THE TASKS OF
KOREAN COMMUNISTS
Treatise
Published in Sogwang, Organ of
the Korean
People’s Revolutionary Army
November 10, 1937
Twenty-seven years
has elapsed since the Japanese imperialists occupied Korea.
During this period
they have turned our country into a source of raw materials and
labour, a market for their commodities and a military base for
aggression against the continent.
Owing to their
ferocious colonial policy, the Korean people have been deprived of
their national rights and freedom and are suffering untold sorrow as
a ruined people. Our people are not only subjected to double and
treble oppression and exploitation by the Japanese imperialists and
their lackeys in a manner reminiscent of medieval times, but are
threatened with the danger of being deprived of their beautiful
written and spoken language.
The Sino-Japanese
war unleashed by the Japanese imperialists is driving our people into
an even more terrible plight. With an eye to ensuring “safety in
the rear”, the Japanese imperialists have greatly expanded their
fascist, colonial repressive machinery—troops, police, prisons,
gallows and all—and concocted a new set of Draconian laws. In this
way, they have turned our beautiful land of 3,000 ri into a
living hell on earth. They are cracking down on the revolutionary
forces with fury, while suppressing and slaughtering innocent people
as never before. Since last summer these hangmen have destroyed the
tower echelons of the Association for the Restoration of the
Fatherland and atrociously arrested and imprisoned a large number of
underground political workers and members of the ARF in the northern
border area of our country. In all parts of Korea they have seized
and imprisoned countless numbers of innocent people and are wantonly
slaughtering them. They have openly instituted compulsory
conscription and grain deliveries in order to meet the
ever-increasing demand for manpower and materials in their aggressive
war against the continent. Thus, our precious young and middle-aged
people are being forcibly rounded up to become bullet-shields for the
Japanese imperialists and our country’s abundant natural wealth is
being ruthlessly plundered.
Our people, known
for their 5,000-year old history and brilliant culture, are now
standing at the crossroads of life and death, and the dark clouds of
national calamity are hovering over our land.
In these grim days
of national suffering, all kinds of renegades from the
revolution—national reformists. Right and “Left” opportunists
and sectarian-flunkeys—have cast off their masks and are openly
conniving with the Japanese imperialist aggressors.
Time has proved that
we communists are the only pivotal force of the revolution capable of
guiding the destiny of the country and the people to the end, and it
has set before us a heavier and more difficult task.
Severe trials and
difficulties stand in the way of the Korean revolution, but the
situation continues to develop in favour of the revolution.
The frantic war
policy and the savage fascist suppression of the Japanese
imperialists are not a sign of their might; they reflect the
last-minute desperation of those who are on the brink of disaster.
The Sino-Japanese war ignited by Japanese imperialism is intensifying
the contradictions between the imperialist powers and weakening the
imperialist camp as a whole- The more the Japanese imperialists
expand the war, the deeper they will fall into a bottomless pit. In
the end, the flames of war will engulf those who ignited them.
Today the national
and class contradictions between the Japanese imperialists and the
Korean people are becoming extremely acute. Workers, peasants, youth,
students, intellectuals, national capitalists, traders, men of
religion and, indeed, the entire Korean people, while cursing
Japanese imperialism as their sworn enemy, wait impatiently for the
day when the enemy is defeated and wage anti-Japanese struggles in
various parts of the country.
From ancient times,
the Korean people have been known as a valiant and resourceful people
who would rather die Fighting than surrender. Following the
occupation of Korea by Japanese imperialism, there took place in our
country various forms of resolute anti-Japanese struggle such as the
Righteous Volunteers’ Army Movement, the Independence Army
Movement, riots by workers and peasants and the anti-Japanese
movement of youth and students.
Now. in the 1930’s,
the anti-Japanese armed struggle, organized and led by us communists,
is dealing Japanese imperialism a telling blow and has raised the
anti-Japanese national-liberation struggle to a new stage. The path
traversed by our people since the Japanese imperialist occupation is
the path of national salvation, one attended by bloody struggles.
We Korean communists
must take advantage of all favourable internal and external
circumstances and promote the brilliant patriotic traditions of our
people. We must organize and mobilize the masses of people correctly
in the struggle to fulfil the solemn task of defeating Japanese
imperialism and regaining our lost country.
1. THE CHARACTER
OF THE KOREAN REVOLUTION
AT THE PRESENT
STAGE
To define the
character of the revolution correctly is of the utmost significance
for organizing and leading the revolutionary struggle correctly and
hastening the victory of the revolution. Only by correctly defining
the character of the revolution is it possible to map out scientific
strategy and tactics and, on this basis, confidently organize and
mobilize the masses of people for the revolutionary struggle.
Formerly, it was
asserted by some that the Korean revolution is a “socialist
revolution” at the present stage, and by others that it is a
“bourgeois revolution”. Both are wrong.
The character of a
revolution is determined by the basic tasks of that revolution and by
the socio-class relations at each stage. The view that the revolution
in our country is a “bourgeois revolution”, and the view that it
is a “socialist revolution” are Right and “Left” deviations
resulting from an incorrect understanding of the basic tasks of the
Korean revolution and the actual socio-class relations in our country
at the present stage. These views are hostile to the revolution and
aim to hinder the close unity of the revolutionary forces and divert
the spearhead of struggle.
Our country is a
semi-feudal, colonial society where because of Japanese imperialist
colonial rule, capitalist development is extremely retarded and
feudal relations of production are predominant.
Under these
circumstances, the basic tasks of the Korean revolution at the
present stage are to carry out the task of the anti-imperialist
national-liberation revolution to overthrow Japanese imperialist
colonial rule and regain our lost country and. at the same time, to
fulfil the task of the anti-feudal democratic revolution to eliminate
feudal relations and pave the way for the country’s development
along democratic lines. These two tasks are closely interrelated.
This is seen in the fact that the Japanese imperialist aggressors—the
colonial rulers—on the one hand and the landlords and the former
feudal bureaucrats—the champions of feudal relations—on the
other, are in collusion with each other.
Japanese imperialism
maintains its colonial system of rule in Korea with the help of its
agents, the comprador capitalists and the feudal landlords, and the
landlords retain the feudal relations of exploitation under its
patronage- Therefore, the struggle against Japanese imperialism and
the struggle against feudalism must be waged as an integral whole.
Hence, our
revolution at the present stage is an anti-imperialist, anti-feudal
democratic revolution.
What, then, are the
concrete targets of our revolution at the present stage?
In the Korean
revolution the main target is the aggressive forces of Japanese
imperialism. Colonial rule by Japanese imperialism is at the very
root of all the misery the Korean people are suffering and the
buttress of all social fetters in this country. The Japanese
imperialists have done everything possible to turn our country into a
permanent colony and enslave our people for all time. They wantonly
obliterate everything unique to the Korean nation and hamper
ferociously the revolutionary advance of the Korean working class and
the rest of the working masses. They have no scruples about
introducing into Korea all the decadence and corruption which they
think helpful to their colonial rule.
