followed
  • 52. • Kim’s communism promised a utopia w/o bureaucracy where all were treated equally and shared everything • Kim’s dynasty created the opposite: a highly stratified society dominated by haves and mostly have nots
  • 53. • In order to have any wealth or opportunities one must be part of Kim’s communist party • Several other dividers exist as well
  • 54. • Citizens in Pyongyang have much more than rural citizens
  • 55. • Males always take precedent over females • Women are not allowed to drive vehicles • Men hardly ever carry anything, they use tractors: Women however always have to carry heavy things
  • 56. • On 8 July 1994, at age 82, Kim Il-sung collapsed from a sudden heart attack. • After the traditional Confucian Mourning period, his death was declared thirty hours later. • His funeral was attended by hundreds of thousands of people from all over North Korea • Many people committed suicide or were killed in the resulting mass mourning crushes
  • 57. Death of Kim Il Sung
  • 58. Death of Kim Jong-il • Died Dec. 17, 2011 of a reported heart-attack • Replaced by Kim-Jong Un • Please read/visit: http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-asia-pacific- 11388628 http://www.facebook.com/pages/Kim-Jong- Un/197999793546225