An Jung-geun

Korean independence activist (1879–1910) From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

An Jung-geun (Korean: 안중근; 2 September 1879 – 26 March 1910), courtesy name An Eungchil (Korean: 안응칠; Hanja: 安應七), was a Korean independence activist who assassinated Itō Hirobumi, the first Prime Minister of Japan and Japanese Resident-General of Korea, in Harbin, China in 1909.[1] An was imprisoned and executed by Japanese imperial forces at Lüshun Russo-Japanese Prison in 1910.

Born(1879-09-02)2 September 1879
Died26 March 1910(1910-03-26) (aged 30)
OthernamesThomas (Christian name)
Quick facts Born, Died ...
An Jung-geun
An c. 1910
Born(1879-09-02)2 September 1879
Died26 March 1910(1910-03-26) (aged 30)
Cause of deathExecution by hanging
Other namesThomas (Christian name)
Known forAssassination of Itō Hirobumi in 1909
Parents
  • An Taehun [ko] (father)
  • Jo Maria [ko] (mother)
AwardsOrder of Merit for National Foundation (Posthumously)
Korean name
Hangul
안중근
Hanja
安重根
RRAn Junggeun
MRAn Chunggŭn
IPA[ɐndʑuŋɡɯn]
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An is honored as a martyr by the governments of South Korea, North Korea, Republic of China and People's Republic of China, while the Japanese government regards him as a terrorist. The Catholic Church excommunicated him for the assassination; the excommunication was lifted in 1993.

Background

An's family produced many other Korean independence activists. An's cousin An Myeong-Geun (안명근; 安明根) attempted to assassinate Terauchi Masatake, the first Japanese Governor-General of Korea (조선총독; 朝鮮總督) who executed the Japan-Korea Annexation Treaty in 1910. He failed, however, and was imprisoned for 15 years; he died in 1926.[citation needed] An's brothers An Jeong-Geun (안정근; 安定根) and An Gong-Geun (안공근; 安恭根), as well as An's cousin An Gyeong-Geun (안경근; 安敬根) and nephew An Woo-Saeng (안우생; 安偶生), joined the Provisional Government of the Republic of Korea in Shanghai, China, which was led by Kim Ku, and fought against Japan. An Chun-Saeng (안춘생; 安春生), another nephew of An's, joined the National Revolutionary Army of China, participated in battles against Japanese forces at Shanghai, and joined the Korean Liberation Army in 1940. Later, he became a lieutenant general of the Republic of Korea Army and a member of the National Assembly of South Korea.[citation needed]

Meanwhile, An Jung-Geun's youngest son, Ahn Jun-saeng [ko] became a prominent businessman and Chinilpa during the Japanese occupation of Korea. He died in 1952 from tuberculosis, with his children immigrating to the United States of America after the war.[2]

  • Grandfather
    • An In-su (안인수; 安仁壽)
  • Father
    • An Tae-hun (안태훈; 安泰勳)
  • Mother
    • Jo Maria (趙瑪利亞, 조마리아) of the Baecheon Jo clan (배천 조씨; 6 May 1862 – 25 July 1927)
  • Sister[citation needed]
    • Younger sister: An Seong-nyeo (안성녀; 1881 – 1954)
  • Brother
    • Younger brother: An Jeong-geun (안정근; 安定根; 17 January 1887 – 17 March 1949)
      • Sister-in-law: Yi Jeong-seo (이정서)
        • Nephew: An Won-saeng (안원생)
        • Niece: An Mi-saeng (안미생)
        • Nephew: An Jin-saeng (안진생; 28 January 1916 – 24 December 1988)
          • Niece-in-law: Park Tae-jeong (박태정)
            • Grandniece: An Gi-su (안기수)
            • Grandniece: An Gi-ryeo (안기려)
    • Younger brother: An Gong-geun (안공근; 安恭根; 11 July 1889 – 30 May 1939)
      • Nephew: An Woo-saeng (안우생; 安偶生; 1907 – 1997)
      • Nephew: An Nak-saeng (안낙생; 安樂生; 22 June 1913 – 1950)
      • Niece: Lady An
        • Nephew-in-law: Han Ji-seong (한지성; 韓志成)
      • Niece: Lady An
  • Wife
    • Kim Ah-ryeo (김아려; 金亞麗)
  • Children
    • Daughter: An Hyeon-saeng (안현생; 1902 – 1959)
      • Son-in-law: Hwang Il-cheong (황일청)
        • Granddaughter: Hwang Eun-ju (황은주)
        • Granddaughter: Hwang Eun-sil (황은실)
    • Son: An Mun-saeng (안문생; 安文生; 1903/04[a] – 1916)[3]
    • Son: An Jun-saeng (안준생; 安俊生; 1907 – November 1951)
      • Daughter-in-law: Jeong Ok-nyeo (정옥녀; 鄭玉女; 1905 – ?)
        • Grandson: An Ung-ho (안웅호; 雄浩)
        • Granddaughter: An Yeon-ho (안연호; 1938 – 6 February 2011)
        • Granddaughter: An Seon-ho (안선호; ? – 2003)
  • Cousins[citation needed]
    • An Myeong-geun (안명근,安明根; 1879 – 1927)
    • An Hong-geun (안홍근)
    • An Bong-geun (안봉근; 安奉根)
  • Grandnephew: An Chun-saeng (안춘생; 安椿生; 12 August 1912 – 26 January 2011)