The overthrow of
Japanese imperialist colonial rule and the restoration of the
country’s independence are prerequisites for the national and class
liberation of our people and for social progress in our country. Our
people’s struggle against Japanese imperialism is aimed at
regaining their lost country and restoring their national rights in
all spheres of politics, the economy and culture and. at the same
time. at removing all the obstacles to national and social progress
so as to pave the way for national prosperity.
So the first and
foremost revolutionary task confronting Korean communists and the
revolutionary people is to organize and mobilize all the evolutionary
forces for the anti-Japanese national-liberation struggle.
Other targets of the
Korean revolution are pro-Japanese landlords, comprador capitalists,
traitors to the nation and pro-Japanese bureaucrats who put
themselves at the beck and call of the Japanese imperialists and
serve them as faithful pawns.
They all actively
help the colonial rule of Japanese imperialism in Korea and. in
partnership with it, oppress and exploit the people. They hamper the
people most viciously in their anti-Japanese struggle. In the
countryside they employ feudal methods based on the feudal ownership
of land, to oppress and exploit the peasants savagely with the
backing of Japanese imperialism, and in the towns they cruelly
exploit the workers in a capitalist as well as a feudal way. They
also play the role of transmitters of obsolete feudal customs and
slavish mentality and of guides helping Japanese imperialism to
stretch out its claws of colonial rule deeper into all fields.
Consequently, if
they are left untouched, the anti-Japanese nationalliberation
struggle can never be successful nor can the way be paved for the
democratic development of the country. Therefore, we must fight
against Japanese imperialism and, at the same time, wage a resolute
struggle against the pro-Japanese landlords, comprador capitalists,
traitors to the nation and pro-Japanese bureaucrats.
To be successful in
the revolutionary struggle we must have a correct understanding not
only of the character and targets of the revolution but also of its
motive force. In any revolution an important guarantee of victory is
the involvement of people of all classes and strata who are
interested in the revolution.
The motive force of
the Korean revolution at the present stage comprises the broad
anti-imperialist democratic forces such, as the workers, peasants,
youth, students, intellectuals and petty bourgeoisie. National
capitalists and religious people with a conscience can also join in
the anti-imperialist struggle.
The working class is
the leading class in the anti-imperialist, anti-feudal democratic
revolution, not to mention the future socialist revolution and the
period of building socialism and communism. This is because the
working class alone is the most advanced class that champions the
fundamental interests of the working masses, has the strongest
revolutionary spirit and sense of organization and is able to
organize and lead all working masses to victory in the revolution.
Our working class
has a more vital interest in the anti-imperialist national-liberation
revolution than any other class.
Under Japanese
imperialist colonial rule, the Korean working class lives in abject
misery. The Japanese imperialists have on the one hand retarded the
growth of our national economy to the extreme and, on the other, have
almost all industries in their grip. They are exploiting the Korean
workers with unheard-of cruelty. In pursuit of their aim of grinding
down our workers more ruthlessly, they are using every possible
method to intensify labour to the maximum and extending the working
day to a-s much as 12-1S hours. Even with such terrible conditions,
not all workers are provided with jobs. The Japanese imperialists are
pursuing the most wicked colonial predatory policy—employing cheap
juvenile and female labour and continually dismissing adult
workers—to secure the maximum colonial super-profits. Thus, many
workers are thrown out of work to form an industrial reserve army,
deprived even of the elementary right to live.
The Japanese
imperialists pay the Korean workers less than half the wages of the
Japanese workers for the same work. Worse still, they take back the
greater part of this in the name of “defence contribution”,
“government bonds”, “fines” and so on. Thus Korean workers
have been reduced to such a state that they can hardly eke out a
living in spite of their indescribable hard toil.
The living
conditions of our workers have worsened since the beginning of the
Sino-Japanese war. The Japanese imperialists “Forcibly drag our
workers to military construction sites for slave labour and do not
pay them even starvation wages. Finally, they kill them in cold blood
under the pretext of “protecting secrets”.
This intolerably
unfair and wretched situation our workers find themselves in has not
only roused their revolutionary spirit, but also made them move
forward towards organizing and tempering themselves as a class in
actual struggles and stand in the forefront of the anti-Japanese
national-liberation struggle.
An analysis of this
struggle which has gone on for more than 20 years in our country
reveals that it is only the working class that can lead the
anti-imperialist, anti-feudal democratic revolution.
The bourgeois and
petty-bourgeois intellectuals in our country have always vacillated
in face of the difficulties which have cropped up in the course of
the anti-Japanese national-liberation struggle because of the
weakness inherent in their class position, and they have attempted to
attain the independence of Korea not in a revolutionary way but in an
easy way. The “Incentive Production Association”, the “Yonjong
Association” and the “Singan Association” and so on which they
created allegedly for Korean independence were all national reformist
groupings which wanted reform and compromise instead of revolution
and struggle.
Therefore, if we are
to complete the anti-imperialist, anti-feudal democratic revolution,
it is of primary importance to ensure the leading role of the working
class, the class vitally interested in this revolution and struggling
dauntlessly in defiance of difficulties.
Together with the
working class, the peasantry also occupies an important place in the
Korean revolution. The peasantry is a dependable ally of the working
class and, like the working class, constitutes a main force of the
revolution.
In countries like
ours, where the peasantry accounts for the overwhelming majority of
the population, special importance should be attached to their
position in the revolution. Peasants comprise more than 80 per cent
of our population. In such circumstances, winning them over is a key
to the success of the revolution. If we fail to involve the peasants
in the revolution in such a country as ours, the end result will be
that the working class will be isolated, its leading role weakened
and, furthermore, the overwhelming majority of the population will be
left to the influence of the enemy.
One reason why our
peasantry holds an important place in the revolution is its numerical
preponderance. Another reason is that it also has a most vital
interest in the anti-imperialist, anti-feudal democratic revolution.
The colonial rule of
Japanese imperialism has condemned our peasants to abject poverty and
starvation. In the countryside the Japanese imperialists exploit the
peasants, keeping feudal landownership intact and using the landlords
as their agents. At the same time, they expropriate fertile land in
the name of “land surveys”, the “organization of the Oriental
Development Company”, and so on and so forth.
In 1914, shortly
after the Japanese imperialist occupation of Korea, more than 60 per
cent of Korean peasants tilled their own land, with tenant farmers
and hired hands accounting for only 35 per cent. But today, the
proportion of tenant farmers and hired hands has jumped to over 70
per cent, while that of peasants tilling their own land has dropped
below 18 Per cent. Thus the overwhelming majority of the Korean
peasants have been reduced to the status of the rural proletariat.
Driven from their hereditary farmlands, innumerable peasants are
tramping alien countries begging for food or are eking out a mere
existence subjected to inhuman treatment under the lash of the
Japanese gangsters, the landlords and the capitalists. As for those
peasants who are still lucky enough to work on their own land, most
of them are living on the bark of trees or on grass roots, being
unable to secure enough food required to live on because of heavy
taxation, and they live in constant anxiety lest they be evicted.
To meet their war
demands, the Japanese imperialists are pressganging rural young
people and middle-aged men indiscriminately for military duties or as
labour fur the construction of military installations. Every year
they plunder millions of sok of rice, which they ship to
Japan. This military burden imposed on the peasants had made their
plight absolutely intolerable.
