It was some day after the historic gathering at Nanpaizi, China.
While talking with her comrades whom she met after a long separation, the anti-Japanese heroine Kim Jong Suk got to know that several guerillas fell in one battle.
Keeping in mind the pain of having lost revolutionary comrades-in-arms, she wrote down their names and the place of the battle on a pocketbook.
After a while Kim Jong Suk said earnestly that it is necessary to remember the comrades who sacrificed themselves for victory in the revolution and regard it as an obligation and conscience of revolutionaries. She said that it is also important not to forget them forever even when the country was liberated and the people were well-off.
With her saying deep in mind, the guerrillas kept their eyes on the pocketbook she was holding.
It was, indeed, a record of the great anti-Japanese war which was associated with her noble revolutionary comradeship.
Turning every page of the pocketbook even after liberation, anti-Japanese heroine Kim Jong Suk always thought how she could do to find out and take care of all bereaved sons and daug