Hongkou Park Incident

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Hongkou Park Incident
Part of the Korean independence movement
yunbonggil sanghae pogtanyigeo.JPG
Hongkou Park shortly after bomb detonation (April 29, 1932)
Location
31°16′22″N121°28′42″E / 31.272836°N 121.478425°E / 31.272836; 121.478425
Planned by
Commanded by Kim Ku
ObjectiveAssassinate prominent Japanese military and colonial personnel
DateApril 29, 1932 (1932-04-29)
11:40 am
Executed by Yun Bong-gil
OutcomeAttack succeeds, Yun captured and executed, Republic of China begins supporting the Korean Provisional Government
Casualties
China Shanghai location map.svg
Red pog.svg
Location of attack relative to present day Shanghai

From 1910 to 1945, Korea was a colony of the Empire of Japan. [1] In 1919, protests against Japanese rule were held throughout Korea, in what became known as the March 1st Movement. After the Japanese violently cracked down on the protests, numerous Koreans fled the peninsula and continued resisting the Japanese from abroad. [2]

Korean Provisional Government

Among the escapees to China were the eventual founders of the Korean Provisional Government (KPG). The KPG was founded in Shanghai a month after the March 1st Movement. [2] Political leanings were diverse within the KPG, with some strongly left and right leaning members. Opinions on how to obtain independence were also diverse, with preferences ranging from pacifism to militantism. [3]

Korean Patriotic Organization

In 1931, a militant organization affiliated with the KPG called the Korean Patriotic Organization (KPO) was founded. It was led by Kim Ku, [4] [5] a significant Korean independence activist who is now held in high esteem in South Korea. [6] [5] Kim set about coordinating a number of attacks on Japanese leaders, including a January 1932 attack in Tokyo that nearly killed Emperor Hirohito. That attack is now known as the Sakuradamon Incident. [4]

Attacker

Yun days before the attack sajin1(yunbonggil seonseojangmyeon).jpg
Yun days before the attack

Yun Bong-gil (1908–1932) was a Korean independence activist. He witnessed the March 1st Movement and was appalled by its repression. He initially sought to advocate for Korean independence through encouraging education and activism, but became disillusioned after continued Japanese suppression. In 1930, he left his wife and two children in Korea to join the KPG and become a militant. [7]

After his arrival in Shanghai, he worked closely with Kim Ku to plan the attack. [7]

Attack

General Yoshinori Shirakawa addresses the crowd shortly before the explosion (1932) Japanese VIP before Hongkew Park Bombing Incident.JPG
General Yoshinori Shirakawa addresses the crowd shortly before the explosion (1932)

On April 29, 1932, a rally honoring the birthday of Japanese Emperor Hirohito occurred. [8] [7] Around 9:30 am, an audience of around 15,000 people, mostly Japanese, gathered to watch 10,000 Japanese troops parade down Jiangwan Road in Shanghai. The troops ended the parade in Hongkou Park, where a decorated stage was set up. [8]

Japanese colonial and military officials went onto the stage, including Yoshinori Shirakawa, Kenkichi Ueda, Kichisaburō Nomura, and Tomono Mori. They were joined by a number of foreign officials, including representatives of the Shanghai Volunteer Corps (Admiral Howard Kelly and Major Ronald Penney), and officials of Italy, France, and the United States. [8]

Kawabata Teiji  [ ja ] gave the first speech, and a number of others followed. [8] [9] After their speeches, the foreign officials departed from the stage, leaving ten Japanese officials there. [9] Several hundred Japanese children gathered in front of the stage, and the military band began to play the Japanese national anthem, Kimigayo . [8] [9]

Just before the anthem finished, Yun threw the bomb. [7] The Illustrated London News reported that:

The Japanese National Anthem was being played, when a youth was seen to step forward and place a cylinder on the front of the dais [lower-alpha 1] and then dart backwards. A dull explosion immediately followed, but it attracted so little attention that the music continued playing. [...] others were seen to collapse wounded and bleeding, while soldiers seized the youth and battered him. Subsequently, another bomb of the same pattern was found near the dais unexploded." [10]

Kawabata and Mamoru Shigemitsu fell to the floor in pain, and Shirakawa clutched his face, which was then streaming with blood. The explosion was so powerful that it blew a hole in the floor of the stage. After a moment of silence, the crowd began to panic. Members of the Red Cross rushed over to assist the wounded. [8]

Aftermath

Casualties

The following casualties occurred as a result of the attack:

