Board Thread:Questions and Answers/@comment-412821-20160205194428/@comment-412821-20160207044859

FirstStooge wrote: I am sorry, Nuke. But, I have never seen such kind of map.

However, please note also that some notorious Korean collaborators during the occupation era are from Gyeongsang-do (ex: Yun Chi-ho, young Park Chung-hee, etc.) while the independence activists are from northern provinces (ex. Cho Man-sik [South Pyongan], Syngman Rhee and Kim Gu [both from Haeju], etc.). Ironicaly, by that day standards, the southern politicians were political realists and more progressive-minded than their northern counterparts who are rooted from the Confucian elites. Even labor activists such as Lyuh Woon-hyung [from Gyeonggi Province, near Seoul] somehow left the Shanghai-based Provisional Government under the conservative faction under Kim Gu at the end of 1920s and led his political activities within the occupied era instead became political exiles, making them more moderate even by the eyes of Japanese authority during 1930s. No need to worry. Just thought if one existed that you'd be the guy to ask.