Nation
 
    
  
+Login    +Register    +Find Id / Pw 음성듣기 설치 및 이용방법    Home  l  Archives  l  Learning Times  |  Sitemap  |  Subscription  l  Media Kit  l  PDF
   Home > Newszone > Nation > Nation Digest >
  Nation
    Photo News  
    Political Digest  
    Nation Digest  
    Provincial News  
    Defense Affairs  
    Airline News  
    Foreign Affairs / N.Korea  
    Seoul Air Show  
    Obituary  
    Dokdo Special  
    Ahn Jung-geun  
    Dokdo Essay Contest  
  Biz/Finance
  Technology
  Arts & Living
  Sports
  Opinion
  Community
  Special
     
  The Learning Times
     Editorial Listening
     Phone English
     Dear Abby
     Domestic News
     Foreign News
     Screen English
     Live English in Drama
     Discovery Education  
     Ancient Idiom  
     iBT Writing  
     English Writing I
     English Writing II  
     English Grammar
     Grasping Vocab
     iBT Vocab
     Korean Language  
     
     Junior Writing
     Junior Reading
     Junior Reporter
     
 
   11-08-2009 18:21 여성 남성
Park Chung-hee Leads List of Collaborators With Japan


An old man unfurls one of tomes of the Dictionary of Collaborators displayed on the grave slab of independent fighter Kim Gu’s tomb in Hyochang Park, Seoul, Sunday. / Korea Times Photo by Koh Young-kwon

By Bae Ji-sook
Staff Reporter

The late former President Park Chung-hee, father of Park Geun-hye, the former leader of the governing Grand National Party, is included on a list of 4,389 collaborators during Japanese colonial rule (1910-1945).

The Dictionary of Collaborators also lists first Prime Minister Jang Myun, renowned dancer Choi Seung-hee and composer of the national anthem, Ahn Eak-tai. Jang Ji-yeon, an opinion leader, who was noted for his poem against Japan's absorption of Korea, is also included for acting as an active supporter late into the Japanese occupation.

The list, released by the Institute for Research on Collaborationist Activists, dropped former Prime Minister Shin Hyon-hwak, who contributed greatly to the nation's industrialization, and two others after a review following requests by their families.

Park, who was in power for 18 years after his 1961 coup, was blacklisted for his pledge of allegiance to Imperial Japan and its army in 1939.

He made the pledge, written in blood, "I am both physically and spiritually ready to be a Japanese subject and am willing to give my life for the emperor." The pledge was made as a self-recommendation to the Japanese Army.

Park Ji-man, son of the authoritarian leader, filed for a court injunction but his request was rejected.

Supporters and opponents got into a shouting match in front of a Sookmyung Woman's University building, where the book was scheduled to be released at a press conference.

Opponents claimed that the report exaggerated certain issues, while supporters called for sincere apologies from the offspring of those on the list.

The venue of release was shifted at the last minute to the tomb of independent fighter Kim Gu at Hyochang Park.

The institute, which was responsible for compilation, said those who had "actively" taken part in the promotion or administration of Japanese rules were listed.

The report for the book was drawn up by 150 professional historians, and was written by 150 people, with 80 researchers studying more than 3,000 documents. The institute will study another 400 names for inclusion.

It was launched as part of a governmental project to "reveal the truth" about the Korean history, but its budget was scrapped by the National Assembly. The book was completed and released thanks to a donation of 750 million won by 30,000 citizens.

bjs@koreatimes.co.kr

Reader's Comments ▶ Other View
Notice From KT Website Manager
Bad language will not be tolerated. All comments considered discriminatory against race or sex, or which are considered offensive against certain people, will be eliminated by the manager. Violators will be deprived of their membership.
Please stay on topic.
tuscan   (76.212.12.13)   11-09-2009 23:52
bedfordforrest: when I said dirty europeans I meant their passion of conquering and imposing asians their way...so don't distort my words my anti korean friend..And again don't blame Koreans because they didn't want to be pushed and influenced by dirty europeans in the past...no one asked them to come and bully korea...
tuscan   (76.212.12.13)   11-09-2009 23:48
drifter: well then what do call fair??? Japan invading, raping and looting korea and deny all of the above?...agree u have to investigate the corruption in korea, but this are different issues my silly anti korean friend....^^ U are a Joke because u are not even able to differentiate between two very different issues. The japanese brutality and its collaborators and the corruption in korea.
dmblum   (121.188.0.184)   11-09-2009 19:01
Collective guilt and shaming is primitive and should be stopped; a child is not responsible for the sins of his father. History needs to be recorded, but not as a recrimination.
drifter   (125.129.22.138)   11-09-2009 17:41
So this is what Koreans call fairness. What a joke. If you want to investigate something, why not investigate the corruption that is occurring on a daily basis here in Korean now. Are you afraid of the rich and powerful just as those before you were? Or, are your pockets filled with money, donations, and other gifts that sway your loyalty and cause you to attack deceased individuals who cannot defend themselves?
archaeologist17   (124.1.67.130)   11-09-2009 16:16
the best thing that could be done is just forgive them and let them slide off into history. they are dead and a 'list' means nothing to them and their descendents are innocent of any such crime so it would be wrong to punish themfor their father's actions.
▶ Managerial regulations
▶ Back ▲ Top