In this way our
countryside has been turned into a shocking famine area, the like of
which has scarcely been seen anywhere in the world at any time in
history.
This dire distress
has triggered off the bitter wrath of our peasants against the
Japanese imperialists and the feudal landlords. They have stepped out
with determination onto the road of anti-imperialist, anti-feudal
struggle, realizing that revolution is the only way to make life
possible for them.
Disregarding this
situation, the “Left” opportunists and sectarian-flunkeys ha\e
underestimated the revolutionary spirit of the Korean peasantry,
alleging that the peasants are “two-faced” and that “the
peasantry can hardly stand by the revolution to the end because they
are a small-propertied class and so vacillate easily.”
This conflicts with
the realities and is in total opposition to the stand that must be
taken to strengthen the revolutionary forces.
Korean communists
should repudiate all the prejudices against and the wrong attitudes
towards our peasants and strive to win them over, so that the main
forces of the revolution will be built up on a solid basis.
Because of its
anti-imperialist, anti-feudal democratic nature, our revolution
requires that not only workers and peasants, but also youth,
students, intellectuals, members of the small-propertied classes,
national capitalists and honest religious believers be enlisted on
the side of the revolution. The fascist colonial rule of the Japanese
imperialists inevitably fills the youth, students, intellectuals,
members of the small-propertied classes, national capitalists and
honest religious believers with hatred against Japanese imperialism
and leads them to fling themselves into the fight for the
independence of the country and the liberation of the people.
In general, the
youth, students and intellectuals have a strong sense of justice and
are responsive to progressive ideas and the trend of the times
because they are searching for science and truth. Therefore, the
progressive elements among them are the first to learn
Marxism-Leninism, awaken and enlighten the workers and peasants and
thus play the role of pioneer leading them into the revolutionary
movement.
In particular, our
youth, students and intellectuals arc not only directly subjected to
national oppression and discrimination by Japanese imperialism hut
suffer the hard fate common to the whole nation caused by Japanese
imperialist colonial rule, and they are more keenly aware than anyone
else of the irrationality of our present-day society.
This is why they
have developed a national consciousness faster than others and have
stronger anti-imperialist sentiments. They are participating actively
in the national-liberation revolution, impelled by the progressive
spirit to fight for justice and inspired by the anti-imperialist,
anti-feudal democratic revolution to drive out the foreign
imperialist aggressor forces and make our backward country as
prosperous as others.
Many of them have
been struggling resolutely against the Japanese imperialists since
the first days of their occupation of Korea and have made great
contributions in rousing workers and peasants and other broad masses
who are against Japanese imperialism to revolutionary struggle. In
the period of preparing the anti-Japanese armed struggle, too,
revolutionary youth, students and intellectuals played a great role
in cementing the revolutionary ranks organizationally and
ideologically and in laying the mass base of the struggle. Joining
the ranks of the anti-Japanese guerrillas and the underground
revolutionary organizations, they are now fighting unyieldingly.
All this testifies
to the fact that they are playing an important role in the
revolutionary struggle.
But they cannot
themselves become a political force or assume a decisive role in the
revolutionary struggle because of their weakness, vacillation and
“do-it-only-halfway” nature. Only under the leadership of the
communists and the working class can they play a revolutionary role
in the anti-imperialist, anti-feudal democratic revolution.
As for the national
capitalists, they should also be viewed analytically. National
capitalists in colonial and semi-colonial countries have certain
characteristics different from the bourgeoisie of the capitalist
countries.
From a class point
of view, the national capitalists come under the heading of the
exploiting class but their economic activities are repressed by
foreign imperialists and their comprador capitalist allies and they
are always exposed to the threat of bankruptcy. Therefore, they have
an anti-imperialist spirit and a desire for national independence,
though not steadfast.
In particular,
national capitalists in our country are slipping rapidly towards
bankruptcy as a result of the fascist colonial terrorist rule of the
Japanese imperialists and the subsequent large-scale infiltration of
Japanese monopoly capital. Korean capital in 1928 accounted for over
26 per cent of the total industrial output value. But the figure
today is less than 10 percent. Even this figure is barely maintained
through sticking to such extremely secondary branches as rice
cleaning, cotton-will owing and so on.
Since they are
destined to become ruined under Japanese imperialist colonial rule
they have an interest in the anti-Japanese national-liberation
revolution and feel impelled to join it.
The comprador
capitalists are more afraid of the people’s anti-imperialist
revolutionary struggle than of imperialist aggression. The national
capitalists, however, resist imperialist aggression and support the
people’s anti-imperialist revolutionary struggle. To call the
national capitalists reactionary because of the acts of treachery to
the country and the people perpetrated by a handful of comprador
capitalists would only mean weakening the anti-imperialist
revolutionary forces. Drawing them into the anti-imperialist
national-liberation struggle is of great importance for isolating the
enemy to the maximum and strengthening the revolutionary forces.
As can be seen, at
the present stage of the Korean revolution its motive force consists
of the anti-Japanese forces drawn from broad sections of society. We
should assume a principled and magnanimous attitude towards all
classes and strata which can join the revolution. We should accept,
rally and organize them and in this way mobilize all the
anti-Japanese forces for the anti-imperialist national-liberation
struggle.
What, then, are the
tasks of the anti-imperialist, anti-feudal democratic revolution in
our country?
Needless to say, the
primary and fundamental task is to overthrow the Japanese imperialist
aggressors and all the reactionary forces—pro-Japanese landlords,
comprador capitalists and so on—who ally themselves with the
aggressors- When this task has been fulfilled, however, it does not
mean that the anti-imperialist, anti-feudal democratic revolution
will have been completed. It should be followed up by abolishing the
social and economic relations on which the Japanese imperialists and
their accomplices—the reactionary forces—rely in all branches of
politics, the economy and culture and by firmly establishing a new,
progressive democratic system so as to make sure that the old system
will never be revived.
Our foremost task
following the defeat of the Japanese imperialist aggressors is to set
up a democratic government.
The fundamental
question of the revolution is the question of power. The seizure of
power is indispensable for our people’s complete national and class
liberation and for the building of a prosperous, independent, and
sovereign state in our country. Through their bitter experience as
slaves in a ruined nation, the Korean people have come to realize
sharply what fate lies in store for a people as long as they are
without state power of their own. Indeed, there is no more important
task than that of establishing a state power genuinely our own.
In solving the
question of power it is very important to decide the form it should
take to fit in with the character and tasks of the revolution and the
class relationships in a given period.
What form of
democratic power, then, should we set up?
There can be two
forms of democratic power. One belongs to the category of bourgeois
power, i.e., democratic power led by the propertied classes. The
other comes under the category of proletarian power, i.e. democratic
power led by the working class.
The former champions
the interests of an extremely limited section of the population,
comprising the bourgeoisie and the petty bourgeoisie. It always
vacillates and is not steadfast, and therefore, cannot lead the
people to socialism and communism, the ultimate goal of the workers
and poor peasants.
