Burnt by the Sun. The Koreans of the Russian Far East - Jon K. Chang

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Index 269

Japanese-Soviet Convention (1925), 66,
79, 84, 86, 98, 104, 110, 131, 219n.31
Jews (of Russia and the USSR), 6, 9 ,
15 –17, 19, 29–30, 67– 68 , 82, 136, 186,
201n.5, 202n.19, 204n.44; (as) Enemy
Aliens (during WWI), 16, 29–31; Jews
in the NKVD, 245n.38; Jews of Odessa,
186 , 242n.3; Protocols of Zion, 19, 21;
Sanhedrin, 21; Koreans and Chinese as
Jews (called “yellow yids”), 21, 205n.68


Kalinin, M.I., 85–86, 188
Kalmykov, Ivan, 46, 49, 189
Kan, Sergei (anthropologist), 107–108
Kazakevich, P.V. (Military Governor of
the Primore), 13
Kazakhstan, chapters 7–9 (throughout),
178 (map 3)
Khan, Andrei, 25, 38, 40, 44–45, 77. See
also Khan Myon She
Khan Chan Gol/Ger (Grigorii E. Khan),
36 , 45–47, 91, 138, 14 4, 158–160,
194 –199, 210n.63, 210nn.66–67,
235n.48, 236n.50
Khan Myon She (Soviet Korean leader),
25, 77, 96, 101, 206n.82, 218nn.25–26,
219n.40, 219n.56, 220n.58; execution
(of Khan Myon She), 159; on
chauvinism within the Party apparatus,
83 –85, 91–92; on territorial autonomy,
83 –85, 91–92. See also Khan, Andrei
Khlevniuk, Oleg V., 233n.8, 233n.11,
236n.64, 236n.70, 241n.6
Kim, Afanasii A., 2–4, 45–48, 85, 91, 94,
105 , 109–110, 141–152 passim, 161,
210nn.68–69, 220n.53, 225n.20,
232n.150, 234n.13, 237n.73
Kim, Aleksandr, 236n.67
Kim, Aleksandra P., 45–46
Kim, En Nok, 58, 123, 213n.36, 243n.8,
254
Kim, Gum Nam, 191 (figure 16), 192
Kim, Gum Soi, 59, 72, 123 , 213n.41
Kim, Konstantin, 167, 253
Kim, Maia, 125, 155, 167, 226n.52, 254
Kim, Pen Khva, 35, 108–109,
223nn.123–124
Kim, Sergei (of Old Lenin’s Way), 127


King, Ross, 116, 225n.18, 228n.65
Kolchak, Admiral, 36
Komsomol, 33, 53–54, 74, 95, 98,
118 –119, 14 4, 150, 248
Korean Autonomous Region (proposed),
82 , 87, 89
Korean deportation of 1937, 151 –179;
Article 5, 155, 162, 234n.14; resolution
1428–3266ss, 153–154; resolution
1847–377ss, 155 ; total Koreans deported
(from the RFE), 157
Korean Pedagogical Institute, 71,
114 –115, 119, 169; closure of KPI, 169
Korean Question, the, 18, 54–55 , 64–67,
75, 88, 93, 96, 100, 210n.56
Koreans: administrative exile, 170;
agency and representation (Koreans),
52 –53; categorization, 1, 16;
citizenship, 63 –64; as a “colonizing
element,” 5, 9, 13, 15, 27, 53, 65, 82,
158 , 176, 187; intermarriage with
Poles and Germans, 123; as
“internationalists,” 45; Labor Army,
170 , 235n.49; land distribution, 64–66;
villages (first seven in Russia), 12;
newspapers (in Korean in Russia), 114;
North Korea (Soviet Koreans sent
there as CP cadres), 192; as Soviet
citizens only (without the possibility of
being Japanese citizens), 87–88, 90,
219n.48 ; Soviet Russification (1939
onwards), 170 ; as spies during
Intervention, 98 ; as “white swans” (the
hunting of Koreans), 26–27; women as
the family “dynamo,”/working two
jobs, 124 ; as “yellow yids,” 21, 205n.68
Korenizatsiia (Soviet indigenization),
passim throughout chapters 4, 5 and 6
Korf, A.N. (Priamur governor-general
1884–1893), 203
Kotani, Ken, 90, 207n.15, 208n.16,
220n.50, 236n.68
“Kremlin ration,” the, 81
Kulaks (rich peasants): Germans,
127 –128, 134; Koreans, 110, 128,
224n.129; Poles, 127–128, 134
Kurka and lapta (variants of baseball), 41,
121
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