(Redirected from Gim Hyeong-jik)
'Kim Hyŏng-jik' (
July 10 1894–
June 5 1926) was the father of the late
North Korean founder
Kim Il-sung and the grandfather of the present leader of North Korea,
Kim Jong-il.
Not much is known about him. He was the son of Kim Bo-hyon, attended Sungshil school, which was run by
American missionaries, and became a teacher and later an herbal
pharmacist. He died as a result of numerous medical problems, including third-degree frostbite.
Kim and his wife attended
Christian churches. It was reported that his son, Kim Il-sung attended church services during his teenage years before becoming an
atheist later in life.
[1] Kim Il-Sung, however claims that he and his parents were atheists and attended mass for other reasons, though many of their friends were Christians.
Kim Il-Sung spoke a lot of his father's idea of chiwŏn (righteous aspirations).
Kim and his family were active in opposition to the
Japanese, who controlled Korea at the time, and in 1920, when Kim Il-sung was eight, they fled to
Manchuria for safety.
External links
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Personality Cult in North Korea
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The Kim Jong Il succession problem (talks about his ancestry)
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Kim's family
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USS General Sherman Incident