Biography

Early life

An's parents

An was born on 2 September 1879, in Haeju, Hwanghae Province, Joseon. He was the first son of An Taehun [ko] and Jo Maria [ko], of the Sunheung An clan (순흥 안씨; 順興 安氏). Ahn is the 26th great-grandson of Ahn Hyang. His courtesy name was An Eungchil, originated from seven dots on the chest and stomach, meaning that it was born in accordance with the energy of the Big Dipper.[4] As a boy, he learned Chinese literature and Western sciences, but was more interested in martial arts and marksmanship. Kim Ku, a future leader of the Korean independence movement who had taken refuge in An Tae-hun's house at the time, wrote that young An Jung-geun was an excellent marksman, liked to read books, and had strong charisma.[5]

Father Wilhelm

At the age of 16, An entered the Catholic Church with his father, where he received his baptismal name, Thomas (토마스),[6][7] and learned French. While fleeing from the Japanese, An took refuge with a French priest in Korea, Father Wilhelm (토마스; 洪錫九), who baptized him and hid him in his church for several months. Wilhelm encouraged An to read the Bible and had a series of discussions with him. He maintained his belief in Catholicism until his death, going to the point of even asking his son to become a priest in his last letter to his wife.[8]

At the age of 25, An began a coal business, but after the Eulsa Treaty he devoted himself to the education of Koreans by establishing private schools in northwestern Korea. He also participated in the National Debt Repayment Movement. His growing involvement in Korean independence activism brought him into disfavor by Catholic Church authorities, who insisted that the Church remain apolitical. As a result, he was refused communion and in 1907 left for Vladivostok, where he joined the armed resistance against Japanese rule[9]. He was later appointed a lieutenant general in a Korean resistance group and led several attacks against Japanese forces.

At the age of 25, he started a coal business, but devoted himself to the education of Korean people after the Eulsa Treaty by establishing private schools in northwestern regions of Korea. He also participated in the National Debt Repayment Movement, but found himself increasingly at odds with Church authorities because of his independence activism as they wanted the Catholic Church to be apolitical. This led to An being refused communion before he exiled himself in 1907 to Vladivostok to join in the armed resistance against the Japanese colonial rule.[10] He was appointed a lieutenant general of an armed Korean resistance group and led several attacks against Japanese forces.[citation needed]

Assassination of Itō Hirobumi

An in 1906
Itō Hirobumi (second on the left) before being gunned down by An

In October 1909, An passed himself off as a Japanese expat through the guards of the Harbin Railway Station, waiting at the Harbin Railway Station for Itō Hirobumi, the Japanese Resident-General of Korea back from negotiating with the Russian representative on the train.

An shot Itō three times with an FN M1900 pistol on the railway platform. To avoid misidentification, An also shot three men next to Itō: Kawagami Toshihiko (川上俊彦), the Japanese Consul General,[11] Morita Jirō (森泰二郞), a Secretary of the Imperial Household Agency, and Tanaka Seitarō (田中淸太郞), an executive of the South Manchuria Railway. All were seriously injured. After the shooting, An yelled out for Korean independence in Russian, stating "Корея! Ура!" (Korea! Hurrah!).

An was arrested by Russian guards who held him for two days before turning him over to Japanese colonial authorities. When he heard the news that Itō had died, he reportedly made the sign of the cross in gratitude.[12] An confirmed this at first under interrogation but later said he had done no such thing. It is not clear why he changed his statement but perhaps he was worried that his having done so would have hurt the Catholic Church.

