Advertisement

Topic: Hwang Jang Yop

Jump to
Latest Headlines Quotes

Hwang Jang Yop News




Wiki

Hwang Jang-yop (born 17 February 1923) is a former major politician in North Korea who defected to South Korea in 1997, making him to date the highest-ranking defector from the isolated state. He was largely responsible for crafting the Juche Idea, North Korea's official state ideology.

Hwang was born in Kangdong, South Pyongan. He graduated from the Pyongyang Commercial School in 1941, and then went to Tokyo in 1942 to attend Chuo University's law school; however, he quit two years later and returned to Pyongyang, where he taught mathematics at his alma mater. He joined the Workers Party of North Korea in 1946, soon after its founding; from 1949 to 1953, he was sent to study at Russia's Moscow University, where he met his wife Pak Sung-ok. Upon his return to North Korea, he became head lecturer in philosophy at Kim Il-sung University. He would later ascend to the presidency of that university in April 1965. In 1972, he became Chairman of the Supreme People's Assembly, a position which he would hold for 11 years.

Sometime in the late 1950s, Hwang discovered a 1955 speech in which Kim said, "Juche means Chosun's revolution (Chosun being the traditional name for Korea)." At the time, Kim wanted to develop his own version of Communism, and Hwang was largely responsible for developing what became known as "the Juche Idea." As part of this, he helped scrub all of the paeans to Joseph Stalin that had been typical of Kim's speeches in the 1940s and early 1950s. He also supervised the rewriting of Korean Communist history to make it look like Kim had been the founder and leader of the ruling Workers' Party of Korea from its inception.

This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License.
It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Hwang Jang Yop."