Chairman Kim Jong Il (1942-2011) of the National Defence Commission of the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea was a man with a great, ennobling sense of humanity.
It is well known that he, despite his failing health during the
last years of his life, was always on tour for field guidance to provide the
people witha happier life until he died on a train bound for on-site guidance.
There are a lot of anecdotes about his travels for the good of the
people, which are helpful in seeing his ennobling sense of humanity.
In March 2000 Kim Jong Il gave on-site guidance at a farm in
Taehongdan County in the northern alpine region of the country. On a visit to a
village, he acquainted himself with the living conditions of the ex-soldiers
there who had volunteered to work at the local farm after their military
service. There, he called on a newly-married couple at their home.
Hearing from an official that the hostess was pregnant, Kim Jong
Il said it was happy news, and asked how many of the wives of the ex-soldiers
were going to have a baby sooner or later. Then, he warmly asked the couple to
tell him whatever difficulties they had in life.
The hostess, attracted by his warm heart, asked the Chairman to
name her baby to be born soon. Giving a hearty laugh, Kim Jong Il accepted her
request pleasantly.
That evening he gave a name as she had asked. Then he took an
effective measure for the Pyongyang Maternity Hospital to dispatch a mobile
medical team to Taehongdan County to offer good service to expecting wives of
the ex-servicemen.
On a visit to the Ryongyang Mine in May 2009, Kim Jong Il went as
deep as a cutting face to encourage the workers there.
That day he happened to meet a woman who had been working at the
mine as an excavator operator for 14 years since she voluntarily left her home
in Pyongyang to work there. Seeing her, Kim Jong Il immediately noticed her
sallow face. After his return, he sent a woman official of the Central
Committee of the Workers’ Party of Korea to the mine to learn about her
condition.
Hearing the report that she had most probably contracted an
incurable disease, he, quite worried, instructed that she should be rushed to
the Pyongyang Maternity Hospital for confirmation of her illness and the best
possible treatment.
Thus, the woman was put to an all-round examination at the
hospital, received intensive treatment for two months under the great concern
of the medical staff, and finally got full well.
The last document he signed in his lifetime was related to the
supply of fish to the people on the occasion of the New Year of 2012. It is no
accident that the Korean people, bidding their last farewell to the Chairman
after his death, lamented bitterly as they would do after the loss of their
own parents, and some even tried to block the way ahead of the bier car out of
their deep sorrow.
Kim Jong Il’s sense of humanity went beyond national boundaries
and nationalities.
A huge number of ordinary people from around the world received
warm care from him, including Jindallae of Palestine, the Novichenkos of
Russia, and Govind Narain Sribastaba of India. They unanimously said that Kim
Jong Il was a man with a great, ennobling sense of humanity, who showed warm,
genuine care for whoever his acquaintance was.
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