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This is a Korean name; the family name is Kimm.
Kim Kyu-sik
Hangul 김규식
Hanja 金奎植
Revised Romanization Kimm Kyusik
McCune–Reischauer Kimm Kiusic
Pen name
Hangul 우사
Hanja 尤史
Revised Romanization Usa
McCune–Reischauer Usa

Kimm Kiusic, also spelled Kimm Giusic (January 29, 1881 - December 10, 1950), was a leader in the Korean independence movement and the early history of South Korea. He was born in Dongnae, now part of Busan. Orphaned at a young age, he studied with the American missionary H.G. Underwood from the age of 6, taking the Christian name "Johann." Later he traveled to America, receiving a bachelor's degree from Roanoke College in 1903 and a master's from Princeton University the following year.

In 1905 Kimm returned to Korea, teaching widely. He fled to China in 1913, following the Japanese annexation of Korea in 1910.

In 1919, unlike his contemporary Syngman Rhee, Kimm successfully travelled to Paris for the Paris Peace Conference to lobby for Korean independence from Japan. He was sent by Lyuh Woon-Hyung and Chang Duk-soo, who had organized Sinhan Cheongnyeondang in Shanghai in the summer of 1919.[1] His efforts in Paris proved to be futile since the United States, even though its president at the time Woodrow Wilson had championed the cause of national self-determination in his Fourteen Points, had no interest in upsetting its close ally Japan. He was a leading member of the Provisional Government of the Republic of Korea based in Shanghai, becoming the Vice-President.

After the liberation of Korea in 1945, he returned to his homeland to participate in the formation of a newly independent state, which was now under the rule of the United States Army Military Government in Korea in the south and the Soviet Civil Authority in the North. Kimm was favored by the American occupation leader John R. Hodge, who saw him and Lyuh Woon-Hyung as moderate leaders on the right and left, respectively. In September 1947, the United States pushed to move the Korean question to the newly created United Nations, which quickly the voted to allow for elections in the south despite the objections of southern nationalists such as Kimm and Kim Gu as well as from the north's Interim People's Committee, who were opposed because of the non-participation of the North.[1] After failed efforts to broker reunification in that year, he retired from politics. After the outbreak of the Korean War in 1950, he was kidnapped and taken to the North; he reportedly died near Manpo in the far north on December 10.

[edit] Notes

  1. ^ a b Eckert, Carter J., Lee, Ki-baik, Lew, Young Ick, Robinson, Michael & Wagner, Edward W. (1990). Korea old and new. Seoul: Ilchokak.

[edit] See also

[edit] Further reading

Political offices
Preceded by
'
Vice Presidents of Provisional Government of the Republic of Korea
1940-1948
Succeeded by
Provisional Government dissolved






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