Kichisaburo Nomura with damaged eye after the bombing (1932) Kichisaburo Nomura after Hongkew Park Bombing.jpg
Kichisaburō Nomura with damaged eye after the bombing (1932)
Hongkou Park Incident
Chinese name
Chinese 虹口公园爆炸事件
Literal meaningHongkou Park Bombing Incident
PersonRoleFate
Yoshinori Shirakawa GeneralDied of injuries on May 26 [11]
Kawabata Teiji  [ ja ]Head of the Japanese Residents' Association of ShanghaiDied [12]
Mamoru Shigemitsu Minister to ChinaLost a leg [13] [8]
Kenkichi Ueda Lieutenant GeneralLost a leg [13] and had an injured arm [9]
Kichisaburō Nomura AdmiralLost an eye [13] [8]
Kuramatsu Murai  [ ja ]Consul-GeneralLeft calf injured [8]
Tomono MoriSecretary-General of the Japanese Residents' Association of ShanghaiInjured [12]
Mr. KawaguchiA newspaper photographer from the Osaka MainichiSlightly wounded by splinters [8]
Unnamed sailorMinor injuries [8]

Arrests and investigation

Yun dropped a second improvized bomb [lower-alpha 2] nearby with the intent to kill himself. However, it failed to go off. The crowd reportedly mobbed and attempted to lynch Yun, but the military police pulled him away, bruised and bleeding. According to an eyewitness, Yun grinned defiantly during his arrest. [8] [14] Yun was sentenced to death at a military trial on May 25. He was transferred to Japan in November, and executed by firing squad on December 19. [15]

Shortly after the attack, the military secured the perimeter, and did not permit anyone to leave until they were searched. Several Chinese people were arrested, although they were later released. A Chinese person managed to escape the park and sought refuge in the house of W. S. Hibbard, an American park-keeper. Japanese troops surrounded Hibbard's house, extracted the Chinese man, and kept Hibbard in detention. [8] [9]

What followed was a vigorous search for anyone involved in the attack. Members of the KPG went into hiding. Kim Ku and three others hid at the house of American Presbyterian missionary George Ashmore Fitch, who was sympathetic to the Korean and Chinese resistance against Japan. Kim eventually managed to escape arrest, and lived to see the liberation of Korea in 1945. [16]

A day later, it was reported that Yun was believed to be connected with a Korean organization called the South China Young Men's Association. French police raided a number of Korean associations in the French Concession of the city to discover more connections to the attack. [8] On May 2, the North China Daily News reported that the Japanese military had declared martial law in the Wusong area of Shanghai, and that officers were conducting random searches throughout the city. [lower-alpha 3] It also reported that over ten raids by the French and Japanese police, nineteen other Koreans and a Chinese "coolie" had been arrested. [17] More raids were expected to follow. Based on an alleged testimony from Yun, they believed that a man with the pseudonym "Li Chun-shan" or "Li Yue-pei" had paid Yun $200 and given him two bombs for the attack, and was still at large. They also alleged that Li was the head of a "Korean Independence League". It also reported that the Japanese believed the prominent Korean independence activist Ahn Changho was not connected to the attack, as he had been arrested a week before the attack had occurred. [17]

To avoid putting other Koreans at risk, Kim Ku sent out public statements to newspapers in Shanghai claiming responsibility for the attack. [16] The North China Daily News announced on May 5 that it had received such a statement, and that the statement argued that the Japanese and French police were conducting raids in a manner that violated international law. In particular, they were accused of making arrests and searching people without a warrant. The Daily News disagreed with the assessment. [17] Others also accused the police similarly, including a number of Koreans and the Shanghai Chinese Bar Association. [19] The police denied these accusations. [18]

Reactions

The attack was covered prominently in several Western media sources. Some of the reported information was incorrect; the Sydney Morning Herald published an article on 30 April that claimed Yun threw a hand grenade and was beaten to death by the crowd. [20] The New York Times reported Yun's name as "Kim Fung-kee". [14]

United States officials reacted negatively to the event. Acting Secretary of State William R. Castle communicated "the sympathy of the government of the United States for the unfortunate victims". [21]

Syngman Rhee, the former President of the KPG who left to the United States after being impeached, expressed disapproval of the KPG's militant activities. He felt that this would only tighten Japan's grip on Korea. [22]

Notes

  1. The North China Daily News reported that he threw a square object high in the air. [8]
  2. The second bomb was described as an 8x3x2 inch tin box filled with nitroglycerin. [8]
  3. It also reported that it received a tip that Korean communists were behind the attack. [17] A statement from Kim Ku later denied that Yun was a communist, although the Japanese and French were skeptical of this. [18]

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References

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  2. 1 2 Robinson (2007), pp. 52–53.
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Sources