Looking back at title 6.25
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Today, I would like to share a message with you under the title of Looking back on 6.25.
Tomorrow is the 51st anniversary of the 6.25 outbreak. June 25, 1950, 51 years ago, was a tragic and gruesome day in the history of our nation that we will never forget. In the early morning of that day, Kim Il-sung, who was heavily armed with the support of the Soviet Communist Party, invaded South Korea with a large army. For three years since then, the Korean Peninsula has been pushed and pushed and devastated.
It was the biggest battle since World War II. This war broke out in the Cold War between liberal democracy led by the United States and communism led by the Soviet Union, and exploded into a heated war on the Korean Peninsula. For the first and last time since the formation of the United Nations, 16 countries including the United States participated in the Korean War, and North Korea was a war in which China and the Soviet Union participated directly or indirectly.
The devastation of that war is indescribable, and the scars of that war are still making the sad reality of separated families today. If we look back at the damage situation of the 6.25 war, the human casualty was 776,360 in total, including the casualties of the South Korean military and the UN forces. So many people were injured. The Chinese and North Koreans suffered about 2 million casualties. Civilian casualties totaled 2.5 million people in South and North Korea combined. And as a result, there were 3.2 million refugees, 300,000 war widows, 100,000 war orphans, and 10 million separated families. The loss of significant critical equipment during the war is also staggering. About 2,000 planes were destroyed by the South Korean and UN forces combined, and 2,200 by the North Korean army. In terms of tanks, about 800 South Korean and UN tanks were destroyed, and 1,200 by the North Korean army, and other equipment suffered huge losses. that has come The damage to property and industrial and public facilities through the war resulted in the destruction of 600,000 private homes and the destruction of 80% of industrial facilities.
The foundations of the people's livelihoods have been completely lost, and the socio-economic system has been devastated and collapsed. Total property damage totaled $23 billion. Considering the Korean War 51 years ago, we must never again engage in a war between our own people and self-destructive people, no matter what happens again. If both South and North Korea do not learn lessons from this terrifying historical fact, there will be no future for our people. Against the historical background of 6.25, we have to think deeply about how the two Koreas will have to live.
First, we need to get our hands on our hearts today and think about the reality of the divided Korean Peninsula.
We must never have false illusions about the reality of North Korea. North Korea is a Stalinist dictatorial communist country based on the Juche idea.
They believe in the Juche idea. The Juche idea is a thorough humanism, and it is a political system that denies Jesus, who does not acknowledge God at all, claiming that humans are the center of everything in the universe and that humans solve all problems. They say that the subject of the people is the party and the state, and that the subject of the party and the state is Kim Il-sung, who alone gives light and life to the people. Kim Il-sung is like a brain in a person's head, and the Party is like a nervous system.
They are saying that Kim Il-sung lives as a subject of the people forever, even after death. They are a collectivist totalitarian state where all means of production are owned by the state and no private ownership is allowed. In comparison, it is a liberal democracy based on our individualism and a market economy system that recognizes private property. As such, when we simply compare systems and ideologies, we cannot find even the slightest homogeneity between these two countries.
Therefore, it is better to discard the illusion that both regimes can easily bring reconciliation or reunification. Kim Jong-il's strategy for unification of red goods never changes. Although tactics to deceive Korea may change from time to time, the strategy for unification of red flags never changes. It is important to know that two countries are two countries that have the same ethnic roots and speak the same language, but live in different cultures with completely different ideological content and national and social systems. Therefore, unless it is a miracle of God, unification is the dream of a distant country and not something our generation can hope for.
In Proverbs 21:31