In contrast, the
latter defends the fundamental interests of the workers and peasants,
carries out the tasks of the anti-imperialist, anti-feudal democratic
revolution in a thoroughgoing way and can lead the masses to
socialism and communism, their ultimate goal.
Therefore, the power
we will establish after the overthrow of Japanese imperialism is
popular democratic power coming under the category of proletarian
power, i.e., democratic power led by the working class.
After the
establishment of this power we must firmly rely on it in introducing
agrarian reform and other democratic reforms. The most important
thing here is to wipe out the remnants of Japanese imperialism root
and branch.
Even after the
destruction of the colonial ruling machine of Japanese imperialism,
this is essential in all branches of politics, the economy and
culture for ensuring the successful fulfilment of the tasks of the
anti-imperialist national-liberation revolution, the complete
political independence of the country and its development along
democratic lines after the elimination of all feudal forces.
To do away with the
remnant forces of Japanese imperialism, we should first eliminate all
the reactionary landlords, pro-Japanese elements and traitors to the
nation who constitute the mainstay of the colonial rule of Japanese
imperialism and actively defend its ruling machine, and leave no room
for them to manoeuvre.
Furthermore, all the
laws and rules concocted by the Japanese imperialists must be
declared invalid and new ones safeguarding the interests of the broad
masses formulated to establish a new order in state construction.
Survivals of ideology and way of life introduced by Japanese
imperialism should be abolished, public education developed in our
own language, both written and spoken, and our own national culture
restored.
Unless we destroy
the economic base of the Japanese imperialists and comprador
capitalists, we cannot pave the way for the independent development
of the economy, nor can we consolidate the political independence of
the country. We must nationalize the major industries—the mines,
factories, railways, transport, banks, communications, home and
foreign trade—held by the Japanese state and by Japanese and
comprador capitalists and make them the property of the whole people.
In this way, we will see to it that the major means of production are
used effectively to promote the independence and prosperity of the
country and the people’s welfare, and that the economic base is
laid for building a new society, free from exploitation and
oppression.
Along with these
anti-imperialist revolutionary tasks, we must carry out the tasks of
the anti-feudal democratic revolution in a thoroughgoing way.
Top priority here is
to solve the land problem correctly. Solution of this problem
constitutes the basic content of the anti-feudal democratic
revolution. This is because it can deliver the peasantry, the
overwhelming majority of the population, from feudal fetters and
feudal exploitation, radically improve their social and political
status and open up a wide avenue for social progress and the
development of the productive forces.
We must confiscate
the land held by the Japanese state and the Japanese and pro-Japanese
landlords and distribute it among the peasants who till it, and put
an end to all aspects of feudal landownership, such as tenancy and
the purchase and sale of land. The economic base of the feudal forces
should be so completely uprooted that it will never be able to revive
again.
Furthermore, we must
see to it that the people are emancipated from all kinds of social
discrimination and inequality, and, especially that women, who make
up half the population, are completely freed from feudal subjugation.
Along with this, the
working people must be assured political freedom and democratic
rights in all respects. Various social measures must be introduced to
protect the working people, such as the eight-hour working day,
labour protection and state insurance, and conditions must be
provided For all working people to participate in labour freely and
work to their hearts’ content under the protection of the state and
society.
The introduction of
all these social and economic reforms will constitute a profound
social revolution aimed at removing the consequences of the monstrous
colonial rule of Japanese imperialism and all the social evils and
fetters that have existed for thousands of years.
The communists
should be quick to realize the centuries-old desire of broad sections
of the working masses to cast off all social oppression and
exploitation, and encourage them to actively participate in the
revolutionary struggle with the utmost political enthusiasm and lead
them constantly along the road of revolution.
With the fulfilment
of the tasks of the anti-imperialist, anti-feudal revolution the
revolution will not have been completed. On carrying out the
anti-imperialist, anti-feudal democratic revolution, we communists
must continue the revolution and build a veritable paradise of
socialism and communism in this country, free from oppression and
exploitation.
2. IMMEDIATE
TASKS OF KOREAN COMMUNISTS
What are the
immediate tasks of the Korean communists for carrying the Korean
revolution forward to victory?
To begin with,
Korean communists must broaden and step up the anti-Japanese armed
struggle and lead it to victory, thus splendidly accomplishing the
sacred task of regaining our country.
In order to drive
out the imperialist aggressors and carry the national-liberation
revolution to completion, we must wage armed struggle resolutely.
Imperialism relies on the military power of counter-revolution to
establish its class rule and dominate its colonies and it will never
give up aggression and war until its counter-revolutionary military
power is utterly defeated.
Nobody can expect
the Japanese imperialists, the most brazen and piratical aggressors,
who have tasted the sweat and blood of the colonial people and boast
of the “might of great Imperial Japan”, to withdraw from Korea
meekly before their counter-revolutionary military power is routed.
That is why we
Korean communists have organized and waged armed struggle against the
Japanese imperialist robbers since the beginning of the 1930’s,
delivering heavy blows at their counter-revolutionary military power.
The need to broaden
and step up the anti-Japanese armed struggle has become a matter of
greater urgency today.
After igniting the
Sino-Japanese war, the Japanese imperialists sent a large force to
the front in the Huabei region of China, aiming to win their war of
aggression against the continent by lightning warfare tactics.
Meanwhile, to make their “home front safe”, they are desperately
carrying out “mopping-up” operations against our revolutionary
armed forces and intensifying the suppression and plunder of the
Korean people.
Frantic expansion of
the Japanese imperialists’ aggressive war only brings nearer their
ruin and creates favourable conditions for the struggle of the Korean
communists to hasten the liberation in our country.
Under these
conditions, we must definitely broaden and step up the anti-Japanese
armed struggle to defeat the rampaging Japanese imperialists and
realize the noble historic cause of regaining our lost country at the
earliest possible date.
This is also
necessary to ensure the continued upsurge of the Korean revolution as
a whole.
The anti-Japanese
armed struggle is the main stream of the anti-Japanese
national-liberation struggle in our country and the highest form of
this struggle. Stepping it up is essential for the successful
development of the various forms of anti-Japanese struggle being
waged by all sections of the people, including workers, peasants,
youth and students.
Therefore, the
Korean communists must do this to bring about a new upswing in the
entire Korean revolution.
To broaden and
develop the anti-Japanese armed struggle, we must first increase the
strength of the Korean People’s Revolutionary Army and intensify
its military and political activities.
The KPRA is not only
a revolutionary armed force directly engaged in the anti-Japanese
armed struggle, hut also a revolutionary army of organizers and
propagandists whose task is to educate and organize the broad masses
and in this way expand and further the Korean revolution as a whole.
Strengthening the
KPRA politically and militarily is a decisive guarantee for stepping
up the anti-Japanese armed struggle and increasing its influence in
every way.
In strengthening the
KPRA it is most important to raise the political and ideological
level of all the commanders and soldiers.
The source of the
revolutionary army’s invincible might lies in its political and
ideological superiority. Because of its commanders and soldiers’
intense loyally to their country and class, the KPRA is invincible
and is capable of annihilating any army of the exploiter classes.
