Choe Chang-ik
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Choe Chang-ik | |
---|---|
Vice Premier of the Cabinet | |
1st Cabinet of North Korea | |
In office 29 November 1952 – 23 September 1956 Serving with Pak Hon-yong, Hong Myong-hui, Ho Ka-i, Choe Yong-gon, Pak Ui-wan, Pak Chang-ok and Kim Il. | |
Premier | Kim Il Sung |
Minister of State Control | |
1st Cabinet of North Korea | |
In office 8 May 1952 – August 1955 | |
Premier | Kim Il Sung |
Preceded by | Kim Won-bong |
Succeeded by | Yi Hyo-sun |
Minister of Finance | |
1st Cabinet of North Korea | |
In office 23 March 1954 – November 1954 | |
Premier | Kim Il Sung |
Preceded by | Yun Kong-hum |
Succeeded by | Yi Hyo-sun |
In office 9 September 1948 – 29 November 1952 | |
Premier | Kim Il Sung |
Preceded by | Post established |
Succeeded by | Yi Hyo-sun |
Personal details | |
Born | 1896 Onsong County, Joseon |
Died | 1960 (aged 63–64) Pyongyang, North Korea |
Nationality | Korean |
Alias | Choe Chang-sok, Choe Chang-sun, Choe Tong-u, Ri Kon-u |
Korean name | |
Chosŏn'gŭl | 최창익 |
Hancha | |
Revised Romanization | Choe Chang-ik |
McCune–Reischauer | Ch'oe Ch'angik |
Choe Chang-ik (Korean: 최창익; Hanja: 崔昌益, 1896–1960[1]) was a Korean politician in the Japanese colonial era. He was a member of the Korean independence movement.[2] He was also known by the names Choe Chang-sok (최창석; 崔昌錫), Choe Chang-sun (최창순; 崔昌淳), Choe Tong-u (최동우; 崔東宇), and Ri Kon-u.
Early life
[edit]Choe Chang-ik was born in Onsong County, Korea Empire in 1896.[3] His exact date of birth remains unknown.
In his fifth year of high school he participated in the March 1st Movement, which resulted in his expulsion. That same year he went to Japan to continue his education at the Seisoku English School (today's Seisoku Gakuen High School).[citation needed]
Choe Chang-ik later studied at Tokyo's Waseda University in the Department of Economics and Politics where he organized a student union and continued his activism. This included secretly infiltrating areas in Korea such as Ganggyeong, Jeonju, Okgu, and Gunsan, where he went on a lecture tour to share his ideas on socialism and equality. Choe Chang-ik was arrested by the Japanese police for these activities but was eventually released. He graduated from Waseda University in February 1925.[citation needed]
Timeline
[edit]In June 1923, Choe Chang-ik returned to Korea and became a member of the Korean Labor Society. In July of that year he helped found the Korea Communist Youth Alliance and served as a commissioner. By September he was arrested by the police while leading a Korean Labor Conference meeting.[4] In April 1924, Choe took part in the founding of the Joseon Youth Alliance and was elected to the group's central executive committee. Eight months later he helped found the Socialist Alliance (an organization not affiliated with the Seoul Youth Association) and was elected to serve as a member of its executive committee.[citation needed]
Following his graduation Choe traveled to the Communist International World Congress as a representative of the Seoul Youth Association. During his return home he became involved with Kim Chwa-chin's Shinmin group, a rebel community in Shinmin province, Manchuria. Choe eventually worked to create a communist league within the organization.[citation needed]
Choe eventually seceded from Kim's group in October 1925 and returned to Korea. In the same month Japanese officials arrested him for his involvement with the Shinmin group along with Han Bin (한빈; 韓斌), Lee Kyung-ho (이경호; 李京鎬) and Lee Young (이영; 李英). In 1926, Choe and Park Du-hui, a member of the Shinmin group, were selected to attend a communist conference in Vladivostok of Russian far east. While there he joined efforts to start a national party assembly. In 1927, upon returning to Korea, he joined, and became an executive, of the Communist Party of Korea. In February 1928 Choe was imprisoned for the so-called "Third Communist Party of Korea Incident". He escaped from prison in 1935.[citation needed]
In 1936, he sought and gained political asylum in China. There he became a part of the Korean National Revolutionary Party and formed the Chonwi Club (전위동맹) in Hankou. He married his wife, Heo Jong-suk, in 1937. In May 1938, he became the commander of Choson uiyongdae (조선의용대), which was Kim Won-bong's Korean National Revolutionary Party's Military Organisation, but he complained that it was funded by Chiang Kai-shek's Kuomintang. A disagreement followed and he left Kim Won-bong's (김원봉; 金元鳳) organisation. He also went to Yan'an, in partnership with Mu Chong (무정; 武亭) and Kim Tu-bong (김두봉; 金枓奉).[citation needed]
In January 1941, with funding from the Chinese Communist Party, and later with Lee Gunwu, Mu Chong founded the "Hebei Korea Youth Federation" in Jindong. In 1942, with Kim Dubong and Lee Gunwu, Mujung, Han bin was created as a Chosun independent alliance, and he was elected as the vice-chairman of the independent alliance. In September 1945, he was appointed to the Communist Party of Korea's Political Committee, and in December he returned to Pyongyang with Kim Tu-bong and Mu Chong. In March 1946, he founded the New Korean Democratic Party and was elected vice-chairman. In August of that year he was involved in the integration of the New Democratic Party and the Communist Party of Korea to North faction of Workers' Party of Korea. In September the Workers' Party of North Korea's Central Committee, the Standing Committee, elected Choe as commerce and business commissar.[citation needed]
Ambassador Ianov and Choe Chang-ik discussed the visit of the DPRK government delegation to Eastern Europe and the USSR (east bloc), and the policies of the Korean Workers' Party. In 1948 he attended the Workers' Party of North Korea's Central Committee and the deputies of the North Korean Supreme People's Assembly. In September Choe became the first North Korea minister of finance; in 1952 deputy prime minister; in 1954 minister of finance and in 1955 security minister of the DPRK.[citation needed]
See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ Charles K. Armstrong (July 2013). Tyranny of the weak. Cornell University Press. p. 130.
- ^ "민족문화대백과사전". Encyclopedia of Korean Culture. Retrieved 2016-12-14.
- ^ http://kpsa.or.kr/modules/bbs/index.php?code=book&mode=view&id=886&page=13&___M_ID=118&sfield=&sword= [dead link]
- ^ "최창익". Naver. Retrieved 2016-12-14.
External links
[edit]- Choe Chang-ik[permanent dead link] (in Korean)
- Choe Chang-ik: Korean historic person information Archived 2018-11-18 at the Wayback Machine (in Korean)
- Choe Chang-ik (in Korean)