Hong Beom-do


Hong Beom-do, was a Korean independence activist. Hong was born in Chasong, North Pyongan.

Biography

Hong was originally a hunter who lived in Korea during the Joseon Dynasty. In September 1907, Japan, as part of its colonial policies in Korea passed a law that required hunters to turn in their hunting guns. The intent was to weaken the Korean resistance. The law effectively ruined the ability of hunters to pursue their traditional livelihood, which resulted in further anger and resentment. Among the angered hunters was Hong. In response to the outlawing of hunters' guns, Hong organized a resistance force named the Righteous Army. The Righteous Army carried out a number of battles against Japanese garrisons around the Bukcheong area, using hit-and-run attacks.
In 1910, Hong moved to Gando, China. After the March First Movement in Korea, Hong became a Commander-in-Chief in the Korean Independence Army. In August 1919, Hong crossed the Tumen River with 200 soldiers. Once across the river and in Korea, Hong successfully attacked the Japanese troops in Hyesanjin and Kapsan. Hong and his soldiers would cross the Tumen River twice more, each time carrying out successful attacks against the occupying Japanese forces.
In June 1920, Hong and his army fought against the Imperial Japanese forces, killing hundreds of Japanese soldiers in the battles of Samdunja and Bongodong. In October of the same year, working together with Kim Jwa-jin, Hong again carried out an attack against Japanese troops at what is known as the.
The following year Hong and his forces were in the Soviet Union, seeking refuge from the Japanese forces who hunted him. In June, the Soviet military enacted a policy by Joseph Stalin to secure Russian borders near China and Korea. Concerned that the Japanese Army might enter the Soviet Union in pursuit of Hong and other Korean independence fighters, the Soviet Union disarmed Korean troops. The loss of weapons and safe areas for Hong and his forces resulted in the collapse of the Korean Independence Army. Hong, still hoping to oppose the Japanese in Korea, chose to join the Russian red army.
In 1937, Stalin's deportation of Koreans in the Soviet Union took place. Originally conceived in 1926, initiated in 1930, and carried through in 1937, this was the first mass transfer of an entire nationality in the Soviet Union. Almost the entire Soviet population of ethnic Koreans were forcefully moved from the Russian Far East to unpopulated areas of the Kazakh SSR and the Uzbek SSR in October 1937. Hong was among those Koreans forcibly relocated to Kazakhstan. It is estimated that 40,000 deported Koreans died in 1937 and 1938 from starvation, exposure and difficulties adapting to their new environment. Hong died in Kazakhstan in 1943.
On October 25, 1963, Hong was posthumously awarded the Republic of Korea Medal of Merit for National Foundation.

