Now, a few lines in newly approved high school textbooks credit Mr. Kim for the first time for his role in combating Japanese colonialism. The passages have fed a roiling debate here about changing relations with North Korea and the United States and about the politicization of history during the cold war.
Yeah, okay, read on:
Mr. Kim's raids prompted the Japanese to mount a major operation in the region, which eventually wiped out most of his fighters, forcing the Korean guerrilla leader to flee to Khabarovsk, in the Soviet Far East. He remained there for the duration of the war, and Kim Jong Il was born in Russia in 1942 during his exile. North Korea's hagiography of its founder is silent on these setbacks, and North Koreans are taught that Kim Jong Il was born at Mount Paektu, the legendary source of Korean civilization
Sounds familiar... didn't the exact same thing happen during the Korean War?