However, we cannot give full scope to the essential superiority of a
revolutionary army unless we work steadfastly to raise the political
and ideological level of the officers and men. Therefore, we must
steadily equip all commanders and soldiers with a revolutionary world
outlook, so that they will be able to pursue the arduous and
prolonged revolutionary struggle with an indomitable fighting spirit.
All the commanders
and soldiers of the KPRA are revolutionary fighters ready to give
their all for the restoration of the motherland and the emancipation
of the people. However, it we tail to keep building up their
confidence in the victory of the revolution under present conditions
when struggle is becoming more difficult and the enemy is stepping up
his ideological offensive, we cannot increase the KPRA’s political
and ideological might.
This sets us the
task of continuing to strengthen political and ideological education
among them. First we must teach them Marxist-Leninist principles. At
the same time, we must firmly arm them with the lines, strategy and
tactics of the Korean revolution. This will help them acquire a firm
revolutionary world outlook. Furthermore, we should get them to adopt
the revolutionary mass viewpoint, the revolutionary style of work, a
sense of revolutionary comradeship and voluntary discipline. This is
the wav to turn all of them into staunch revolutionary fighters
convinced of victory in the revolution and filled with the lofty
revolutionary spirit to devote their youth and lives wholly to the
sacred task of restoring the country. And this is the way to turn
them into true educators of the people and skilful organizers of the
mass movement.
The political and
ideological superiority of the KPRA can become ever greater when
combined with powerful military technical might. The Japanese
imperialist aggressor troops are the most savage and crafty invaders,
armed to the teeth with modern military hardware. If we are to defeat
such an enemy the KPRA must be thoroughly prepared politically and
ideologically. It must also be armed with excellent military
technique and superb guerrilla tactics.
While constantly
expanding and strengthening the units of the KPRA, we must avail
ourselves of every opportunity to promote military education and
training, so that all military cadres and soldiers become expert in
handling weapons and equipment and well-versed in guerrilla tactics.
By strengthening the
KPRA politically and militarily in this way, we will be able to train
it to become a revolutionary force capable of crushing the numerical
superiority of the enemy with our political and ideological
superiority, and his military and technical superiority with our
superiority in guerrilla tactics.
Strengthening the
KPRA politically and militarily must go simultaneously with
increasing its military and political activities.
The KPRA units
should launch a large-scale offensive behind the lines of the
Japanese imperialist aggressor troops, who are intent on their war of
aggression against China proper, put them in a passive position and
create a situation definitely in favour of the Korean revolution.
To this end, we
should closely and actively combine large and small unit operations
in keeping with the balance of forces between the enemy and our side
and the changes in the situation; extend the scope of our armed
struggle deep into our homeland; and in conjunction with this,
organize a nationwide war of resistance. When the vigorous military
and political activities of the KPRA and the nationwide war of
resistance are combined, the Japanese imperialist robbers will be
defeated and the country’s independence will certainly be restored.
Secondly, Korean
communists must organize and conduct more vigorously the
anti-Japanese national united front movement and unite closely a
wider segment of the anti-Japanese patriotic forces on a nationwide
scale, so that the revolutionary forces secure superiority over the
counter-revolutionary forces.
This is a powerful
political movement aimed at rallying all the patriotic forces of
Korea opposing Japanese imperialism around the communists so as to
turn the balance of forces decisively in favour of the revolution. It
occupies a very important place in our anti-Japanese
national-liberation struggle.
Revolution is for
the sake of the masses and it emerges victorious only when broad
sections of the people participate in it. Winning over the masses,
uniting them into a political force and relying on their
inexhaustible strength is therefore a fundamental principle
communists and revolutionaries must abide by in their revolutionary
struggle.
Winning over the
anti-Japanese forces in all walks of life and forming them into an
organized body has been an important task of the Korean communists
from the beginning of the anti-Japanese national-liberation struggle.
On the basis of
scientific assessment of the subjective and objective conditions
created in the development of our revolution, we set forth the line
on forming an anti-Japanese national united front already at the
beginning of the 1930’s and strove consistently to implement it.
And at last, in May 1936, we formed the Association for the
Restoration of the Fatherland, the First organization of the
anti-Japanese national united front in our country.
Within a very short
space of time, the ARF has grown in scope and strength to become a
powerful underground revolutionary organization and a most
broad-based mass organization, drawing a good many of the
anti-Japanese masses under its wing.
The masses with
anti-Japanese leanings, including workers and peasants, and patriotic
elements of all strata in Manchuria and the homeland widely embraced
by the anti-Japanese national united front, are now waging a vigorous
revolutionary struggle, upholding the Ten-Point Programme of the ARF.
Its lower bodies
have been formed and are active over a vast area of Manchuria and in
major cities and villages at home, including those in North and South
Hamgyong, North and South Pyongan and Kangwon Provinces. And so a
ramified organizational network is being formed to cover the whole
country.
In our country
today, not only workers and peasants, but many patriotic youths,
students and intellectuals support the Ten-Point Programme and are
launching determined action against Japanese imperialism. Meanwhile,
they are volunteering for our army by the score. All forces who love
the country and nation and aspire to democracy, including small and
middle entrepreneurs, small tradesmen, handicrafts-men and
nationalists, are blended into a single stream of anti-Japanese
struggle under communist leadership.
Particular mention
should be made here of the Korean Independence Army, a nationalist
armed force. This army, caught in the snare of conservatism, rejected
alliance with the communists for a long time. But upon learning the
Declaration and Programme of the ARF it earnestly supported them and
expressed its readiness to form an alliance with us. Some of its
units have already participated in joint operations with our units.
This concerted action helps to strengthen unity and holds out the
prospects of a more solid allied front.
In addition, many
progressive followers of the Chondo Religion in the homeland,
opposing the pro-Japanese activities of the reactionary Choe Rin
clique, have also joined the struggle for the nation’s common
cause. Upholding the Ten-Point Programme of the ARE and responding to
its appeal, they are actively supporting and encouraging our
anti-Japanese armed struggle. Dozens of their representatives came to
see us and pledged that they would fight with us on the same front to
win back our country. They are now offering us aid. both moral and
material. The ARE has succeeded in winning over a great many Chondo
believers in a number of counties in the northern part of Korea and
its influence among progressive believers across the country is
increasing daily.
Today the Korean
people see the bright dawn of national liberation in the
anti-Japanese armed struggle and in the ARE movement which is growing
under the immediate influence of this struggle. They are rising
bravely in the anti-Japanese revolutionary struggle, certain that
victory will be theirs.
The present internal
and external situation urgently demands that we Korean communists
expand and develop the anti-Japanese national united front movement.
Confronted with a
crisis in which their colonial rule might collapse through our
people’s anti-Japanese national-salvation war of resistance, the
Japanese imperialist aggressors are intensifying their colonial
suppression and exploitation of the Korean people to an unprecedented
degree, A huge military force and every conceivable means of
repression are geared to this end. As the enemy’s suppression
intensifies, the anti-Japanese spirit of the Korean people surges
ever higher and their revolutionary advance becomes most active.
