Choe Hui Suk
Choe Hui Suk, who was a faithful friend to anti-Japanese war heroine Kim Jong Suk and carried out duties together with her, was a veteran among the women fighters of the Korean People’s Revolutionary Army. Choe took part in small-unit operations. On her way to Headquarters to convey some important information one day, she encountered “punitive troops”, who were going over the mountains with a fine-tooth comb in search of KPRA. She got a bullet through her leg and was captured.
Choe was under the worst imaginable circumstances that she was manacled and her eyes gouged out by the enemy, but she shouted “I have no eyes, but I can still see victory in the revolution.”
The enemy carved her heart out.
“I can still see victory in the revolution!”--these are words made only by the one with unbreakable revolutionary principle.
This is a famous saying made only by those who are sure of validity and truth of their cause and the fighters who are strong in revolutionary principles.
The words are the very summary of the life of woman fighter Choe Hui Suk.
They represent strong will and unshakeable faith of all Korean revolutionaries.