Nodutdol | 노둣돌 Profile picture
Oct 1, 2021 16 tweets 5 min read Read on X
In the fall of 1946, 300,000 workers in southern Kroea joined a general strike demanding rice and workers' rights from the US military govt.

On Oct 1, 1946, police killed a striker in Daegu, sparking a rebellion that swept southern Korea. This is the story of the Autumn Uprising Historical photograph of a large crowd of Korean people in w
The Autumn Uprising began just one year into the US military occupation of southern Korea. The US used the Japanese coonial police to violently disband the self-governing People’s Committees. Promised decolonization, Koreans instead faced continued exploitation under the US. Two soldiers on a US army tank stand up on the turret. One w
A major cause of the uprising was a US-manufactured food crisis. US free trade policies caused the price of rice to quadruple in just one year. Although peasant rents were officially capped at 1/3 of harvests, landlords sometimes collected as much 80% of harvests. A Korean peasant tills an empty field with a cart beside him
The US also reinstated the hated Japanese rice collection system, allegedly for the purpose of fighting hunger. The US military govt ordered rice seized from peasants to go to corporate rice collection agencies. Police used this system to hoard rice for themselves, pictured below 8 police officers in front of a straw roof house in Daegu. T
The US-manufactured food crisis provoked intense worker & peasant resistance. In Sept, the US military shut down three newspapers and arrested union and Communist Party leaders.

The Communist Party responded with even greater militancy—just weeks later, the general strike began A large crowd of Korean workers or students marching. Severa
On Sept 23, 8,000 rail workers in Busan went on strike for rice rations, monthly salaries, and to restore lost jobs. In just a week this transformed into a general strike of 300,000 rail and industrial workers. US military declared the strike illegal. A large crowd of strikers are gathered on either side of a l
On Oct 1, 300 rail workers in Daegu joined the strike to demand increased rice rations. Police killed a striker.

The next day, mourners carried the martyr's body through Daegu. They attacked the central police station and then took control of the city. The uprising had begun. Two police officers in uniform walk a striker through a busy
With the city under their control, the people redistributed rice from the police and pro-Japanese collaborators, mostly landlords and the bourgeoisie. The following is a quote from an eyewitness to these events. “On my way from work, I saw a lot of stuff piled in the st
On average, the people found 143 gallons of rice in each Daegu policeman's home. That's about 72 grocery-store sized bags of rice. By Oct 6, 38 policemen had been killed.

The US declared martial law and sent in tanks. Hundreds were killed and thousands arrested in the crackdown. Stock photo of bags and bags of rice stacked on top of each
After Daegu, uprisings swept across the south. 2.3 million people, mostly peasants, rebelled in 40 counties, attacking police stations, govt offices, landlords, and rice collection agencies.
The US mobilized soldiers, police, and fascist vigilantes to suppress the uprisings. By winter, they killed 1,000 people and arrested 30,000 more. 200 police died in the uprisings.

Pictured: US soldiers oversee Korean police making mass arrests in Daegu Image: A Us soldier stands int he bottom corner of the frame
The US military's oppression of the Korean people provoked the Autumn Uprising. The US and ROK blamed the rebellions on North Korean and even Soviet infiltrators. In reality, they were organized by local people through peasant and trade unions and the People's Committees.
Like many anticommunist atrocities, the uprisings were erased from public memory for almost 60 years. The families of those arrested or killed faced social discrimination and lifelong police harassment. english.hani.co.kr/arti/english_e…
We must continue to tell the stories of US-ROK atrocities to break the culture of silence that protects US imperialism and neocolonialism from scrutiny.
Sources:
"US Policy in Korea 1945-1948, A Neo-colonial Model Takes Shape," Mark J. Scher. Paper.
"Colonial Legacies and the Struggle for Social Membership in a National Community: The 1946 People’s Uprisings in Korea," Jin-Yeong Kang. Paper.
Peasant Protest and Social Change in Colonial Korea, Gi-Wook Shin. Book.
Korea's Grievous War, Sukyoung Hwang. Book.

• • •

Missing some Tweet in this thread? You can try to force a refresh
 

Keep Current with Nodutdol | 노둣돌

Nodutdol | 노둣돌 Profile picture

Stay in touch and get notified when new unrolls are available from this author!

Read all threads

This Thread may be Removed Anytime!

PDF

Twitter may remove this content at anytime! Save it as PDF for later use!

Try unrolling a thread yourself!

how to unroll video
  1. Follow @ThreadReaderApp to mention us!

  2. From a Twitter thread mention us with a keyword "unroll"
@threadreaderapp unroll

Practice here first or read more on our help page!

More from @nodutdol

Dec 29, 2024
US President Jimmy Carter has died.

We do not mourn Jimmy Carter. Today we mourn the 2,000 martyrs of Gwangju, who were slaughtered by the South Korean military regime with the support and knowledge of the Carter Administration.

A South Korean soldier totes an automatic weapon as he guards a group of young people taken prisoner bound together by rope in a single file line. This photo is from the May 27 Gwangju Massacre
On May 17, 1980, Col. Chun Doo Hwan of South Korea declared martial law in the face of a rising movement for democracy led by students and workers.