To cope with this
situation, the Korean communists must keep abreast with the upsurge
of anti-Japanese spirit among the masses and strive to mobilize all
the anti-Japanese patriotic forces of the people for the
national-liberation struggle.
Pressing forward
with the anti-Japanese national united front movement is also an
important task for the development of world revolution.
In imperialist
countries such as Japan, Germany and Italy which have embarked upon
full-scale fascistization, fascist dictatorship has deprived the
people of democratic freedoms and all political rights and the
revolutionary movement is undergoing a severe trial. The danger of
fascistization is growing daily on a worldwide scale. Communists are
countering this situation with an anti-fascist popular front movement
and making positive efforts to organize and mobilize the broad masses
in it.
In this situation,
strengthening our anti-Japanese national united front movement is the
way we can contribute to weakening the allied international fascist
forces and hastening the victory of ail the inter-national democratic
forces, and help turn the international climate in favour of our own
revolution.
Korean communists
must work energetically to deepen and advance this movement in
conformity with the new demands of the revolution.
It is most important
here to make the ARF organizations more militant and expand and
strengthen its ranks.
The ARF is a united
front organization formed by the communists in a situation where a
Marxist-Leninist party is still absent in our country. At the same
time, it is a powerful underground revolutionary organization.
Therefore, by making
its organizations militant and expanding and strengthening its ranks
it will be possible to rally the anti-Japanese patriotic forces
across the country in a unified way and, at the same time, to provide
the Korean revolutionary movement with communist leadership.
In order to
strengthen the anti-Japanese national united front movement we must
expand the ARF’s organizational network deep into the homeland and
actively organize the broad anti-Japanese masses in it.
We must also
intensify its organizational and political activities in every way,
while making its organizations militant and skilfully employing
flexible methods of work suitable to underground activities. Under
the severe conditions in which the enemy is stepping up his
suppressive measures, we should not give every organization the same
name, but give hem various names according to the actual conditions
in each locality and the characteristics and political level of the
people in all walks of life. Each organization should adopt various
forms of activity in accordance with the actual conditions. This will
make the ARF a more powerful revolutionary underground organization
of a mass character, one that is active and deeply rooted among the
broad masses of people.
In order to further
expand and develop the ARF movement communist leadership must be
established over the entire movement. Only when this leadership is
Firmly ensured can the anti-Japanese national united front movement
be consistently pushed forward in conformity with the interests of
all the people, including the working class, and develop successfully
in accordance with revolutionary strategy and tactics. We communists,
therefore, should firmly establish ourselves in leading positions in
the organizations of the ARF and give them revolutionary guidance.
In leading the
movement, communists should clearly recognize any Right and “Left”
tendencies and deal thoroughly with them.
If we are to unite
people of all strata we must combine the revolutionary mass line
correctly with the class line. We must guard against both “Left”
and Right tendencies—such as establishing contacts only with
workers and peasants, getting caught in the snare of class prejudice,
and in the name of the united front, linking up with anyone
unconditionally. If we draw only workers and peasants into the ARF
organizations and exclude the rest of the anti-Japanese patriotic
forces we may lose great masses of people with anti-Japanese
sentiments. On the other hand, if we accept everybody who comes
along, regardless of political considerations, alien elements of
different shades will sneak in.
We should therefore
stick firmly to the principle of winning over as many of the
patriotic, democratic forces opposing Japanese imperialism as
possible and, at the same time. of completely isolating pro-Japanese
elements, traitors to the nation and all other alien and hostile
elements.
In leading the
anti-Japanese national united front movement it is also important to
combine solidarity with struggle within its ranks in a proper manner.
Proceeding from
their own class interests, the anti-Japanese masses of various strata
take different positions and attitudes in the struggle against
Japanese imperialism. Because of their class limitations many of them
are irresolute and waver in the anti-Japanese struggle, even though
they hate Japanese imperialism. If we do not help them to overcome
their vacillations they will be unable to cope with the difficulties
that crop up in the course of the struggle and to keep a firm
anti-Japanese position and, in the end, will become turncoats and
cause grave harm to the revolution.
Communists must
therefore strengthen solidarity with them while unfolding a
principled struggle to overcome their indecision and weak-nesses.
This will preserve the ranks of the united front and bring its
strength into full play even in a situation where the enemy is
intensifying its military and ideological offensives.
Thirdly, Korean
communists should strive to strengthen solidarity with the
international revolutionary forces.
This is the
proletarian internationalist duty of Korean communists and an
important guarantee for strengthening the world’s revolutionary
forces, isolating the Japanese imperialists internationally and
consolidating our own revolutionary forces.
Particularly now
when the Japanese imperialists have occupied Manchuria, are
conducting a large-scale aggressive war against China and are making
desperate preparations for war against the Soviet Union, it is a
matter of urgency to safeguard the Soviet Union and strengthen
solidarity with the Chinese revolutionary forces for the advance of
both the world revolution and the Korean revolution.
Japanese imperialism
is the enemy not only of the Korean people but also of the Chinese
people. Only when militant solidarity between the peoples of Korea
and China is strengthened and the anti-Japanese united front is
cemented in their struggle against the common enemy, Japanese
imperialism, can we deal it heavier political and military blows and
hasten the victory of the Korean and Chinese revolutions.
It is on this
principle that we Korean communists have fought together on the
common battle front in firm unity with the anti-Japanese forces of
the Chinese people from the earliest days of the anti-Japanese armed
struggle and, moreover, we have made great efforts to unite with all
Chinese anti-Japanese units that could possibly add up to a big force
in the war against Japan.
There are various
Chinese anti-Japanese units. Among them are those under the influence
of the Chinese Communist Party, and remnants of the former
Northeastern Army under the Kuomintang which, impelled by the
Manchurian Incident”, rose to fight under an anti-Japanese
save-the-nation banner. There are also anti-Japanese armed units
formed by peasant rebels such as the “Red Spear Society” and
“Broad Sword Society”.
The Korean
communists long ago formed an Anti-Japanese United Army with the
anti-Japanese guerrilla units led by the Chinese” communists and
have waged a dynamic joint anti-Japanese struggle.
Moreover, we have
striven to form an anti-Japanese allied front with the National
Salvation Army and Self-Defence Army formed out of the remnant units
of the former Northeastern Army and with all other Chinese
nationalist anti-Japanese units organized by peasant rebels. Right
after the September 18 Incident28 we organized and perseveringly
waged an active and self-sacrificing struggle, forming anti-Japanese
soldiers’ committees and special detachments, dispatching political
workers to these units and helping the special detachments increase
their role in every way. These steps helped to overcome their
obstinacy in views, indecision and political ignorance and to form a
united front.
The KPRA has fought
shoulder to shoulder with the Chinese nationalist anti-Japanese units
in many successful joint operations such as the attack on Dongning
county seat20, inflicting powerful blows on Japanese imperialism.
These battles demonstrated the united strength of the peoples of
Korea and China and laid a firm foundation for all-round alliance and
unity of action with these units.
In the second half
of the 1930’s when the main units of the KPRA advanced to the
Paekdu-san guerrilla base, we also persuaded many Chinese nationalist
anti-Japanese units discouraged by the enemy’s “punitive”
operations to join the Anti-Japanese United Army through
revolutionary education or successful large-scale joint operations.
