New York Post

SWING AND A ‘MYTH’ FOR KIM DYNASTY

How despotic NK ‘gods’ keep power

- By DANA KENNEDY

Over three generation­s, the Kim dynasty of North Korea has hijacked the ancient origin story of the Korean people, telling outlandish lies of the despots’ godlike abilities to legitimize their power and brainwash the citizens of the Hermit Kingdom into worshippin­g them.

The Kims have long claimed to have what they call the “Mount Paektu bloodline.” Mount Paektu lies in the north and is the highest, most sacred spot on the peninsula for all Koreans. It’s where the spiritual founder of Koreans, Dangun, son of a god and a bear, was said to have been born in 2333 BC.

“It’s hard to overstate how sacred Mount Paektu is for all Koreans,” David Maxwell, a retired US Army Special Forces colonel and North Korea expert, told The Post. “It’s key to the birth of Korea. Everywhere in the south, you see pictures of the mountain. Military officers sit in the south side of mess halls so they can look north at the picture of Paektu.”

Kim Jong-un, 37, the portly grandson of Kim Il-sung, who founded North Korea in 1948, is often pictured astride a white horse on the mountain’s snowy slopes. He’s claimed to have climbed the 9,000-foot peak at least twice — though it would be difficult in the long coat, expensive pants and shiny dress shoes he wore both times.

North Koreans have long been told that Kim Il-sung and his guerrilla forces fought Japanese occupying troops here and that his son, Kim Jong-un’s father Kim Jong-il, was born on the mountain. This despite reliable reports that Kim Jong-il was actually born in the Soviet Union, where his father was living in exile at the time.

Associated with the phony origin story are tales of eye-popping superpower­s: Kim Jong-un, who hasn’t been seen publicly since May 1, driving a car at age 3, competitiv­ely sailing at 9, making 11 holes-in-one during a single round of golf, his father walking at 3 weeks old, and this doozy: discoverin­g a unicorn lair.

But there’s been a potentiall­y seismic shift in some of the outrageous propaganda.

Rocket Man took a calculated risk this month when state media admitted that his grandfathe­r was in fact not capable of “chukjibeop” — the supernatur­al ability to “fold space,” make people appear and disappear, or travel through time.

By doing away with some of the crazier supernatur­al tales, say North Korea experts in the West as well as South Korea, Kim Jong-un is shrewdly hoping to focus on more realistic disinforma­tion that may play better with the masses.

Analysts say he is shrewder than he appears.

“Kim Jong-un knows that North Koreans, despite their isolation, still have more and more access to electronic devices and smuggled-in DVDs,” Michael Madden, a North Korea scholar at 39 North, told The Post.

“He knows his people aren’t going to buy some of this stuff anymore. He’s doing what he has to do to keep up with the times and hold on to his power.”

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 ??  ?? ICONS: Kim Jong-un often shows himself astride a white horse on Mount Paektu (top) — where his father and grandfathe­r stand in the painting above.
ICONS: Kim Jong-un often shows himself astride a white horse on Mount Paektu (top) — where his father and grandfathe­r stand in the painting above.

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