Inheriting the spirit of the May resistance
On
May 18 1980, students and citizens of Gwangju launched a nationwide
resistance against the US colonial rule and fascist rule of the military
junta.
Memorial
services for the victims of the May 18 Gwangju Popular Uprising took
place in Gwangju and different parts of south Korea on the lapse of 37
years after the uprising.
A
candlelight-eve for honoring the memory of the martyrs of the uprising
was held in Gwangju on May 17, with the attendance of more than 5 000
people including bereaved families, religionists and members of civic
organizations.
The
participants sang in chorus the song "March for Dear Ones" and a
performance depicting the final resistance on May 27 1980 was given.
All
military fascist gangsters including Chun Doo-hwan who slaughtered the
martyrs, those who took Baek Nam-gi’s life and those who bred ferry Sewol disaster should be punished, the executive chairman of the April 16 Family Association stressed at the meeting.
They hardened their determination to join hands in the action to uproot all social evils left by the former regime.
On May 18, a commemorative meeting took place in Mangwol-dong cemetery of Gwangju with at least 10 000 people in attendance.
The
truth of Gwangju massacre should be brought to light and social
democracy should be realized in the spirit of the May 18 resistance and
the candlelight revolution, they asserted.
Similar events were held in Seoul, Busan, Daegu and other parts of south Korea.
The
speakers at a rally held in Gwanghwamun Plaza said that the May
resistance in 1980 developed into the candlelight revolution to unseat
the Park group eventually.
Nearly 40 years have passed since the uprising, but the wish of the south Korean martyrs has not yet come true.
The
south Korean people would surely build a new society where the popular
masses are masters of it through more energetic action, wiping out the
US and its sycophant forces.
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