Kim Song-ae explained

Honorific-Prefix:Respected First Lady
Kim Song Ae
Native Name Lang:ko
Office:First Lady of North Korea
1Namedata:Kim Il Sung
Term Start:17 December 1963
Term End:15 August 1974
Term Label:In role
Predecessor:Position established
Successor:Position abolished until 2018
Office2:Chair of the Central Committee of the Korean Democratic Women's League
Term Start2:1993
Term End2:25 April 1998
1Namedata2:Kim Jong Il
Predecessor2:Vacant
Successor2:Cheon Yeon Ok
Term Start3:1971
Term End3:1976
1Namedata3:Kim Il Sung
Predecessor3:Kim Ok Sun
Successor3:Vacant
Birth Date:1924 12, df=y
Birth Place:Kangso-guyok, Heian'nan-dō (South Pyongan Province), Korea, Empire of Japan
Death Date:September 2014 (aged 89)
Death Place:Kanggye, Chagang, North Korea
Party:Workers' Party of Korea
Children:Kim Kyong Jin (son)
Kim Pyong Il (son)
Kim Yong Il (son)
Module:
Context:north
Hangul:김성애
Hanja:金聖愛
Mr:Kim Sŏng-ae
Rr:Gim Seong-ae
Child:yes
Pronunciation:Huo

Kim Song Ae (; born Kim Song Pal (김성팔); 29 December 1924 – September 2014)[1] was a North Korean politician who served as the first lady of North Korea during the time that the position existed, from 1963 to 1974. She was the second wife of North Korea's founder, Kim Il Sung from their marriage in 1952 until his death in 1994.

Biography

Born Kim Song Pal on 29 December 1924 in South Pyongan Province,[2] [3] Kim Song Ae began her career as a clerical worker in the Ministry of National Defense where she first met Kim Il Sung in 1948. She was hired to work in his residence as an assistant to Kim Jong Suk, Kim Il Sung's first wife. After Kim Jong Suk’s 1949 death, Kim Song-ae began managing Kim Il Sung's household and domestic life. During the Korean War she looked after Kim Jong Il and Kim Kyong Hui.[2] She married Kim Il Sung in 1952, although due to the war no formal ceremony was held. She gave birth to three sons: Kim Kyong Jin (b. 1952), Kim Pyong Il (b. 1954), and Kim Yong Il (b. 1955).[4]

Kim Song Ae later rose in political power. From the mid 1960s until the mid 1970s, Kim Song-ae allegedly held a significant amount of political influence in North Korea.[5] As her tenure of political significance occurred in about the same period as that of Jiang Qing in China during the Culture Revolution, Jang Jin-sung referred to Kim Song-ae as the "North Korean mirror image of Jiang Qing".[5]

In 1965, she became vice-chairwoman of the Central Committee of the Korean Democratic Women's League (KDWL), and in 1971, she rose to be chairwoman.[6] In December 1972, she became a representative of the Supreme People's Assembly.[6]

According to Jang Jin-sung, Kim Song Ae had the ambition to place her son, Kim Pyong Il in the position of successor to her spouse Kim Il Sung, rather than his son from his first marriage, Kim Jong Il.[5] In this, she was supposedly supported by a faction of the North Korean political elite, among them her brother Kim Kwang Hop, and Kim Il Sung's younger brother Kim Yong Ju, and opposed by the faction of her stepson Kim Jong Il.[5] In the 1970s, her influence was reportedly seen as excessive by the party, who started to curb it.[5] In parallel, her stepson Kim Jong Il became the designated heir of Kim Il Sung, and his faction worked to remove her from influence.[5] [6] In 1976, Kim Song-ae lost her position as chair of the KDWL, which removed her communication channel to the public and effectively curbed her power base.[5] Reportedly, Kim Song-ae, as well as her brother-in-law Kim Yong Ju, who had supported her plans to place her son in the position of heir instead of Kim Jong Il, was placed in house arrest in 1981 upon the wish of the designated heir Kim Jong Il.[5]

In 1993, she was reinstated by Kim Jong Il as chair of the KDWL, but her position was purely symbolic and nominal, and she was removed a second time in 1998.[7] Since 1998, little information about her has reached the outside world.[8]

There are rumours that she was killed in a car accident in Beijing in June 2001.[8] Other reports claimed she was still alive as of July 2011, though in poor health, and that ambassador Kim Pyong-il returned to Pyongyang from his posting in Poland to visit her. In 2012, a report from a North Korean defector claimed that Kim Song Ae had been declared insane in the early 1990s, even before the death of Kim Il Sung, and since then been kept under supervision of a psychiatric nurse in her house arrest.[6]

She was later reported to have died in 2014,[1] a date which was confirmed by the Southern Ministry of Unification in December 2018.[9]

Awards

Works

See also

Notes and References

  1. https://m.news.naver.com/read.nhn?mode=LSD&mid=sec&sid1=100&oid=003&aid=0006228449 김일성 부인 김성애 사망설 제기
  2. Web site: Kim Song Ae (Kim So'ng-ae) . North Korea Leadership Watch . 25 October 2020.
  3. Web site: 북한정보포털 | 인물.
  4. Web site: Kim Family . North Korea Leadership Watch . 28 September 2020 .
  5. Jang Jin-sung: Dear Leader: Poet, Spy, Escapee – A Look Inside North Korea, 2014
  6. http://newfocusintl.com/kim-il-sungs-wife-was-declared-insane-over-20-years-ago/ NF|New Focus. Kim Il-sung’s wife was declared insane over 20 years ago. Politics. Tuesday 18 September 2012
  7. http://newfocusintl.com/ro-song-sil-a-key-elite-of-the-north-korean-system/ NF|New FocusRo Song Sil: a key-elite of the North Korean system? Politics. Monday 8 April 2013
  8. Web site: 김부자 실체: 김정일의 계모 김성애. https://archive.today/20070627201724/http://www.rfa.org/korean/features/kim_dynasty/2006/05/02/kim_sung_ae/. dead. 27 June 2007. 2 May 2006. 20 May 2007. Radio Free Asia (Korean service). Lee Su-gyeong (이수경).
  9. http://www.koreaherald.com/view.php?ud=20181227000623 NK founder’s second wife died in 2014: Unification Ministry
  10. Book: Summary of World Broadcasts: Far East. May 1976. Monitoring Service of the British Broadcasting Corporation. A–5.
  11. Book: North Korea Handbook. 2002. Yonhap News Agency. Seoul. 978-0-7656-3523-5. 854.
  12. Book: Summary of World Broadcasts: Far East. 1979. Monitoring Service of the British Broadcasting Corporation. A–21.
  13. Book: Daily report: Asia & Pacific. 105–115. 1971. The Service. D–3.