Gwoneophoe Explained

Gwoneophoe
Native Name:권업회
Native Name Lang:ko
Purpose:
Headquarters:Shinhanchon, Vladivostok, Russian Empire

Gwoneophoe, name sometimes translated as Work Promotion Association[1] or Association for the Encouragement of Industry,[2] was a Korean diaspora organization in Primorskaya Oblast, Russian Empire from 1911 to 1914.

The group was a secret hub for the Korean independence movement, and operated the militant : the first Korean government-in-exile during the 1910–1945 Japanese colonial period. While in the midst of training an army it was building, it was suddenly forcefully closed upon the beginning of World War I. Russia and Japan both joined the Allies, and created an agreement to suppress Korean independence activists.

The group holds an important place in Korean history, and had many significant members and successor organizations. Its Korean Independence Army government was later succeeded by the, then by the Korean Provisional Government, then by South Korea.[3] Its newspaper, Kwŏnŏp Sinmun, was considered a significant publication for the Korean diaspora at the time.

Background

See also: Koryo-saram and Korean independence movement. Until the mid-19th century, Korea was isolationist, and Koreans rarely left its borders.[4] Thousands of Koreans began moving into the area that became the Russian Far East in the late 1800s, to escape a famine. Around that time, the Empire of Japan moved to consolidate its control over Korea, and eventually colonized it in 1910. Vladivostok developed a significant Korean population that congregated in the enclave Shinhanchon, and became a center for the Korean independence movement and independence activists in exile.[5] [6] [7]

History

The organization was founded on June 1, 1911, in Shinhanchon.[7] On the surface, the group was meant to forward agriculture, commerce, industry, and education, but it secretly served as a center of the Korean independence movement.[7] The reason for the secrecy was because Russia had signed a number of agreements with Japan, including one in July 1910[8] and one on June 1, 1911,[7] in which they would suppress and extradite Korean independence activists to the Japanese Empire.[7] Several Korean organizations in Vladivostok, including the newspaper Taedong Kongbo, were closed due to this.

At the inaugural meeting, independence activists and Hong Beom-do served as president and vice president respectively.[7] They had an initial membership of around 300.[7]

Organization politics was reportedly competitive. A number of factions existed in the organization, including the North Faction, which was composed of people from Hamgyong Province.[7] Another was the Seoul Faction, which merged into the Korean-American Kyŏng Faction in September 1911.[7] These factions had existed for years prior across previous organizations, and in Gwoneophoe they initially continued feuding on a number of ideological issues. They made continuous efforts to unite under the banner of a shared common enemy of the Empire of Japan.[7]

Gwoneophoe gained the support of a local youth organization, Ch'ŏngnyŏn Kŭnŏphoe, and eventually absorbed it on July 16, 1911. Gwoneophoe assumed operation and funding of the youth group's newspaper, Taeyangbo.[7] However, in the midst of an internal dispute,[9] around 15,000 pieces of movable type were stolen from the paper by the pro-Japanese Korean spy .[10] [11] This effectively halted the paper's printing.[7]

Official recognition and expansion

Beginning in late 1911, the local Vladivostok government began moving to officially recognize Gwoneophoe, and held meetings in which they mediated the group's internal disputes.[7] Nikolay Gondatti, then governor-general of the region, was made an honorary member of Gwoneophoe. The group's management structure was reorganized, and in December, the two factions united with Russian help.[7] On December 19, they became the first local Korean organization to be officially recognized by Russia. Factional influence still lingered however, and by 1913 the North Faction had more influence in the group.[7]

With support from the Russian government, they became the de facto organization for Koreans in not just Vladivostok, but the entire region.[7] They established branches in various settlements with Korean populations, including Nikolaevsk, Khabarovsk, Partizansk, and Ussuriysk.[7] They had ten branches by July 1914, and around 10,000 members.[7] In 1914, it absorbed the Shinhanchon Residents' Association .[7]

Much of its expenses came from the printing of its newspaper, Kwŏnŏp Sinmun, which it established on May 5, 1912. The organization received membership fees and donations, but member ended up contributing significant funds for its activities.[7] The newspaper became a significant presence in the Korean diaspora, alongside the Korean-American papers Sinhan Minbo and Sinhan Kukbo.[7]

Secret militant activities

Meanwhile, the group secretly planned militant activities for the liberation of Korea.[12] In June 1912, Yi Chong-ho, Shin Chae-ho, and worked on planning an assassination attempt on Japanese Prime Minister Katsura Tarō, who had overseen Korea's annexation and was visiting Russia around this time.

In June 1913, the group had a funding proposal approved by the Vladivostok government for a celebration in 1914 of the 50th anniversary of Koreans immigrating to Russia. The proposal included the creation of monuments, the researching of histories, and the translations of texts into both Russian and Korean.[7] In actuality, the funding was really intended for use in the group's secret militant arm and Korean government-in-exile: the .[7] This government coordinated activities with Korean groups across China and Russia. They established an army and militant training school in Wangqing County in Manchuria.[7]

Dissolution

The group and its activities came to an abrupt end with the beginning of World War I in mid-1914. Russia and Japan joined the Allies, and subsequently established an agreement to crack down on Korean independence activist organizations.[7] Russia then forcefully disbanded Gwoneophoe, some time around August 1, 1914.[7]

References

Sources

Notes and References

  1. Dae-Yeong . Youn . 2014 . The Loss of Vietnam: Korean Views of Vietnam in the Late Nineteenth and Early Twentieth Centuries . Journal of Vietnamese Studies . 9 . 1 . 85 . 10.1525/vs.2014.9.1.62 . 10.1525/vs.2014.9.1.62 . 1559-372X.
  2. Ban . Byung Yool . 2016 . Danjae Sin Chae-ho's Nationalist Actvities in the Russian Maritime Province . 한국학논총 . ko . 46 . 365–392 . 1225-9977.
  3. Web site: 김 . 정인 . 대한민국 임시정부 (大韓民國 臨時政府) . 2024-02-13 . . ko.
  4. Yoon . In-Jin . March 2012 . Migration and the Korean Diaspora: A Comparative Description of Five Cases . Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies . en . 38 . 3 . 413–435 . 10.1080/1369183X.2012.658545 . 143696849 . 1369-183X.
  5. Web site: Kwak . Yeon-soo . 2019-03-14 . Tracing freedom fighters in Russian Far East . 2024-01-21 . . en.
  6. Web site: 정 . 진석 . 2020-08-02 . [제국의 황혼 '100년전 우리는'] [144] 연해주의 抗日신문과 언론인들 ]. 2024-02-13 . . ko.
  7. Web site: 권업회[勸業會] ]. 2024-02-13 . 우리역사넷.
  8. Web site: 러시아지역 . 2024-02-12 . 우리역사넷 . National Institute of Korean History.
  9. Web site: 2003-07-14 . 러시아지역 한인신문 약사 . 2024-02-13 . 재외동포신문 . ko.
  10. Web site: 엄인섭 (嚴仁燮) . 2024-02-13 . . ko.
  11. Book: 이 . 재석 . 밀정, 우리 안의 적 . 이 . 세중 . 강 . 민아 . December 2021 . 시공사 . 979-11-6579-841-3 . ko.
  12. Web site: 배 . 항섭 . 2004-05-31 . [개교 100주년]조부의 유지이어 교육사업과 항일투쟁에 매진 ]. 2024-02-13 . 고대신문 . ko.