(We not only sent political cadres to them but supplied them with
provisions. clothes and weapons though we ourselves were in need.)
This raised their morale and inspired them with confidence in
victory, leading them to 1’ighl actively on the anti-Japanese
front.
There are some among
us, however, who are not successful in forming an allied front with
the Chinese nationalist anti-Japanese units because of a narrow
outlook. If we do not carry on effective work with these units, they
will be unable to withstand the enemy’s relentless “punitive”
operations and are liable to waver, surrender and turn traitor or
lake the backward step of becoming local bandits. Therefore, we must
not ignore these units but strengthen our allied front with all of
them, even if they do waver and are not steadfast; we must give them
positive leadership, and continue to expand the anti-Japanese war so
that we will isolate Japanese imperialism to the maximum and add
muscle to our anti-Japanese armed forces.
In our work with the
Chinese anti-Japanese units the principle we should continue to
follow is that we lead them not to surrender to Japanese imperialism
but to fight, holding aloft the anti-Japanese save-the-nation banner,
and not to encroach upon the interests of the people but to
confiscate the property of the Japanese, their lackeys and
pro-Japanese Chinese landlords and use it to obtain military
supplies.
On the basis of
steadily consolidating unity with the Chinese communists, we must
unite with all Chinese anti-Japanese units and all revolutionary
forces in China, thus forming a broader Korean-Chinese anti-Japanese
united front.
In strengthening
solidarity with the international revolutionary forces, it is also
important to defend the Soviet Union, the motherland of the
proletariat of the world.
The Soviet Union,
founded by Lenin, is the first socialist state and the first slate of
the proletarian dictatorship which truly champions the interests of
the workers and peasants. It affords the first example of the victory
of Marxism-Leninism and stands as the great bulwark of the
international working class.
It is the
internationalist duty of the working class of all countries to
protect the great Soviet Union. Revolution in each country develops
and is defended on the basis of the militant unity and solidarity of
the international working class. The growing might of the Soviet
Union, the socialist state, is a source of great inspiration to the
working class of the world and to the oppressed peoples resisting
foreign imperialism and their own ruling classes. Therefore, we must
struggle to defend the Soviet Union, the only state of the
proletariat and the first of its kind in the world, thereby defending
the world revolution and creating a more favourable international
climate for the Korean revolution.
Under the slogan
“Defend the Soviet Union with arms!” we must ceaselessly attack
the Japanese imperialists in the rear to strike constant terror in
the hearts of these bandits and frustrate their aggressive
machinations against the Soviet Union at every step.
In future, too, in
keeping with the requirements of the newly created situation and
raising the banner of proletarian internationalism, we must be active
in defending the Soviet Union, consolidate the anti-Japanese united
front with the Chinese people and strengthen solidarity with the
international working class and all oppressed colonial peoples. We
must direct the spearhead of attack at the Japanese imperialist
aggressors, the chief enemy of the Korean people, and shatter their
ambition to dominate Asia.
Fourthly. Korean
communists must take energetic steps to found a revolutionary,
Marxist-Leninist party in our country.
A Marxist-Leninist
party is the vanguard of the working class and the General Staff in
revolution- Only when we have a party of the working class can we
rally broad masses interested in the revolution, successfully
organize and mobilize them for revolutionary struggle and lead them
to victory with correct strategy and tactics.
The communist
movement began early in our country under the influence of the
October Socialist Revolution. Our first Communist Party was founded
in 1925.
Our working masses,
who had long languished under Japanese imperialist colonial rule and
feudal oppression, welcomed the founding of the Communist Party of
Korea whose mission was to defend the interests of the have-nots, and
they put their expectations and hopes in it. However, due to
fundamental weaknesses and limitations, it could not satisfy these
expectations and hopes-
The Party failed to
take root among the working class and other broad sections of the
people. It consisted mainly of bourgeois and petty-bourgeois
intellectuals and show-off Marxists with a shaky class position. To
make matters worse, it could not achieve unity of its ranks owing to
the scramble for hegemony among the sectarians who had wormed their
way to the top. Consequently, unable to overcome the Japanese
imperialist suppression and the subversive activities of the
sectarians, it was dissolved three years after it was founded.
Under these
circumstances, the Korean communists are confronted with the most
urgent task of founding a revolutionary, Marxist-Leninist party,
drawing serious lessons from the communist movement in the 1920-s.
However, we cannot
create a revolutionary party the way sectarians did in the past, when
a small number of communists got together, without any organizational
and ideological preparation, set up a “party centre” and
proclaimed the founding of the party.
To found a
revolutionary, Marxist-Leninist party, solid organizational and
ideological groundwork must be laid before anything else.
We have achieved
considerable success in this respect through strenuous effort.
Although we have not
announced the party centre yet, we have set up party organizations
and underground revolutionary organizations of various kinds in the
units of the KPRA and among workers and peasants at home and abroad,
and provided them with a unified leadership. In the KPRA units a
system of leading party organizations based on the principle of
democratic centralism is now established and party organizational
life is functioning regularly. In the areas along the Tuman-gang and
Amnok-gang Rivers, party organizations have also been formed among
broad masses of workers and peasants, and a unified leadership is
ensured for them. In particular, an active struggle has been waged to
form Communist Party organizations in the homeland in line with the
policy of making independent preparations for founding a party, and
significant success has been registered.
In the flames of the
armed struggle and in the course of the underground revolutionary
struggle over the past few years, we have also reared the finest sons
and daughters of the workers, peasants and other working people as
communists, thereby building up the organizational core for founding
a party.
At the same time, we
have waged an energetic struggle to overcome the sectarianism left
over from the communist movement of the 1920’s, with the result
that the sects have now been basically removed from our ranks, unity
of ideology and purpose has been brought about and solidarity
achieved within the revolutionary ranks.
The Korean
communists, basing themselves on the successes achieved so far,
should endeavour to found a Marxist-Leninist party as soon as
possible- To this end, we should push forward organizational and
ideological preparations more vigorously on a nationwide scale.
The important tasks
of the Korean communists in this work are:
First. to expand
party organizations in the units of the KPRA and in the revolutionary
mass organizations, including the ART’ and the Anti-Japanese Youth
League30, in the homeland and in the areas along the Tuman-gang and
Amnok-gang Rivers, rally communists under a unified organizational
system and steel them in militancy through party organizational life.
Now that a sound
centre of leadership has been formed for the Korean revolution, many
communists of the new generation have been brought up- and the ARF
and various other revolutionary organizations have taken root among
the broad masses, it is an urgent task for us to expand party
organizations and unite the communists. The successful fulfilment of
this task will enable party organizations to take deep root among the
masses including workers and peasants and, on this basis, guarantee a
firm unified leadership for the Korean revolution.
In strict accordance
with the principle of independence in our preparations for the
founding of a party, we must form party cells and groups wherever
possible in units and regions and unite all communists
organizationally. In particular, we should foster a revolutionary
leading core in the main industrial areas and in farming and fishing
villages in the homeland and expand the network of the ARF
organizations by ourselves. On this basis, we should form party
groups and cells among the workers and peasants and put them under a
unified organizational system.