Korean independence army

In 1919, Hong Beom-do established relations with Koreans residing in Yeonggae, Primorsky, and Gando. He joined forces with the Korean National Army in March 1920 and they became an autonomous organization of Korean resistance fighters opposed to Japanese colonialism. During this time they lived and operated in the area of Nosuando. Starting with the attack on Hyesanjin in August 1919, the military forces led by Hong launched a military campaign against the Japanese forces in northern Korea. After March 1920, Hong led the coalition of the Korean independence forces in the northern area of Manchuria.
Hong Beom-do, who had also led the Korean Righteous Army, has won several victories since 1907 at Gaksan, Samsu, and Bukcheong. These successes eventually led to increased attacks by the Japanese Army and the Korean army's activities in Korea became difficult, resulting in a need to escape in 1910 to Primorsky and Kando. Once in a safer location inside Russia, Hong continued his campaign against the Japanese. In August 1918, when Japan invaded Primorsky in support of the White Army during the Russian civil war, Hong Beom-do formed a military force centered around the former independence army and Korean people living in Manchuria. When the March 1st Movement took place in 1919, Hong and his soldiers moved to Antuhyun.
Later, in August 1919, the Korean independence army crossed the Yalu River and wiped out a Japanese military unit. This was the first domestic military operation to take place in Korea following the March 1st Movement. In October, Hong's forces once again moved into Korea, occupied Ganggye and Manpojin, fighting a fierce battle with the Japanese army in Jaseong county, northern Korea. By March 1920, Hong was allied with the Dongdo-dong Military Service, led by Choi Jin-dong, who had been stationed in Hoeryong and Jongseong along the Tuman coast of the Tuman River. The domestic resistance operation of the Korean Liberation Army provided a boost to the national spirit of Koreans everywhere and prompted further armed resistance struggles in Manchuria.
By March 1920, the Korean independence army had moved its base from Antuhyun to Wang Qinghyun, China and received financial support from the Korean People's Association for a larger domestic resistance operation. Hong also joined forces with the National Liberation Army, which was under the leadership of the Korean People's Association. The military's finances and administration were managed by the Korean Minjok Association and the Korean Liberation Army was directed by Hong Beom-do.
On May 3, 1920, the Korea Military Association held a joint military operation with other Korean military and resistance forces in Wangchunhyeon Poomdong. Also located there were the Provisional Ministry of Education, the Ministry of Military Affairs, and the Korean Civil Corps. The northern Korean military group orchestrated many of the subsequent activities, specifically being in charge of administration, politics, and finances. Hong Beom-do became the head of the Korean Northern Army Command and was in charge of the military forces. The Korean rebels were assembled into four groups under the leadership of Yi Cheon-oh, Kang Sang-mo, Kang Si-beom, and Jo Kwon-dong.
On June 4, 1920, the Independence Army of Korea, which was led by Park Seung-gil, entered Jaseong County, Korea and ambushed Samdungja and attacked a Japanese army patrol. In retaliation, the Japanese army occupied Nanam-dong in North Hamgyeong-do of the Japanese 19th Division headquarter base. By June 7, the Doron Ministry of Military and the Shinmin Army of the Korean People's Association had defeated a battalion of the 19th Division of the Japanese Army and won a great victory for the Korean people. On July 8, Hong and his forces surprised and defeated the Japanese police who were searching for the independence forces in that area.
The Japanese Army, having lost the battle in Chungsang-ri and other locations, retaliated by carrying out a campaign of brutal scorched earth warfare that included the killing of Koreans and burning of villages. In response, the Korean Independence Army launched a military counter offensive. In December 1920, Hong's forces were integrated with other independence forces to organize the Korean Liberation Army.

Battle of Bongo-dong (Battle of Fengwudong)

After the March First Movement, there are Korean Independence Army of armed resistances in Manchuria. The Japanese army conducted a series of suppression operations starting in May, 1920. In August 1919, Hong Beom-do launched an advance operation into Korea. Hong succeeded in integrating the northern army in Gando with other forces. On May 28, 1920, Hong Beom-do's Korean Independence Army, Ahn-Mu's National Army and Choi Jin-dong's Military Affairs Command were combined into the Korean Northern Army Command. They assembled troops and were prepared for a significant military operation.
On June 4, 1920, troops of Korean Democratic Corps attacked Japanese Army units in Hamgyeongbuk-do Gangyang-dong. The next day, a Japanese unit pursued the Independence Army, and the Korean Northern Army Command trapped the Japanese in Samdunja, soundly defeating them.
On June 6 and 7, as the conflict increased, the Japanese Army deployed a battalion from the 19th Division, stationing it at Nanam. The Japanese battalion launched an attack on Bongo-dong. The Independence Army combined forces were led by Hong Beom-do and hid in ambush in the mountains of Bongo-dong. As the Japanese forces advanced, the Korean military and ambushed the pursuing battalion from three sides, destroying them. The Japanese battalion withdrew after suffering substantial casualties. An estimated 157 Japanese soldiers were killed and 300 wounded out of 500, and 13-21 Koreans were killed and 18 wounded out of 1,200~1,300.

Influence

The Battle of Bongo-dong was the first large-scale battle between the Korean Independence Army and the Japanese Army in Manchuria. The Korean soldiers and the leadership of the Korean Northern Army Command were inspired by the victory, as were Koreans in China and Korea. The Korean resistance forces served as momentum for further independence battles in the 1920s.