The 20-meter-tall bronze statues of Kim Il-sung and Kim Jong-il standing in front of the mural wall of the Korean Revolution Museum. The statues were unveiled in 2012. Image source: Commons/by Nicor/CC 3.0
Every country has monuments and what they decide to build monuments to can tell you a lot about the place and time in which they were erected, along with, of course, what the country finds important.
North Korea is no different. There are monuments to great
battles, the founding of the country, and to important figures in national
history. But what makes North Korea different than any other country is both
the number and variety of monuments and the government-enforced ideology that
goes along with them.
No one is forced to travel to see the Washington Monument,
there is no requirement to take full photographs of the Victoria Memorial in
London, and even in China people can give voice to a certain level of
ideological debate in front of the giant portrait of Mao hanging above the
Forbidden City.
While the Juche Tower, Workers’ Party of Korea monument, the
giant bronze statues of Kim Il-sung and Kim Jong-il, and the Kumsusan Memorial
Palace mausoleum may receive the most photographs and the most mention in the
press (whenever the topic arises), those grand edifices only make up part of
the crown
of North Korean monuments, while there are literally thousands of others that
dot the landscape and provide an inescapable reminder that this is solely the
nation of Kim Il-sung, his descendants and their ideas.
North Korea’s cult of personality surrounding the Kim family
had its roots prior to the official formation of the Democratic Peoples’
Republic of Korea in 1948, with the adulation of not only Kim Il-sung but of
other revolutionary leaders and anti-Japanese guerillas, but after he became
the clear leader of the nation, the cult began to take on new dimensions. In
the decades since, it has become tradition for each new generation of Kim to
expand the cult of his father while establishing one of his own.
Kim Jong-il secured his position as heir by building up the
cult surrounding Kim Il-sung to religious levels and tying the legitimacy of
government to the Kim family itself. After Kim Il-sung died in 1994, thousands
of tower monuments to his “eternal life” were erected in every town and
village. And from there, the physical and permanent manifestations of the cult
were impossible to miss no matter how rural the area.
However, Jong-il allegedly told
officials that he didn’t want massive or hundreds of monuments built to him
while he was alive and while the people were still struggling with food
shortages. While this would give him the image of a caring leader, more
concerned about the peoples’ needs, it is also just as likely that he wanted to
avoid internal dissent as the masses would be required to help
fund and build monuments to a living “supreme leader” all while the state
routinely failed to provide adequate food, medicine, and shelter to millions.
Regardless of the real reasons, it did set a precedent. The
bulk of monuments relating to Kim Jong-il during his lifetime are those erected
at factories and other locations that he visited while giving “on the spot”
guidance tours, they aren’t mega statues.
Kim Jong-un has maintained this tradition.
Prior to Kim Jong-il’s death in December 2011, there were at
least 10,000 stone and bronze monuments in North Korea. The vast majority were
dedicated to Kim Il-sung while a small but important minority had been erected
to Kim Jong-il and to his activities, as well as few in honor of other members
of the family.
After his death, particularly between 2012 and 2016, Kim
Jong-un embarked on a major construction program to enlarge Jong-il’s cult and
to help establish his own. In keeping with tradition, permanent monuments to
the living leader are less numerous than the ones built in honor of the
previous one.
As such, Kim Jong-un replaced
every mural of Kim Il-sung in the center of each county seat with a set of
joint mosaic murals, each now featuring Kim Il-sung and Kim Jong-il. He also
ordered that the text on every Tower of Immortality be modified to include the
now “eternal general” Jong-il (to go along with the “eternal president” Kim
Il-sung). To understand the scope of that change, it required alterations to at
least 5,260 Towers.
The massive Mansudae bronze statue of Kim Il-sung in Pyongyang was also replaced with a new one, now joined by a statue of Kim Jong-il. The smaller bronze statues in each provincial capital were likewise replaced with the pair of them.
Smaller monuments dedicated to locations where Kim Jong-il had visited or gave “revolutionary guidance” in the last year of his life were also erected after his death.
One of the grand monuments constructed under Kim Jong-un in honor of his ancestors is the bronze statues of Kim Il-sung and Kim Jong-un riding horses on the grounds of the Mansudae Art Studio. The studio is the only organization with permission to depict the Kim family and they are responsible for every important statue and mosaic mural of the Kims in the country.
The monument depicts Kim Il-sung on horseback, both the man
and the horse exuding confidence and stability. Next to him is Kim Jong-il, his
horse almost bursting with energy as the Dear General led the country “forward”
and “applying his unique 'military first' policy to turn our country into an
invincible one that can never be defeated and has a nuclear deterrent in the
face of the deadly pressing offensive of imperialists,” in the words of Kim
Yong Nam who served as President of the Presidium from 1998 to 2019.