Trial and execution

An's Japanese captors showed sympathy to him. According to An's autobiography, during his detention at Lüshun Russo-Japanese Prison, he was well treated and provided with ample food, delicacies, and other daily necessities. His calligraphy was highly admired and sought after by Japanese, most of which were later stored in Japan.[12]

On 30 October 1909, the Japanese public prosecutor Mizobuchi Takao started his first interrogation of An. During the questioning, An recited Itō’s fifteen crimes as his motivation for the execution.[13] Foremost among them, An accused Itō of having ordered the assassination of Empress Myeongseong—an act often attributed to Miura Gorō, who sent a report to Itō after the assassination.[14] After hearing An’s account, Mizobuchi said: “Now that I have heard what you have said I can say that you are a righteous hero of the East. Such a person will certainly not be executed. So do not worry.” An responded, “I am not interested in discussing my life and death. Please quickly inform His Majesty the Emperor of what I have said. It is my hope that Itō’s evil policy can be rectified and the East rescued from its precarious position.”[15]

"Itō Hirobumi's 15 crimes.

  1. Assassinating the Korean Empress Myeongseong
  2. Dethroning the Emperor Gojong
  3. Forcing 14 unequal treaties on Korea
  4. Massacring innocent Koreans
  5. Usurping the authority of the Korean government by force
  6. Plundering Korean railroads, mines, forests, and rivers
  7. Forcing the use of Japanese banknotes
  8. Disbanding the Korean armed forces
  9. Obstructing the education of Koreans
  10. Banning Koreans from studying abroad
  11. Confiscating and burning Korean textbooks
  12. Spreading a rumor around the world that Koreans wanted Japanese protection
  13. Deceiving the Japanese Emperor by saying that the relationship between Korea and Japan was peaceful when in truth it was full of hostility and conflicts
  14. Breaking the peace of Asia
  15. Assassinating the Emperor Kōmei.[16][17]

I, as a lieutenant general of the Korean resistance army, killed the criminal Itō Hirobumi because he disturbed the peace of the Orient and estranged the relationship between Korea and Japan. I hoped that if Korea and Japan be friendlier and are ruled peacefully, they would be a model all throughout the five continents. I did not kill Itō misunderstanding his intentions."

The place where An was executed, with signage in Chinese and Chinglish, Lüshun Russo-Japanese Prison, Dalian, China

Lawyers from Britain, Russia, and Korea, some retained by Korean communities abroad to assist An, sought permission from the Japanese colonial court in Lüshun to defend him, but their requests were rejected. The court instead appointed Japanese lawyers to represent him. In November 1909, before the trial, Japanese Foreign Minister Komura Jutarō ordered that An’s case be handled under Japanese criminal law. On 2 December 1909, Komura instructed the court to sentence An to death.[18]

The court held six public hearings in February 1910, attended mainly by Japanese spectators, except for An’s two brothers and a lawyer from Korea. During the proceedings, An argued that he should be treated as a prisoner of war rather than an assassin, but the court rejected the claim.[18]

An was sentenced to death on Feb 14, 1910. In the afternoon on the same day, An's two brothers Jeong-geun and Gong-geun met with him to deliver their mother's message, "Your death is for the sake of your country, and don't ask for your life in a cowardly manner. Your brave death for justice is final filial regard to your mother."[19]

On 17 February 1910, An met with Hiraiwa Yoshito, president of the Japanese colonial Lüshun High Court, and expressed his intention to write A Treatise on Peace in the East as well as his decision not to appeal the case.[20] Hiraishi assured him that he would have several months to complete the treatise before the execution. However, Tokyo later ordered that the sentence be carried out promptly, leaving An’s work unfinished.

During his imprisonment, An asked that Father Wilhelm come and visit him in prison but Bishop Mutel refused his request, apparently because he wanted Ahn to publicly repudiate his actions before he would send a priest. Father Wilhelm visited him anyway, arriving in Lushun on March 1, 1910, hearing his confession and giving him Holy Communion. Mutel later punished Wilhelm for his actions but Wilhelm appealed to the Vatican and was vindicated.[21]

Before his execution, An received traditional Korean white clothes sent by his mother and asked to be executed as a prisoner of war by firing squad. Instead, he was hanged as a common criminal at the prison on 26 March 1910.[22]

After An’s burial on the same day, Japanese officials held a banquet at the residence of Hiraiwa Yoshito to commend those involved in the case. Bonuses were awarded to officials who had participated in the case.[23]

In his will, An dictated that his body be buried in Harbin Park in China and later moved to his homeland if Korea achieved independence. However, the location of his burial has never been found.[24] According to available records, he was buried near the prison. The South Korean government has not received cooperation from the Japanese government regarding the burial site, and several joint South–North Korean and Chinese excavation efforts have failed to recover his remains.[25] Hyochang Park in Seoul contains a grassy mound that serves as an honorary grave for An.[26]

Legacy

Taegukgi by An Jung-geun longing for the Independence of Korea
"一日不讀書口中生荊棘" means "Unless you read every day, thorns grow in the mouth."

