Kim Song-ae
Kim Song-ae | |
---|---|
First Lady of North Korea | |
In role December 17, 1963 – August 15, 1974 | |
Supreme Leader | Kim Il-sung |
Preceded by | Office established |
Succeeded by | Ri Sol-ju (2018) |
Chair of the Central Committee of the Korean Democratic Women's League | |
In office 1993 – 25 April 1998 | |
Supreme Leader | Kim Jong-il |
Preceded by | Vacant |
Succeeded by | Cheon Yeon-ok |
In office 1971–1976 | |
Supreme Leader | Kim Il-sung |
Preceded by | Kim Ok-sun |
Succeeded by | Vacant |
Personal details | |
Born | Kangso-guyok, South Pyongan Province, Japanese Korea | 29 December 1924
Died | September 2014 (aged 89) Kanggye, North Korea |
Political party | Workers' Party of Korea |
Spouse | Kim Il-sung (m. 1952–1994; his death) |
Children | Kim Kyong-jin (daughter) Kim Pyong-il (son) Kim Yong-il (son)[a] |
Korean name | |
Chosŏn'gŭl | 김성애 |
Hancha | 金聖愛 |
Revised Romanization | Gim Seong-ae |
McCune–Reischauer | Kim Sŏng-ae |
Kim Sŏng-ae (Korean: 김성애, 29 December 1924[1] – September 2014[2]) was a North Korean politician who served as the First Lady of North Korea from 1963 to 1974. She was the second wife of the President of North Korea, Kim Il-sung.
Biography
Kim Song-ae originally worked as a secretary.[3] She married Kim Il-sung in 1952, following the death of Kim Il-sung's first wife in 1949, although due to the Korean War no formal ceremony was held. One source indicates Kim Il-sung had had an affair with her even before his first wife died. [citation needed] She gave birth to a daughter (Kim Kyong-jin, 1953) and two sons (Kim Pyong-il, 1955; Kim Yong-il, 1957).
She 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.[3] 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".[3]
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.[4] In December 1972, she became a representative of the People’s Supreme Assembly.[4]
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.[3] 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 brother Kim Yong-ju, and opposed by the faction of her stepson Kim Jong-il.[3] In the 1970s, her influence was reportedly seen as excessive by the party, who started to curb it.[3] In parallel, her stepson Kim Jong-il became the designated heir of Kim Il-sung, and his faction worked to remove her from influence.[3][4] 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.[3] 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.[3]
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.[5] Since 1998, little information about her has reached the outside world.[6]
There are rumours that she was killed in a car accident in Beijing in June 2001.[6] Other reports claimed she was still alive as of July 2011, though in poor health, and that 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.[4]
She was later reported to have died in 2014,[7] a date which was confirmed by the Ministry of Unification in December 2018.[8]
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Notes:
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Works
- Kim Song-ae (1969). Let Us Women Become Revolutionary Fighters Infinitely Loyal to the Party and Reliable Builders of Socialism and Communism by Revolutionizing and Working-classizing Ourselves. Pyongyang: Foreign Languages Publishing House. OCLC 253679297.
- — (1970). On the Women's Emancipation Movement in Korea. Report at the Meeting Held in Honour of the 25th Anniversary of the Founding of the Korean Democratic Women's Union, November 17, 1970. Pyongyang: Foreign Languages Publishing House. OCLC 1012367.
See also
Notes
- ^ Not the same person as former premier Kim Yong-il
References
- ^ http://nkinfo.unikorea.go.kr/nkp/theme/viewPeople.do?nkpmno=933
- ^ 김일성 부인 김성애 사망설 제기
- ^ a b c d e f g h i Jang Jin-sung: Dear Leader: Poet, Spy, Escapee – A Look Inside North Korea, 2014
- ^ a b c d NF|New Focus. Kim Il-sung’s wife was declared insane over 20 years ago. Politics. Tuesday 18 September 2012
- ^ NF|New FocusRo Song Sil: a key-elite of the North Korean system? Politics. Monday 8 April 2013
- ^ a b Lee Su-gyeong (이수경) (2 May 2006). "김부자 실체: 김정일의 계모 김성애". Radio Free Asia (Korean service). Archived from the original on 27 June 2007. Retrieved 20 May 2007.
- ^ 김일성 부인 김성애 사망설 제기
- ^ NK founder’s second wife died in 2014: Unification Ministry