Alexandra Kim
Early life
Kim Aerim was born in Sinelnikovo, a Korean village in Siberia. At the time, the area was a hotbed of Korean nationalism. In 1869, her father, Kim Du Suh, had emigrated to Russia, adopting the name Piotr Kim and converting to Orthodox Christianity.<ref name=Lankov/> He worked as a translator. Later he went to Manchuria to work as a interpreter on the railway. In 1895, Alexandra joined him in China. Soon after her arrival in China, Kim Du Suh died. Alexandra was adopted by Jozef Stankevich, a Russian friend of her father.<ref name=Lankov/> She attended a girls school in Vladivostok, Siberia. After finishing her education, she began working as a teacher in a primary school. She got married to Stankevich's son.<ref name="kimsoft">13.4. The Women's Brigade</ref><ref name="pdf">001-12 försidor</ref><ref>[KS] Westerners and Korean Spouses</ref>
Political activism
Kim gave up teaching and moved back to Vladivostok, where she took part in political activities for the cause of Korean migrants.
Her marriage did not last long. She divorced her husband and shifted to the Urals region. In the Urals she began political activism. In 1916, she joined the Russian Social Democratic Labour Party (Bolsheviks). In 1917, Lenin sent her back to Siberia to mobilize Koreans there against the counter-revolutionary forces and the Allied Expeditionary Forces.
In Khabarovsk she was in charge of external affairs at the Far-Eastern Department of the Party. There she met with Yi Dong-Wi, Kim Rip and other Korean independence fighters. Together they founded the Korean People's Socialist Party in Khabarovsk on April 28, 1918.<ref name="kimsoft"/><ref name="pdf"/><ref>Association for Asia Research- Who were the Soviet Koreans?</ref>
Capture
Kim was captured, along with many other Korean communists, by White forces and Japanese troops on September 4, 1918. She was executed on September 16, 1918. Reportedly, her last words were "Freedom and Independence for Korea!"<ref name="kimsoft"/>
Bibliography
- Pan Pyong Yul. The Life and Activities of Kim Alexandra Petrovna (Stankevich): A Short Biography of the First Korean Communist Yun Pyong Sok Kyosu Hwangapkinyom Hanguk Kundaesa Nonchong, Seoul, 1990.
- Pak Hwan. Kim Alexandra Petrovna (Stankevich), Leader of Korean Socialist Party Hanguksahan Nonchong, Seoul, 1992.
- Александра Петровна Ким-Станкевич. Очерки, документы и материалы. М. Институт востоковедения РАН, 2008.
References
- Pages with broken file links
- 1885 births
- 1918 deaths
- Bolsheviks
- Korean communists
- Koryo-saram
- Old Bolsheviks
- Russian Social Democratic Labour Party members
- Russian communists
- Russian Marxists
- Russian people of Korean descent
- Russian revolutionaries
- Korean revolutionaries
- Executed Korean women
- Korean women in politics
- People executed by Japanese occupation forces
- Executed Russian women
- 20th-century executions by Japan
- People from Oktyabrsky District, Primorsky Krai