Exiled abroad, seeing the world in a new light

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Exiled abroad, seeing the world in a new light

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Kim Jong-pil, fourth from left, poses for a photo on his visit to Jerusalem on Feb. 9, 1999, when he served as prime minister under the Kim Dae-jung government, with American university students he met on site. [KIM JONG-PIL]

This is the latest in a series of articles on the life and times of Kim Jong-pil, a two-time prime minister, based on extensive interviews with the 89-year-old.

People began to refer to me as a man of twisted fate during the early 1960s, when I was pressured to resign from my official positions and go overseas. Even though I was at the center of a plan for a military revolution [coup], I was under consistent pressure from those in the political circle to step aside in their struggle for power.

During my tenures abroad, I sometimes couldn’t see why I had to leave the country. But in hindsight, my experiences and what I had learned overseas all contributed later to my understanding of the world and leadership. I learned a lot from going one place to another in the United States and Europe.

I spent the summer of 1963 in France during my first self-imposed exile, which was half voluntary and half forced. During my stay there, I followed French President Charles de Gaulle to every part of the country to listen to his speeches.

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Kim Jong-pil, far right, poses for a photo with former U.S. President Henry Truman in September 1964, at the Harry S. Truman Library and Museum in Independence, Missouri. [KIM JONG-PIL]

In one speech that I still vividly remember, he said, “We have Napoleon Bonaparte, Joan of Arc and Victor Hugo. There will be no path that will stand in the way of France. There would have been no glory for Europe if it hadn’t been for France. If there was glory for Europe, it all shined from France.”

Then he began to sing the French national anthem, “La Marseillaise,” in unison with the thousands of people who had attended the address. His oratory skills had my heart beating fast with excitement. He was a great speaker and a public provocateur. I sensed that he had the power of a politician willing to share the pain and happiness of his people.

While de Gaulle deeply impressed me, so, too, did his wife, Yvonne de Gaulle. Though she was at every event at which her husband was present, she never stood before the public. Instead, she mostly stayed in the car to listen to her husband’s speeches.

It was an exemplary case of a first lady looking after her husband.

De Gaulle was known for his lack of emotional expression, but he was much more open with his daughter Anne, who had Down syndrome. When Anne died at the age of 20, the former general shed tears. “Baby, you have nothing to worry about now,” he said. “You have won your freedom.”

He was buried next to Anne in 1970 in his hometown, instead of being honored at the national cemetery as a war hero.

His decision influenced me, and led me to decide that my gravesite will also be in my hometown in Buyeo [South Chungcheong] rather than in Seoul National Cemetery.

Another political figure I greatly admire is Winston Churchill. He was a great leader with a distinctive personality marked by his hunger for intellect, his perseverance and autonomic mindset, as well as his dogmatism. Among these characteristics, one that stands out most for me was his unwavering determination to accomplish his goals.

Without his strength as a leader, overcoming the challenges presented by World War II would have been much more difficult for Britain and taken a heavier toll.

During my first overseas stay, I visited Churchill’s war room in the heart of London, where for three years he had devised war strategies in an underground bunker. I looked for a glimpse of his presence in that tiny, isolated space.

When I was chairman of the ruling Democratic Republican Party (DRP), I was invited in October 1966, to give an address at Westminster College in Fulton, Missouri. After being bestowed an honorary doctoral degree, I stood before a crowd of 1,200 people to present my speech, titled “The Path of Asia Toward Freedom.”

I stood on the same podium where Churchill had stood 20 years before when he famously declared that “an iron curtain” had been drawn across the European continent.

Just as the former British prime minister had talked about Europe’s struggle for freedom, I talked about Asia’s struggle for freedom.

I drove to every corner of Europe in the first eight months during my first exile, traveling nearly 80,000 kilometers in total.

In Germany, I drove a Mercedes more than 100 miles an hour (160 kilometers per hour) on the autobahn. Having seen the outside world, I could feel my global perspective was significantly expanded.

“If President Park Chung Hee had done what I did overseas, his perspective on world affairs would be widened to a new level,” I once said after my return to Korea.

Park had been out of the country only twice - once to the U.S. and once to Taiwan - before becoming president. But even during his presidency, his contact with the local people and culture was greatly limited on official overseas trips.

Deepening one’s perception of the world and of other people and their cultures is only feasible through direct contact with them, and attempting to acclimate to their way of life, which is impossible as president.

When I indulged him with my experiences overseas, he would just stare at me, obviously envious. “You are a free man and thus can choose to do what pleases you. But how can I do that?” he would ask.

I still find it regrettable that he could never leave Korea in order to see what more could be contributed to the good of the nation.

In June 1964, I embarked on my second overseas journey to ease growing protests against diplomatic efforts to restore ties with Japan.

I visited the Harry S. Truman Library and Museum in Independence, Missouri, in September that year and met with the former president, who had courageously decided to form the U.S.-led UN coalition forces to defend South Korea at the outset of the (1950-53) Korean War.

During our hour-long meeting, President Truman told me that one of the most regrettable things he had done in his presidency was failing to unify the Korean Peninsula despite the huge loss of life during the conflict.

He couldn’t push for the unification at the time, he said, because of daunting international opposition to that effort.

I then asked what advice he had for a young political man from Korea.

He told me a story of a tiger. “You may think a tiger is tame, and even feel grateful for the zoo keeper as he feeds him and looks after him every day. But to think so is nonsense. If a zoo keeper steps on the tiger’s foot by mistake, the tiger will jump him and try to bite. If a politician thinks of his people as the tiger and forms his politics accordingly, he will inevitably succeed in his political career.”

He spoke the truth. A politician by nature must be willing to serve the people. If he looks to gain from his political activities, it could be the end.

Compiled by Chun Young-gi, Kang Jin-kyu [kang.jinkyu@joongang.co.kr]
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