Commemoration

In 1962, the South Korean government posthumously awarded An the Republic of Korea Medal, the highest grade of the Order of Merit for National Foundation, for his efforts toward Korean independence.[27]

On 26 March 2010, a nationwide centenary tribute to An was held in South Korea, including a ceremony led by the Prime Minister Chung Un-Chan and tribute concerts.

Pan-Asianism

An strongly believed in the union of the three great countries in East Asia, China, Korea, and Japan in order to counter and fight off Western imperialism, namely, Western countries that controlled parts of Asia, and restore East Asian independence. He followed the progress of Japan during the Russo-Japanese War and claimed that he and his compatriots were delighted at hearing of the defeat of one of the agents of western imperialism, but were disappointed that the war ended before Russia was totally subjugated.[citation needed]

According to Donald Keene, author of Emperor of Japan: Meiji and His World, 1852–1912, An Jung-Geun was an admirer of Emperor Meiji of Imperial Japan.[28] One of the 15 charges An leveled against Itō was that he had deceived the Emperor of Japan, whom An felt desired peace in East Asia and Korean independence. An requested that Meiji be informed of his reasons for his execution of Itō in the hopes that if Meiji understood his reasons, the emperor would realize how mistaken Itō's policies were and would rejoice. An also felt sure that most Japanese felt similar hatred for Itō, an opinion he formed from talking with Japanese prisoners in Korea.[28] During An's prison sentence and trial, many Japanese prison guards, lawyers, and even prosecutors were inspired by him.[29]

An felt that with the death of Itō, Japan and Korea could become friends because of the many traditions that they shared. He hoped that this friendship, along with China, would become a model for the world to follow. His thoughts on Pan-Asianism were stated in his essay, "A Treatise on Peace in the East," (東洋平和論; 동양평화론) that he worked on and left unfinished before his execution.[28][30] In this work, An recommends the organization of combined armed forces and the issue of joint banknotes among Korea, Japan, and China. Sasagawa Norikatsu (笹川紀勝), a Professor of Law at Meiji University, highly praises An's idea as an equivalent of the European Union and a concept that preceded the concept of the League of Nations by 10 years.[31]

Calligraphy

An's calligraphy: Independence (獨立)

An is highly renowned for calligraphy works. While he was in prison, many prison guards such as Chiba Toshichi (千葉十七) who respected him, made requests to An for calligraphy works.[29] He left many calligraphy works which were written in the jail of Lushun although he hadn't studied calligraphy formally. He would leave on his calligraphy works a signature of "大韓國人" (Great Korean) and a handprint of his left hand, which was missing the last joint of the ring finger, which he had cut off with his comrades in 1909 as a pledge to kill Itō. Some of the works were designated as Treasure No. 569 of the Republic of Korea in 1972.[32] One of his famous works is "一日不讀書口中生荊棘," (일일부독서 구중생형극; Unless one reads every day, thorns grow in the mouth); a variation on a well-known idiom from Dream of the Red Chamber ("Three days without practicing the piano led to my hands being as stiff as thorns"; 「三日不弹,手生荆棘」).[33]

Memorial Halls

Memorial halls for An were erected in Seoul in 1970 by the South Korean government and in Harbin by the Chinese government in 2006.[34] South Korean President Park Geun-Hye raised the idea of erecting a monument for An while meeting with General Secretary of the Chinese Communist Party Xi Jinping in China in June 2013. Thus, another memorial hall at the Harbin Railway Station, where the assassination occurred, was opened on Sunday, 19 January 2014 in Harbin. The hall, a 200-square meter room, features photos and memorabilia.[35] Annual activities in memorial of An are held in Lüshun, where he was imprisoned and executed.[36]

Controversies

The legacy of An is divisive. The Japanese government regards An as a criminal and terrorist, while the South Korean government honors him as a national hero. In North Korea, official attitudes toward An were initially ambivalent because of his yangban aristocratic background[37], but his status has been increasingly elevated under Kim Jong Un.[38]

China, across successive regimes, has generally regarded An with admiration. At the time of the assassination, Harbin was under Russian control as the center of the Chinese Eastern Railway, constructed under the Li–Lobanov Treaty. In order to avoid damaging relations with Japan, both the Qing government and Russia allowed Japanese authorities to exercise jurisdiction over the trial. Nevertheless, Chinese political figures such as Yuan Shikai, the last Qing governor of Korea before Itō, as well as Sun Yat-sen and Liang Qichao, publicly praised An[39]. The Republic of China, which supported Korean independence movements, regarded An as a martyr. In the early years of the People’s Republic of China, his story appeared in primary school textbooks, though it later received less attention in official propaganda.[40]