In the city of Gwangju, students rose up in protest. Soldiers at the scene killed a deaf man, Kim Gyeong Cheol—sparking a rebellion Side by side photograph of Kim Gyeong Cheol with his grave marker. Kim is a young man in his 20s, he is wearing a suit and pinstriped shirt with tie in this black and white photo. His grave bears a cross and has a simple granite marker bearing his name, next to a smaller photograph
The Gwangju Uprising seized control of the city for 9 days. The people of the city formed committees to govern themselves, organizing food distribution, medical aid, self-defense, and more. Many hoped the US would intervene on their behalf.

But the US saw Gwangju as a threat. College students hang out of the side of a bus in liberated Gwangju, they are smiling and waving their hands, visibly joyous
Read 8 tweets
Jan 5, 2024
Has north Korea abandoned reunification?

On New Year’s Eve, global media reported that Kim Jong Un no longer supports Korean reunification. But this is not true.

A thread 🧵 Collage of president Yoon of south Korea and Kim Jong Un of north Korea
Kim Jong Un recently announced major changes in north Korea’s stance towards reunification. This marks a huge breakdown in inter-Korean relations after years of US, south Korean, and Japanese aggression.

However, north Korea has NOT abandoned reunification.
In a speech made on Dec 31 at the 9th Plenum of the Central Committee of the Workers Party of Korea, Kim Jong Un rejected south Korea’s formula for “reunification by absorption”— the idea south Korea should absorb the north, overthrow its govt, and abolish its socialist system.
Read 18 tweets
Oct 20, 2023
As anti-imperialist Koreans, we stand unequivocally with Palestine, its people and its armed resistance against the Zionist occupation. This is neither a two-sided conflict nor a war: it is an occupation and a genocide.

🧵 Image
As Koreans whose homeland is divided, we know imperialism is our common enemy. Following our liberation from Japanese colonialism and the beginning of independent socialist construction in Korea, the US split our country in two and indiscriminately bombed and killed our people.
There is a reason the Nakba and the division of Korea coincided in 1948, backed by the same imperialist interests. Both Korea and Palestine are geographically strategic sites for the US empire’s grip across the world.
Read 14 tweets
Jun 25, 2023
Today marks the 73rd anniversary of the “start” of the Korean War. We've curated a list of educational resources that the US & south Korean governments desperately tried to erase from our history. In the face of blatant US propaganda, it is up to us to learn the real history 🧵
The Hidden History of the Korean War by I.F. Stone

In this new book, I.F. Stone challenges the dominant historical narrative about the Korean War and exposes the US' deliberate attempts to prolong the war.
Blowback, Season 3

Brendan James and Noah Kulwin expose US involvement in the Korean War using primary sources, vivid storytelling, and sharp historical analysis. The season also features interviews with Suzy Kim, Tim Shorrock, and Bruce Cummings.
Read 12 tweets
May 18, 2023
#OTD in 1980, the people of #Gwangju rose up against Chun Doo-hwan's military dictatorship, calling for democracy in south Korea.

In response, with a green light from the US, south Korean police & soldiers massacred 2,300 people. We will never forget the martyrs of Gwangju. 🧵 Black and white photo from the student protests. Many people are gathered holding banners and flags, and a person in the middle is waving the south Korean flag.
In Oct 1979, former President Park Chung-hee was assassinated by his own head of security. Chun Doo-hwan then seized power via military coup.

On May 17, 1980, he declared martial law, using rumors of communism to close schools, ban political activity, and censor the press. Black and white photo of Chun Doo-hwan with US President Ronald Reagan, holding glasses and toasting.
On May 18, 1980, thousands of students in Gwangju gathered to protest martial law and the closing of their universities.

Police & soldiers responded with brutal violence, beating students with clubs and rounding them up for execution. Students and bystanders alike were killed. Black and white photo of soldiers beating civilians with clubs.
Read 11 tweets
May 13, 2023
The US and south Korea started building a shooting range in Changwon — without informing the local government or residents.

Changwon is a city full of apartments, shopping centers, and industrial parks — all within a 1.5 km radius of the shooting range.

en.yna.co.kr/view/AEN202305…
The south Korean defense ministry defended its actions using the Status of Forces Agreement, which exempts US troops from following domestic laws in south Korea.

The Status of Forces Agreement is an imperialist tool that allows the US to control and suppress the Korean people.
With a US shooting range in their backyard, the residents of Changwon will face irreversible environmental, physical, and psychological damage.

From 1952-2004, the US installed a bombing range near Maehyang-ri village. At least 12 villagers were killed by stray bombs or bullets.
Read 4 tweets

Did Thread Reader help you today?

Support us! We are indie developers!


This site is made by just two indie developers on a laptop doing marketing, support and development! Read more about the story.

Become a Premium Member ($3/month or $30/year) and get exclusive features!

Become Premium

Don't want to be a Premium member but still want to support us?

Make a small donation by buying us coffee ($5) or help with server cost ($10)

Donate via Paypal

Or Donate anonymously using crypto!

Ethereum

0xfe58350B80634f60Fa6Dc149a72b4DFbc17D341E copy

Bitcoin

3ATGMxNzCUFzxpMCHL5sWSt4DVtS8UqXpi copy

Thank you for your support!

Follow Us!

:(