Nov. 28, 2024 Thursday  
Rodong Sinmun
Agricultural Workers Meet with Victim of U.S. Crime

Culture 2024.6.26.


At the Sinchon Museum in the DPRK, there are the tombs of 400 mothers and 102 children showing the brutal atrocities committed by the U.S. imperialists.

During the last Korean War, the U.S. imperialist aggressors mercilessly killed those mothers and children by brutal methods beyond human imagination after keeping them at a powder magazine in Pamnamu (chestnut) Valley in Wonam-ri of Sinchon County.

Kim Myong Gum, an old woman who survived from the powder store when she was nine years old, is now asking the younger generation to take revenge on the enemies.

At a meeting with agricultural workers held at the Hall of Culture in Jungdan-ri, Rangnang District of Pyongyang, on July 24, she condemned the U.S. imperialists for committing the massacres, saying that though more than 70 years have passed since then, she still hears the cry of those children and mothers’ painful outcries.

She stressed the need to tightly take arms of the revolution and class and make the U.S. imperialists pay dearly for the blood of the Korean people at any cost so as to prevent the repeat of such tragic history, always remembering the lessons of Sinchon.

Speakers said that no matter how many generations may be replaced, the wounds of grudge the U.S. imperialists had inflicted on the Korean people and the blood-stained trace recorded in history can never be healed nor erased, and expressed their will to annihilate the enemies.

Present there were officials concerned, officials of the Union of Agricultural Workers and peasants in Pyongyang.

Rodong Sinmun