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Kim Chi Ha was a hugely messed-up poet in the 1970's. Before and after too, if by that one meant that he participated in demonstrations, or that he wrote and published work critical of the oppressionist regime of Park Chung Hee, or that he has lived and worked through a full and deep engagement with life. His long poems of the 1970's such as "Story of a Sound," "Five Bandits," and "Cry of the People" made it pellucidly clear that he was someone the government of the Republic of Korea would view as a threat, someone who might mess them up, for in those days it was a crime in the ROK, South Korea, to spread groundless rumors. It was also a criminal act to read a poem having that title, as if reading a poem titled "Groundless Rumors" could be construed to imply a critical view of things, which was also illegal. Not only was it a crime to read such things, or own or publish them, but it was also a crime to fail to report someone who had, even if you yourself had not. This was a part of Korea's National Security Law set in place in 1948.
Article 10 made it a crime to fail to report any one or more of the activities listed in articles 1 through 9, and such failure was punishable by up to seven years imprisonment. Article 10 was the reason that the families of citizens slaughtered on Cheju Island during the so-called Uprising of 1948-1949 neglected to seek to claim or to bury the corpses of the dead. Over the course of one year and then more, South Korean troops and contingents of the so-called Northwest Youths killed up to 60,000 civilians, literally decimating Cheju's population. Some estimates, it should be noted, run as low as 20,000 killed, but it is impossible to tell how many were actually killed, since, according to the provisions of Article 10 in the National Security Law of 1948, to have been a family member or friend of someone killed by the South Korean military was proof of a breach of Article 10 for failure to report anti-state activity.
This same dynamic was a factor at the time of the...