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Kim Sung ae

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Alma mater
  
none

Name
  
Kim Sung-ae

Choson'gul
  
김성애

Role
  
Kim Il-sung's wife


Hancha
  
金聖愛

Kim Sung-ae newfocusintlcomwpcontentuploads201209kimsu

Born
  
1928
Korea

Occupation
  
former chairperson of the Central Committee of the Korean Women's Association

Relatives
  
kim jong-il(step son) kim kyong-hui(stepchild)

Spouse
  
Kim Il-sung (m. 1952–1994)

Children
  
Kim Pyong-il, Kim Kyong-Jin

Similar People
  
Kim Il‑sung, Kim Pyong‑il, Kim Jong‑suk, Kim Kyong‑hui, Kim Sul‑song

Political party
  
Workers' Party of Korea

Revised Romanization
  
Gim Seong-ae

Grandchildren
  
Kim Eun-song, Kim In-kang

Kim Sŏng-ae (born 1928) is a former North Korean politician, and the second wife of North Korean leader Kim Il-sung.

Biography

Kim Song-ae originally worked as a secretary. She married Kim Il-sung in 1952, following the death of Kim Il-sung's first wife in 1949, although due to the Korean War no formal ceremony was held. One source indicates Kim Il-sung had had an affair with her even before his first wife died. She gave birth to a daughter (Kim Kyong-jin, 1953) and two sons (Kim Pyong-il, 1955; Kim Yong-il, 1957).

She later rose in political power. From the mid 1960s until the mid 1970s, Kim Song-ae allegedly held a significant amount of political influence in North Korea. As her tenure of political significance occurred in about the same period as that of Jiang Qing in China during the culture revolution, Jang Jin-sung referred to Kim Song-ae as the "North Korean mirror image of Jiang Qing".

In 1965, she became vice-chairwoman of the Central Committee of the Korean Democratic Women's League (KDWL), and in 1971, she rose to be chairwoman. In December 1972, she became a representative of the People’s Supreme Assembly.

According to Jang Jin-sung, Kim Song-ae had the ambition to place her son, Kim Pyong-il in the position of successor to her spouse Kim Il-sung, rather than his son from his first marriage, Kim Jong-il. In this, she was supposedly supported by a fraction of the North Korean political elite, among them her brother Kim Kwang-hop, and Kim Il-sungs brother Kim Yong-ju, and opposed by the fraction of her stepson Kim Jong-il. In the 1970s, her influence was reportedly seen as excessive by the party, who started to curb it. In parallel, her stepson Kim Jong-il became the designated heir of Kim Il-sung, and his fraction worked to remove her from influence. In 1976, Kim Sung-ae lost her position as chair of the KDWL, which removed her communication channel to the public and effectively curbed her power base. Reportedly, Kim Sung-ae, as well as her brother-in-law Kim Yong-ju, who had supported her plans to place her son in the position of heir instead of Kim Jong-il, was placed in house arrest in 1981 upon the wish of the designated heir Kim Jong-il.

In 1993, she was reinstated by Kim Jong-il as chair of the KDWL, but her position was purely symbolic and nominal, and she was removed a second time in 1998. Since 1998, little information about her has reached the outside world.

In 2012, a report from a North Korean defector claimed that Kim Sung-ae had been declared insane in the early 1990s, even before the death of Kim Il-sung, and since then been kept under supervision of a psychiatric nurse in her house arrest.

There are rumors that she was killed in a car accident in Beijing in June 2001. Other reports claim she is still alive as of July 2011, though in poor health, and that Kim Pyong-il returned to Pyongyang from his posting in Poland to visit her.

References

Kim Sung-ae Wikipedia