Unveiled in 2012, the monument was cast and finished in just
two months according to North Korean sources and was one of the very first
major works to show Kim Jong-il.
With Kim Jong-un having solidified his link to past leaders
and sufficiently glorified them, he also began work on his own cult. As statues
of himself are taboo, the first glimpse of his megalomania was seen in the 560-meter-long
slogan sign on the hill overlooking the Samsu Hydroelectric Dam. Declaring, “Long
live Songun Korea's General Kim Jong Un!” the sign was actually built
before his official transition was over. A decade later it still stands, the
only change being to reflect his own changes in policy; the word “Songun” has
been replaced with “Juche”.
In all, under the rule of Kim Jong-un, the AccessDPRK project
has located 867 monuments that were built from 2012 onwards. This represents
7.3% of all monuments in the country and new ones are erected every year.
Of that number, 31 are joint statues and 281 are joint
murals. There are also at least 5,260 Towers of Immortality in the country. And
aside from the alterations to the thousands of existing Towers, Kim has had a
further 103 erected around the country.
In addition to the 867 that are currently known to have been
built by Kim Jong-un, scores of others (in addition to the Towers) were renovated
or remodeled in some way.
The 312 joint statues and joint murals are indeed new
monuments, but most (a few were totally new constructions) were additions to
sites that had already existed prior to Kim Jong-il’s death. Of the other ones,
new Towers, new guidance commemorations, new murals of other kinds, for which I
have a certain year of construction, there were 25 totally new monuments built
in 2012, 36 built in 2013, 56 built in 2014, 55 built in 2015, 87 built in 2016,
82 built in 2017, 73 built in 2018, 52 built in 2019, 16 built in 2020, and two
are known to have been built in 2021. Once satellite images are updated for
other parts of the county, the 2020 and 2021 figures will certainly rise.
All of this new construction means that there are at least
11,755 monuments in North Korea. And between building new ones and renovating
existing monuments, I estimate that at least $1 million a year on average is
spent on this aspect of the personality cult. There have been tremendously
greater expenses in the past (such as the Kumsusan
Memorial Palace), but those are relatively few and far between.
Another way to quantify the scope of monuments in North
Korea is to look at how much land they occupy. After doing a representative
survey of the different types of monuments, totaling 10% of all monuments in
the country, I estimate that the paved (e.g. non-landscaped) area of all of the
monuments in the country occupies approximately 350 combined acres of land.
Another way to look put it, is that they take up the same amount of land as 198
standard UK football pitches. However, if you were to add in the landscaping
and wider public parks dedicated to key members of the family, the total area
of the country involved in commemorating the Kim’s grows considerably. The land
area of the Kumsusan Memorial Palace alone is nearly 90 acres and there’s over
80 acres dedicated to the Kims in the city of Hoeryong.
While knowing that acres and acres of land are being used to
glorify such a family instead of being used for better purposes helps us
conceptualize the scope of monumental construction, knowing the types, numbers,
and dates of construction does offer additional benefits for those interested
in the topic.
The vast majority of guidance visits are publicized in DPRK
media, but they are vague on the exact locations of the places visited. So, we
can correlate the construction dates of monuments and their types to then help
identify the locations of formerly unknown places, as these smaller commemorative
monuments are usually built within a few months to a year of the visit. A good
example of connecting monument construction with Kim visits can be seen in the
elite KPA
Farm No. 1116, where monuments and a museum have been built in response to
multiple visits by Kim Jong-un.
The edification of the Kim family goes well beyond stone
monuments in village squares. There are hundreds of museums in the country,
many of which have been renovated under Kim Jong-un. From the expansion of the Korean
Revolution Museum to the reconstruction of the Sinchon
Museum of American War Atrocities, scores of buildings that either directly
enforce the ideologies of Kim Il-sung and Kim Jong-il or that promote the regime’s
narrative of history have either been remodeled or placed under construction.
With monuments in every village and scattered throughout
larger towns to the Juche ideological study halls to Kimilsungism-Kimjongilism
rooms inside of high schools, and to revolutionary museums being located in
every county seat, no one is far removed from visible reminders that North
Korea is Kim’s Korea.
Add to this that the only official sources of information
come from the state and that the regime has taken great steps under Kim Jong-un
to limit outside information from breaking the ideological blockade, this
layered approach to propaganda bolstered by a decade of new monuments has continued
to shape the world view of 25 million people and it will be a monumental task
in itself to overcome
three generations of indoctrination if reunification ever comes.
~ ~ ~ ~
I have scheduled this
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