Wherever there are soldiers
Leader Kim
Jong Il in his lifetime
toured a long way for his Songun revolutionary leadership, sometimes
crossing a high and rugged pass and sometimes riding on the rough
waves, to go wherever there were soldiers.
The Chol Pass in central Korea
is a very steep and rugged road.
One March day in 1996 he, saying
Supreme Commander should try driving a car if he wants to know the
road to the front, crossed the Chol Pass at the wheels, though the
road was slippery after sleeting.
Officials earnestly requested
him not to cross the Chol Pass any more.
But he said: “I also know if I
slip on the rough pass, I would fall over a precipice. But I cross
the pass again and again because my soldiers over the pass are
waiting their Supreme Commander while safeguarding the defense line
of the country.
Lying on their belly on the
frozen land to watch the enemy’s position all night, the soldiers
think of their Supreme Commander. Then how can I sit at rest?”, he
would say and crossed the Chol Pass over and over again.
That’s why today the Chol Pass
has become a symbol of his Songun revolutionary leadership.
The same story is associated
with Mt. Osong, a height faced with enemy on the front most line.
One day in August 1998 Kim
Jong Il suggested
officials to climb Mt. Osong. It is a high and rugged mountain with
151 curved passes, rising over 1 000 meters above the sea level.
Officials stood in his way,
saying that it was impossible to go up because the pass was washed
out by heavy rain.
“As I have come as far as
here, I must climb up the height where there are soldiers. Supreme
Commander must tour the rugged pass in the bad weather like today to
learn how the soldiers were getting along.
Crossing steep roads, he arrived
at the front commanding post on the top of the height.
The commander of the unit gave a
salute to him and said with great concern how he could tour so rugged
a road.
At this Kim
Jong Il said he should go
not only a smooth road, but a rugged road too.
For his Songun revolutionary
leadership Kim Jong Il
sailed the rough sea to Cho Islet.
One November day in 1996 he
sailed the rough waves aboard a small fast boat.
Usually, the navigation route to
Cho Islet was dangerous and that day it was very cold and there was
so much lift of sea.
Officials tried to dissuade him
from navigating and requested him to put off the schedule.
But Kim Jong
Il got aboard, saying
soldiers were waiting him on the islet and he had never sailed before
the wind.
That day he got to the islet
after sailing nearly an hour to cover a little over 5 miles.
The high and rugged Chol Pass
and Mt. Osong and the rough waves could not keep Kim
Jong Il from touring the
road to the front with warm love for soldiers.
Like this, Kim
Jong Il toured the road
of his Songun revolutionary leadership with a firm determination to
safeguard the destiny of the country and nation with arms and with a
fervent love for soldiers.
Just it made the DPRK a
dignified military power nobody can encroach upon.
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