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| Activities with KPG
(1919 ¡ 1932) |
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In connection with Korea's March First
Independence Movement in 1919, Kim Koo was exiled to Shanghai
where he participated in Korean provisional Government(KPG)
activities. In the KPG he filled various posts, such as
Police Bureau Commissioner in 1919, Minister of Internal
Affairs in 1923, and Premier in 1926. He restructured
the KPG's administrative system in 1927 and devoted himself
to a letter campaign to Koreans living in the United States.
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| His efforts brought in funds for organizing
the Korean Patriotic Corps. In 1932 he made elaborate preparations
for the anti-Japanese acts of Yi Bong-chang and Yun Bong-gil. |
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| Kim Koo and His Family |
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In 1920 his wife and his
son came to live with him in Shanghai, China. In 1922
his mother came and his second son Kim Sin was born. This
happy family life did not last long. His wife died in
January 1924. In 1925 his mother and Sin, his second son,
went back to Korea. Two years later when his elder son
Kim In also went back to Korea, leaving him alone in exile. |
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| Paikbum Diary |
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In 1928, Kim Koo started
writing the Paikbum Diary (named after his pen name).
Here he wrote of his commitment to anti-Japanese measures
that would bring maximum effects with minimum resources,
while also recording his personal and family histories
with the intention of leaving a sort of written will to
his two sons in Korea. |
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| Korean Patriotic Corps |
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Kim Koo established the
Korean Patriotic Corps (KPC) in 1931. Backed by the unilateral
support of the KPG, he promoted radical steps such as
dispatching KPC staff members to assassinate Japanese
key figures at home and abroad and to blow up colonial
government organizations. Two of their more effective
acts were carried out by Yi Bong-chang, who threw a bomb
at the Japanese emperor in Tokyo in January 1932, and
Yun Bong-gil who bombed Hongkou Park, Shanghai in April
1932, killing Commander Shirakawa, who led the Japanese
Army stationed in Shanghai, as well as other important
Japanese figures. The KPC's patriotic acts such as these
inspired hope in the Korean people for a |
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| national independence
achieved by their own hands and also drew worldwide publicity
about the Japanese brutalities conducted in Korea. |
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