The refers to the arrest, torture, and imprisonment of members of the Korean Language Society, which occurred in 1942 under the
Japanese colonial rule of Korea.
Description
In mid-1942, an investigation by the provincial police of
Kankyōnan-dō led to the discovery of a female Korean high school student's diary. Therein she stated that she was punished at school for speaking Japanese,
which led to the arrest of teachers at her school. Consequently in October, police arrested members of the
Korean Language Society
The Korean Language Society () is a society of hangul and Korean language research, founded in 1908 by Ju Sigyeong. It promotes hangul exclusive writing.
Hangul Day was founded in 1926 during the Japanese occupation of Korea by members of the K ...
in
Keijō
, or Gyeongseong (), was an administrative district of Korea under Japanese rule that corresponds to the present Seoul, the capital of South Korea.
History
When the Empire of Japan annexed the Korean Empire, it made Seoul the colonial capita ...
on charges of violating the
Peace Preservation Law
The was a Japanese law enacted on April 22, 1925, with the aim of allowing the Special Higher Police to more effectively suppress alleged socialists and communists. In addition to criminalizing forming an association with the aim of altering the ...
.
Following torture, a confession was obtained that the
Joseon Language Society was an organization having as its purpose the
independence of Korea from Japan. However, at that time, the society was engaged in researching the Joseon language, establishing spelling rules, and compiling a dictionary of the Korean language. Members did not engage in group activities that would violate the Peace Preservation Law.
In the late 1950s,
Lee Hee-seung (李熙昇) left a memoir closest to the truth. In the early 1970s, a new 'memory' was created in celebration of the 25th anniversary of liberation and the 50th anniversary of the Korean Language Society. In particular, the happening at
Jeonjin Station, which was the beginning of the incident, was reconstructed to fit the status of the Joseon Language Society.
The writing in the diary, which is a private area, has been changed to an open space, a conversation in the train. The use of Korean, not Japanese, became a problem. From the beginning, it was 'Korean language common use' that could be interpreted in various ways. The Japanese police interpreted it in Japanese, and Korea in the 1970s interpreted it in Korean. In the 1980s, there were rebuttal recollections by the parties to the incident, but the historical narrative did not change. It was because the Joseon Language Society was already a symbol of suffering and resistance through the medium of the national language.
Laws leading to the event
* In 1936, the Japanese government in Korea passed the ''Chosun Ideological Crime Prevention Ordinance'' (조선사상범보호관찰령).
* In 1941, the ''Chosun Ideological Crime Prevention Ordinance'' was amended.
* In 1943, the 4th Joseon Education Ordinance policy abolished Korean language education, banned the use of Korean, and forced the use of Japanese.
And from April 1939, the Japanese government in Korea abolished Korean language subjects in schools and proceeded to close Korean language newspapers and magazines.
Timeline
* In July 1942, Park Byeong-yeop (wearing Korean traditional costume) was waiting for a friend at Jeonjin Station in Hongwon-eup, South Hamgyeong-do. He was questioned and taken into custody at the Hongwon Police Station. The Hongwon police searched his house, and the diary of Park Young-ok (his niece) was confiscated. This contained a phrase apparently showing that one of her teachers at Yeongsaeng High School 4 in
Hamheung rejected the Japanese law to teach using only the Japanese language. Young-Ok Park and her friends Soon-Nam Choi, Soon-Ja Lee, Jeong Seong-Hee, In-Ja were arrested and interrogated. After enduring torture for several days, they finally incriminated two teachers, Kim Hak-joon and Jung Tae-jin, who had encouraged students to use
Hangul
The Korean alphabet is the modern writing system for the Korean language. In North Korea, the alphabet is known as (), and in South Korea, it is known as (). The letters for the five basic consonants reflect the shape of the speech organs ...
, and had tried to inspire a sense of independence by telling stories such as the fall of Japanese imperialism, the revival of the Joseon people, and the story of the sacrifice of
Gyewolhyang during the
Japanese invasion of Korea in 1592. Both Kim Hak-joon and were members of the Korean Language Society.
* In September 1942, a student at Yeongsaeng Girls’ High School was arrested for talking in Korean by the Japanese police and interrogated.
* On October 1, 1942, the police, having concluded that the Korean Language Society was an independence movement group. began to arrest members, including: , Choi Hyun-bae,
Lee Hee-seung, Jeong In-seung, Kim Yoon-kyung, Kwon Seung-wook, Jang Ji-young. Eleven people, including Han Jing, Lee Jung-hwa, Lee Seok-rin, and , were arrested in Seoul and sent to
Hongwon
Hongwŏn County is a county in South Hamgyŏng province, North Korea. It is flanked by the Sea of Japan (East Sea of Korea) to the south, and by the Hamgyŏng Mountains to the north.
Physical features
The northwest region is particularly mounta ...
, Hamgyeongnam-do.
* On October 18, 1942, and were arrested.
* On October 20, 1942, Jeong Yeol-mo was arrested.
* On October 21, 1942,
Lee Byeong-gi,
Lee Man-gyu, Lee Kang-rae, and Kim Seon-ki were arrested
* On December 23, 1942, Seo Seung-hyo,
Ahn Chai-hong
Ahn Chai-hong (, December 31, 1891 – March 1, 1965) was a Korean activist, politician, and journalist who participated in the Korean independence movement.
See also
* Korea Independence Party - Ahn Jae-hong was a member of the party here. ...
, Lee In, Kim Yang-soo, Jang Hyeon-sik, Jeong In-seop, Yun Byeong-ho,
Lee Eun-sang were arrested separately
* Kim Do-yeon (金度演) on March 5, 1943, and Seo Min-ho (徐珉濠) on next day, respectively, and all were detained at the Hongwon Police Station.
* From the end of March to April 1, Hyeon-mo Shin and Jong-cheol Kim were interrogated without detention.
* Kwon Deok-gyu and Ahn Ho-sang escaped arrest due to illnesses,
* By the end of March 1943, 29 people had been arrested and sentenced to all sorts of barbaric punishments. They were severely tortured, and 48 people had been interrogated.
* Lee Yoon-jae, Han Jing died in prison, before completion of their trials.
Arrests in the incident
In popular culture
The 2019 South Korean movie, ''
Mal-Mo-E: The Secret Mission,'' fictionalises the story of the creation of the first Hangul dictionary and the story of this incident of torture and imprisonment of key members of the Korean Language society, while apparently remaining close to the facts.
References
Citations
Sources
*{{cite web , author-last=Miyata , author-first=Setsuko , title=朝鮮語学会事件 , trans-title=Korean Language Society incident , website=
Kotobank
is a Japanese-language online encyclopedia which allows users to search across dictionaries, encyclopedias, and databases provided by publishers and others. It is operated by Voyage Marketing Co. At launch, the service's name was in rōmaji, but ...
, url=https://kotobank.jp/word/%E6%9C%9D%E9%AE%AE%E8%AA%9E%E5%AD%A6%E4%BC%9A%E4%BA%8B%E4%BB%B6-98008#E6.97.A5.E6.9C.AC.E5.A4.A7.E7.99.BE.E7.A7.91.E5.85.A8.E6.9B.B8.28.E3.83.8B.E3.83.83.E3.83.9D.E3.83.8B.E3.82.AB.29 , access-date=February 26, 2024 , language=ja
External links
Korean Language Society website100 years of the Korean Language Society
Korean independence movement
Japanese war crimes in Korea
Anti-Korean violence
1942 in Korea
1943 in Korea
Torture during wars