-------------------------
Via Workers World News Service
Reprinted from the April 15, 2004
issue of Workers World newspaper
-------------------f------

CHUNG SOON-DUK DIES AS SHE LIVED: A FIGHTER FOR KOREA'S LIBERATION

By Monica Moorehead

Countless unknown or little-known self-sacrificing revolutionaries have
given their lives for the liberation of humanity from colonialism and
imperialism, under some of the harshest conditions imaginable. One such
revolutionary was Chung Soon-duk, who died on April 1 in Seoul, South
Korea. She was 71 and had suffered a stroke two months earlier.

As the wife of a peasant farmer in South Korea, Chung became a communist
guerrilla fighter during the outbreak of the Korean War in June 1950.
She, her husband and other peasant fighters went into the Chiri
Mountains to fight against the U.S.-backed, reactionary South Korean
military. She learned how to read and write as a guerrilla.

The Pentagon had occupied the southern part of the Korean peninsula in
1945 at the end of World War II. It remained there illegally, dividing
the country and setting up a right-wing dictatorship in the south to
counter the socialist revolution, led by the Korean Workers Party, that
was transforming the north. From 1950-53, 1.8 million U.S. troops were
sent to Asia to participate in a war meant to defeat that revolution.
Close to 4 million Koreans lost their lives in this bloody conflict
within a three-year period. Three-fourths of those killed were in the
north, but the U.S. failed to defeat the socialist government.

For over 50 years, since the end of the Korean War, the U.S. has refused
to sign a peace treaty with the Democratic People's Republic of Korea in
the north.

Chung remained a great supporter of the DPRK until her last breath. She
dreamed of the day when all of Korea would be free of greedy landlords
and exploiters. But she did more than dream. She took up arms as a
vehicle for making this dream a reality.

Chung's husband died on the battlefield in 1952. By the end of the
Korean War, many of Chung's compatriots had been killed or surrendered
to the South Korean military, but she and others continued the fight
against the "colony of U.S. imperialists," as she referred to South
Korea.

Chung sacrificed material comforts and remained in the mountains as a
guerrilla until 1963, 10 years after the armistice, when, in a shoot-out
with the South Korean police, she was shot and captured. She lost her
right leg.

Chung spent 23 years in prison and was released on parole in 1985 after
she finally signed a statement "disavowing" her communist ideology. In
an Associated Press interview last August, she reiterated that she still
believed in communism and only signed the statement in order to receive
better health care and a reduced prison sentence. Her dream was to go to
the north.

In September 2000, South Korea sent 63 communist guerrillas, who had
refused to denounce communism, to the DPRK. They had spent up to 45
years in solitary confinement. Chung was not among them.

Right before Chung died, the Red Cross Society in North Korea stated
that not including her among those repatriated was "proof that South
Korea is the worst violator of human rights." (AP, April 2)

Mingahyop, an organization in the south that supports former communist
guerrillas and political dissidents, stated that Chung will be cremated
and her ashes sent to a Buddhist temple near the demilitarized zone, so
that one day her remains can have a final resting place in the DPRK, as
she wished.

Today, millions of Koreans in the north and south are fighting for the
reunification of their country despite the ominous presence of occupying
U.S. troops and the Pentagon's nuclear threat. These Koreans are
carrying on in the great heroic tradition of freedom fighters like Chung
Soon-duk.

"All my life, I have been a unification warrior who struggled to free
the fatherland from the Americans," Chung stated last August. "I can
still fight. I still feel like standing up and climbing the mountains."

[Moorehead was a delegate at
an international conference on the reunification of the Korean peninsula
held in Pyongyang, DPRK, last July.]

- END -

(Copyright Workers World Service: Everyone is permitted to copy and
distribute verbatim copies of this document, but changing it is not
allowed. For more information contact Workers World, 55 W. 17 St., NY,
NY 10011; via e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Subscribe wwnews-
[EMAIL PROTECTED] Unsubscribe [EMAIL PROTECTED] Support the
voice of resistance http://www.workers.org/orders/donate.php)




------------------ This message is sent to you by Workers World News Service. To subscribe, E-mail to: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> To unsubscribe, E-mail to: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> To switch to the DIGEST mode, E-mail to <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> Send administrative queries to <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>



Reply via email to