Shinhanchon Incident
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The Sinhanch'on Incident () or the April Disaster () was a massacre of Korean civilians by Japanese soldiers in the Korean enclave Sinhanch'on, Vladivostok,
Far Eastern Republic The Far Eastern Republic ( rus, Дальневосто́чная Респу́блика, ДВР, r=Dalnevostochnaya Respublika, DVR, p=dəlʲnʲɪvɐˈstotɕnəjə rʲɪsˈpublʲɪkə), sometimes called the Chita Republic, was a nominally indep ...
beginning on April 4, 1920. The massacre lasted for several days. It is not known how many were killed, although one estimate puts the number at several hundred.


Background

Since the late 19th century, Koreans moved into the Russian Far East in search of economic opportunities. After Japan colonized Korea in 1910, the enclave Sinhanch'on in Vladivostok became a hotbed for the Korean independence movement. Famous independence activist and general
Hong Beom-do Hong Beom-do (; russian: Хон Бом До; August 27, 1868 – October 25, 1943), was a Korean independence movement, Korean independence activist and general. Biography Hong was born in Chasong, North Pyongan. During his early life, he was ...
used the village as his base. Other notable activists Shin Chae-ho and also stayed in the village. Various institutions, including schools and newspapers, were created for the community. When the Russian October Revolution broke out in 1917, the region became destabilized. The Bolsheviks massacred Japanese civilians and attacked military institutions. As the Koreans were generally friendly to the Bolsheviks due to sharing Japan as a mutual enemy, they became a target of retaliation.


Description

Around 5 a.m. on April 4, 1920, Japanese soldiers made a surprise attack on Sinhanch'on, conducting mass arrests, killing civilians, and burning down buildings. The number of civilian deaths is unknown. Japanese records record arrests of 60 Koreans, but a Korean source records more than 300 arrests. Arrested Koreans were tortured for information about independence activists. An account of a survivor reports that Korean civilians were dragged into the office of a local Korean newspaper and kept in there. The building was then set on fire, which killed the occupants. Korean possessions were looted and a Korean school was burnt down. The attack continued until 8 a.m. After a pause, the Japanese returned around 4 p.m. and continued their attack. They attacked again on the following day. Numerous Koreans fled Sinhanch'on, with some making their way to Shanghai to join the Provisional Government of the Republic of Korea. Similar attacks on Korean civilians occurred in Ussuriysk. Choe Jae-hyeong was captured there by the Japanese, and eventually executed by firing squad.


Legacy

In August 1999, a memorial was set up to the Korean independence movement in Sinhanch'on by the Institute of Koreans Abroad ().


See also

*
Free City Incident The Svobodny Incident (), also known as the Jayu City Incident () and the Heukha Incident (), occurred on June 28, 1921, in Svobodny, Amur Oblast, Svobodny (Russian for "free") in the Far East Republic (currently Amur Oblast, Russia) where the ...
 – A subsequent related Soviet–Korea conflict


References

{{Koryo-saram Massacres committed by Japan Anti-Korean violence Mass murder in 1920 Korean independence movement Japan–Korea relations 1920 in Russia Koryo-saram history Japanese war crimes History of Vladivostok 1920 in Korea