Some scholars have argued that An’s assassination accelerated Japan’s annexation of Korea. In 2009, Itō Yukio, history professor at Kyoto University and a leading expert on Itō Hirobumi, argued that An was a "righteous and sincere man" whose assassination was a strategic disaster for Korean independence stemming from political misunderstanding. Yukio pointed out that Hirobumi favored a "Protectorate" model where Korea remained a separate entity. By killing the most powerful moderate voice in Japan, An inadvertently cleared the path for the hardline military faction, led by Yamagata Aritomo, to push through the total annexation of Korea in 1910.[41]

An Jung-geun Memorial Hall, Harbin

In China, An’s story has been selectively revived after being largely neglected for half a century. In 2014, amid tensions with Japan over the Diaoyu/Senkaku Islands dispute, China opened a memorial hall for An at Harbin Railway Station following South Korea's suggestion, prompting protests from Japan. Yoshihide Suga, then the Japanese Chief Cabinet Secretary and later Prime Minister, stated that the memorial was “not conducive to building peace and stability” in East Asia.[42] In early 2017, the memorial hall was relocated to a museum in Harbin following South Korea’s deployment of the U.S. THAAD missile defense system, prompting concerns from South Korea, while China denied political motivations.[43] It reopened at Harbin Railway Station after renovation and expansion in 2019.[44]

A devout Catholic during his life, An was refused communion by the Catholic Church in Korea because of his political activism. During his imprisonment, he was excommunicated for the assassination. The excommunication was lifted in 1993.[45]

In February 2017, South Korean police were criticized for using a picture of An in posters put up in the city of Incheon.[46] The poster warned of terrorism, and many South Korean citizens online criticized the police, asking "if it was meant to imply if An was a terrorist". The police apologized and clarified that there was no intention to associate An with terrorism, and all posters were taken down.[47]

In 1959, South Korean film King Gojong and martyr An Jung-Geun was the first movie about An Jung-geun, and is a dramatized story about the event.[citation needed] The 1979 North Korean film An Jung Gun Shoots Itō Hirobumi is another dramatized story of the event.[48] The 2004 South Korean film Thomas An Jung-geun (토마스 안중근) is another dramatized story of the event.[49] Released on 10 September 2004, it is directed by Seo Se-won. An Jung-Geun is played by actor Yu Oh-seong and Itō Hirobumi is played by Yoon Joo-sang.

He is represented by the characters Go Ae-shin and Eugene Choi in the 2018 South Korean Drama Mr. Sunshine (South Korean TV series).[50]

A Chinese-South Korean co-production, The Age of Heroes, is being planned as a Korean drama for 2019. The Age of Heroes is planned to be 24 episodes long and entirely pre-produced with a budget of 30 billion won. Filming will begin by the end of 2018 with locations in South Korea, China, and North Korea.[51]

A fictionalized explanation of the events is presented in an episode of the fifteenth season of Murdoch Mysteries, a Canadian murder mystery show. In the episode, entitled Patriot Games, a dead body in a Toronto cellar leads to an explanation of An Jung-geun's assassination plot wherein rogue Russian agents play a part, requiring swift action to prevent the outbreak of a potential world war.[citation needed]

Hero, a 2022 South Korean musical drama film dramatized story about the event, directed by Yoon Je-kyoon.

Harbin, a 2024 film directed by Woo Min-ho, stars Hyun Bin as An.[52]

See also

References

  • Chung, K. (1910/2004). 대한계년사 9 [History of Korean Empire Vol. 9]. Seoul, South Korea: Somyung. ISBN 89-5626-094-X
  • Itō, Y. (2009). 伊藤博文 近代日本を創った男 [Itō Hirobumi – A man who modernized Japan]. Tokyo, Japan: Kodansha. ISBN 4-06-215909-0.
  • Jansen, M. B. (1961). Sakamoto Ryoma and the Meiji Restoration. Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press. ISBN 0-8047-0785-5
  • Kang, J. (2007). 한국근대사산책 5 [Modern history of Korea Vol. 5]. Seoul, South Korea: Inmulgwa Sasang. ISBN 978-89-5906-075-7
  • Kim, G. (1928/1997). 백범일지 [Baekbeomilji]. Seoul, Korea: Hakminsa. ISBN 89-7193-086-1
  • Nam, K. (1999). 종횡무진 동양사 [History of Eastern Asia] Seoul, South Korea: Greenbee. ISBN 89-7682-051-7

Notes

  1. died in 1916, age 12[3]

Notes

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