Chollima Movement
Chollima Movement | |
Chollima. | |
Korean name | |
---|---|
Chosŏn'gŭl | |
Hancha | |
Revised Romanization | Cheollima undong |
McCune–Reischauer | Ch'ŏllima undong |
The Chollima Movement (Korean: 천리마운동; Hancha: 千里馬運動) was a state-sponsored Stakhanovite movement in North Korea intended to promote rapid economic development. Launched in 1956 or 1958,[1] the movement emphasized "ideological incentives to work harder" and the personal guidance of Kim Il Sung rather than rational modes of economic management.[2]
Origin
The term
Kim Il Sung first introduced the term Chollima in December 1956,
The successes of the Chollima movement were first seen in 1957 when Kim Il Sung called on workers in a factory in the Kangdong County (near Pyongyang) which only had a capacity of 60,000 tons to produce an extra 10,000 tons of steel. The factory, however, was able to produce 120,000 tons, 60,000 tons more than its capacity.[9] This achievement was credited as lighting the torch of the Chollima movement.[9] The term ‘Chollima rider’ was given to workers who surpassed their targeted goals of production.[10] This title encouraged people to work harder. The North Korean government even started a slogan of ‘drink no soup’ to make it so workers did not need to use the restrooms as often.[10]
The slogan of ‘Let us dash forward in the spirit of Chollima’[9] was adopted to help motivate workers, with the result that successes were reported in many areas of economic activity. North Korea experienced an annual industrial growth of 36.6 percent during the five-year plan.[6]
In 1959, the Chollima Work Team Movement was started. This was a system of socialist competition waged among teams of workers, upholding the
The Chollima Work Team Movement was initiated by Chin Ung-won who organized fellow workers on his work team for the goal of achieving production far exceeding the quota assigned to them. With Chin's success and the encouragement from the national government the movement gained rapid massive support and Chin became the ideal Korean worker. The Chollima Work Team Movement gained 178,000 members less than a year and a half after its start.[11]
Effects
This Chollima movement, however, was not able to remain successful indefinitely. The nation obtained the short-term gains in quantity of production but at the cost of lower quality. The economy was distorted as resources were shifted to extensively fund industries while neglecting other needed sectors. Human exhaustion also followed this movement.[6] Little labor remained and resources were stretched to their limits. Economic output began to fall and by 1961 the nation was facing an exhausted labor force.[12] During the mid-1960s, North Korea stopped publishing economic statistics except for percentage increase over previous periods.[12] The Kim Il Sung-directed economy undoubtedly needed alterations. Kim Il Sung however, had no
Chollima is still supported and used by the current North Korean regime. The term Chollima and ideas from the early movement still exist in North Korea today.
In other areas of North Korea society the term “Chollima speed” is still used to depict rapid completion of expectations, referring to both the mythical horse but also to the economic growth in the 1950s.[14] In the late 1990s North Korea again called on a second Chollima movement to help strengthen the nation during a period of massive energy shortages and severe famine.
Later usage
The Chollima Movement was the first of many mass mobilization campaigns in North Korea, and probably the most famous one.[15] Chollima has since become an icon of North Korea. Several statues of the winged horse have been constructed throughout the country. Most significant is the 46-meter high Chollima Statue on Mansu Hill , Pyongyang. This statue was completed in 1961 and was built “to honour the heroism and invincible fighting spirit of the Korean people like the legendary winged horse Chollima that is said to cover a thousand ri in a day. Mounted on the winged horse are a worker holding high the "Red Letter" of the Central Committee of the Workers’ Party of Korea and a young peasant woman holding a sheaf of rice.”[16]
Chollima has been used as a brand name for trucks, buses, and tractors in North Korea.
In popular culture
- The protagonist of the 1960 North Korean short story "A Letter from Haeju-Hasong" is depicted as an exemplary Chollima Rider.[21]: 267–268
See also
- Ch'ŏngsan-ni Method
- Great Leap Forward
- Juche
- Politics of North Korea
- Saemaeul movement
- Stakhanovite movement
References
- ^ Many sources cite 1956. However, B.R. Myers states that the movement actually started in 1958, but that "North Korean historians backdated the start of this movement to 1956 to make it seem less like a copy of its Chinese counterpart," and that "even conservative South Korean researchers now uncritically accept 1956 as the year the movement began." Meyers, B.R. The Cleanest Race. Melville House, 2011. p41.
- ^ Jeffries, Ian (2006). North Korea: A Guide to Economic and Political Developments. Psychology Press. p. 66.
- ^ Harrold, "Comrades and Strangers: Behind the Closed Doors of North Korea", p182
- ^ Checa, "Korea: Rice and Steel", p108
- ^ a b Jefferies, "North Korea: A Guide to Economic and Political Developments", p50
- ^ a b c d Oh, "North Korea Through the Looking Glass", p50
- ^ 'Kim Il Sung's', special Write-up to Centerary of His Birth, KCNA, March 31, 2012.
- ^ Checa, "Korea: Rice and Steel", p110
- ^ a b c Harrold, "Comrades and Strangers: Behind the Closed Doors of North Korea", p183
- ^ a b French, "North Korea: The Paranoid Peninsula", p77
- ^ a b c d Lee, "North Korea: A Strange Socialist Fortress", p28
- ^ a b Oh, "North Korea Through the Looking Glass", p51
- ^ Workers of the DPRK, Forerunners in Era, KCNA, May 1, 2012.
- ^ Kim Jong Un's feats for Army Building, KCNA, April 25, 2012.
- ISSN 1529-1529.
- ^ Pyongyang's Monuments and Architecture Archived 2018-03-23 at the Wayback Machine.
- ^ Made in North Korea China Motor Vehicle Documentation.
- ^ FAO/WFP Crop and Food Security Assessment Mission to the Democratic People's Republic of Korea (PDF) (Report). Food and Agriculture Organization/World Food Programme. 2013. Retrieved 7 January 2014.
- ^ Democratic People's Republic of Korea (North Korea)[permanent dead link] China Motor Vehicle Documentation.
- ^ "First Flight of North Korea's "Chollima-1" SLV Fails, but More Launches and More New SLVs Are Likely". 38 North. June 7, 2023.
- OCLC 1201384523.)
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Further reading
- Kim Il-sung (1971). "Let Us Create Literature and Art Suitable to the Chollima Age: Talk With Writers, Composers and Film Workers, November 27, 1960". Selected Works. Vol. II. Pyongyang: OCLC 873247887.
- — (1972). Let Us Develop the Chollima Workteam Movement in Depth, a Great Impetus to Socialist Construction: Speech Delivered at the Second National Meeting of the Vanguards in the Chollima Workteam Movement, May 11, 1968. Pyongyang: OCLC 21956597.