In view of the
historical lessons of the early communist movement, we should
strictly adhere to the policy of building party organizations from
the bottom. Only then can we draw on the class consciousness of the
broad working masses and accept into the party those progressive
elements of worker and peasant origin who have been steeled and
prepared in action, and establish a most revolutionary and militant
party with a sound mass basis.
The party
organizations in the KPRA units and in the different regions should
strictly abide by the principle of democratic centralism in all their
activities and increase both their fighting capacity and their
vanguard role.
Every party member
should be faithful in his organizational life and steel himself in
actual struggle to become an indefatigable revolutionary fighter, a
communist.
Secondly, to train
large numbers of the best elements of worker and peasant origin in
the revolutionary struggle to become the revolutionary core and thus
build up a sound organizational backbone for founding a party.
In the tight of the
bitter lessons of the early communist movement in our country, this
is vital for the consolidation and development of the party we are
going to create.
We must do active
work in recruiting the finest sons and daughters of the workers and
peasants into the People’s Revolutionary Army and, in the flames of
the armed struggle, bring them up to be communist core elements ever
faithful to the revolution, to be the organizational backbone of the
party. We must accept into the party those who are politically aware
and steeled in militancy in the underground revolutionary struggle
and train them to become revolutionary core elements.
Furthermore, we must
unite revolutionary workers, peasants and other broad masses of
people with anti-Japanese sentiments in mass organizations, such as
the Association for the Restoration of the Fatherland, the
Anti-Japanese Youth League, the Anti-Japanese Association and the
Women’s Association, and train them to become ardent communists
through the actual struggle against Japanese imperialism.
Thirdly, to continue
the all-out struggle against sectarianism, prevent it from
penetrating party and other revolutionary organizations and thus
firmly ensure the purity of the communist ranks and unity in ideology
and purpose.
Unless sectarianism
is completely overcome it is impossible to guarantee firm unity among
the communists, achieve community of ideology, purpose and action
based on the unified line, strategy and tactics of the Korean
revolution and accomplish the historical task of founding a party.
Sectarianism in our
country arose with intellectuals of bourgeois, petty-bourgeois and
ruined gentry origin who, taking advantage of the revolutionary tide
rising under the impact of the October Socialist Revolution, wormed
their way into the ranks of the working-class movement under the
cloak of Marxism.
Although they talked
about communism and the emancipation of the working class, the
sectarians utilized the labour movement as a means of gaining Fame
and high position and realizing careerist, political ambitions.
As soon as they had
sneaked into the working-class movement, they split off into parties
of five or groups of three for sectarian purposes and formed sects
such as the Tuesday group, the M-L group and the Seoul-Shanghai
group. Without any political views or theoretical basis, they
continued sectarian feuds to spread the influence of their own
particular group and obtain hegemony. In the end, they destroyed the
Party.
Even after the Party
was dissolved, they continued their sectarian feuds here in Manchuria
under the slogan of “Party reconstruction”.
Driven by the desire
to spread their groups’ influence and gain fame and high position,
the sectarians organized the adventurist and misguided May 30
Uprising. This incident resulted in exposing the underground
revolutionary organizations, caused the death of many communists and
other revolutionary people and did great harm to our communist
movement. Moreover, the sectarian-flunkeys, with the backing of the
national chauvinists, used the anti-”Minsaeng-dan” struggle for
their own evil sectarian purpose and committed grave criminal
acts—sacrificing many fine communists and revolutionaries and
creating alienation, enmity and distrust within the revolutionary
ranks, thereby weakening their unity and solidarity.
If we had not
corrected the “Left” error in the anti-”Minsaeng-dan”
struggle promptly through a principled struggle against the
sectarian-flunkeys and national chauvinists, things would have come
to a serious pass beyond remedy in the communist and revolutionary
movement.
Sects have now been
removed from our ranks in the main. But former sectarians who
backslid to become national reformists and even spies for Japanese
imperialism are now engaged in all manner of schemes to disrupt the
communist ranks from within.
Therefore, we should
first make party members, soldiers of the KPRA and the broad
revolutionary masses thoroughly aware of the crimes committed by the
sectarian-flunkeys who have inflicted tremendous harm on our
communist and revolutionary movement. By so doing, we will get them
to maintain a constant and high degree of vigilance and hatred for
the class enemy, to prevent the penetration of sectarianism and to
detect and smash the sectarian-flunkeys’ subversive and wrecking
activities in good time.
In addition to this,
we must arm all party members and soldiers of the KPRA with
Marxism-Leninism and with the line, strategy and tactics for the
Korean revolution and thereby ensure community of ideology, will and
action in the entire ranks.
This is the
prerequisite for fully guaranteeing the purity as well as the unity
of ideology and will of the communist ranks, and for preparing a
sound organizational and ideological groundwork for the founding of a
Party.
The Korean
communists should carry out these main tasks faithfully in their
preparations for founding a party and in this way accomplish the
historical cause of establishing a revolutionary, Marxist-Leninist
party at the earliest possible date.
* *
*
The Korean
communists should, above all, adhere to a firm independent position
in order to crown their revolutionary tasks in success.
An independent
position means the fundamental stand of the communists—having
confidence in the strength of their own people and responsibly
carrying through the revolution in their country by their own
efforts. Only when they maintain a firm independent position in the
revolutionary struggle can they formulate revolutionary lines and
policies corresponding to the actual conditions in their country,
safeguard and implement them thoroughly and fight to the last for
their country’s revolution no matter what the difficulties and
hardships.
The masters of the
Korean revolution are the Korean people and the Korean communists.
The Korean revolution must be carried out by the Korean people under
the leadership of the Korean communists.
We should never
forget the bitter lesson of the past when the communist and
revolutionary movement in our country suffered severe damage and
experienced many twists and turns because the sectarians took to
flunkeyism.
The Korean
communists must carry on revolutionary struggle by their own faith
and build up their own strong revolutionary forces and firmly rely on
them in leading the Korean revolution to victory.
Revolution in each
country is a link in the chain of world revolution and a component
part of it. It is carried on with powerful assistance from the world
revolutionary forces. It is the internationalist duty of the
communists of each country to fight energetically for the triumph of
the world revolution.
Powerful assistance
from the world anti-imperialist forces is very important in our
national-liberation struggle against the military-feudal Japanese
imperialist aggressors who are allied with world imperialism.
But no matter how
great the assistance of the international revolutionary forces may
be, the Korean communists cannot lead the Korean revolution to
victory if they fail to map out the line, strategy and tactics for
the revolution to fit the realities of their country and. on this
basis, solidly build up their own revolutionary forces.
The Korean
communists will continue to strengthen solidarity with the
international revolutionary forces, reject flunkeyism and Right and
“Left” opportunism, take a firm independent stand in leading the
Korean revolution, and fulfil the historical cause of national
liberation without fail.
Victory and glory
belong to the Korean communists who are fighting unyieldingly under
the unfurled banner of the Korean revolution.
Long live the Korean
revolution!
Long live the world
revolution!
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