With Sense of Moral Obligation for Revolutionary Forerunners
Kim Jun Hyok, a security officer of the Moranbong District Security Department, and his younger brother Kim Ju Hyok, a student at
It was over ten years ago when they started visiting the cemetery.
At that time, one of them went to a primary school and the other a kindergarten.
Their father, who had visited the cemetery on the anniversary of the country’s liberation, told his wife that they must implant pure moral obligation in the hearts of the children from when they were little.
So, the brothers visited the cemetery on holidays led by their parents.
As they grew up, their parents told them, whenever visiting the cemetery, that their happiness today was attributable to the anti-Japanese revolutionary fighters who dedicated themselves to the country.
The brothers have kept visiting the cemetery for over 10 years.
They wrote down in a book the fighters’ names, birthdays and dates of their decease and extracted the contents of their feats one by one.
Whenever they ascended Jujak Peak, they made up their minds to live like them.
When a project was conducted to better arrange the cemetery, the brothers devoted their warm sincerity.
As there are lots of young people like them who cherish a sense of noble moral obligation for the revolutionary forerunners, our revolutionary tradition is more firmly preserved and our country’s future is bright and rosy.
Rodong Sinmun