May God bless you and your...

Valenda Newell
October 26, 2016 | Indianapolis, IN
Dec 3, 1925 – Aug 18, 2008
Kim Dae-jung, born on Dec 03, 1925, passed away on Aug 18, 2008.
Obituary
SEOUL, South Korea (AP) — Former President Kim Dae-jung, who spent years as a dissident under South Korea's military dictatorship and later won the Nobel Peace Prize for seeking reconciliation with communist North Korea, has died. He was 85.
Kim, who had been hospitalized with pneumonia since last month, died shortly after 1:40 p.m. (0440 GMT) on Tuesday, said Park Chang-il, chief of Severance Hospital in Seoul. He said Kim suffered respiratory distress, a pulmonary embolism and multiple organ failure.
The Nobel laureate's wife, three sons and former aides were at his side, according to lawmaker Park Jie-won, Kim's former presidential chief of staff.
South Korean leaders, from friends to former foes, had been paying their respects for days at the hospital to a man whose epic career spanned South Korea's evolution from a brutal military dictatorship to a full-fledged democracy and global economic leader.
"We lost a great political leader," President Lee Myung-bak said in a statement. "His accomplishments and aspirations to achieve democratization and inter-Korean reconciliation will long be remembered by the people."
Kim built a reputation as a passionate champion of human rights and democracy who fought against South Korea's military dictatorships and survived several suspected assassination attempts, including a 1973 abduction in Tokyo hotel by South Korean agents.
Once president, he was the architect of the "Sunshine Policy" — a novel approach to relations with North Korea that sought to bring the two wartime rivals closer as a way to encourage reconciliation.
His efforts led to an unprecedented thaw in relations with the North and culminated in a historic North-South summit — the first on the divided peninsula — in Pyongyang with leader Kim Jong Il in 2000.
His successor, the late President Roh Moo-hyun — who committed suicide three months ago amid a broadening corruption probe focused on the Roh family — maintained the Sunshine Policy. But Kim Dae-jung saw his work unravel when Lee, a conservative, took office in 2008, and conditioned aid to the North on the regime's commitment to nuclear disarmament.
In response, North Korea cut nearly all ties with the South, suspended several joint projects born of warming ties and threatened to restart its nuclear programs. But Kim continued to advocate engagement with Pyongyang.
"The South and North have never been free from mutual fear and animosity over the past half-century — not even for a single day," he told reporters in January. "When we cooperate, both Koreas will enjoy peace and economic prosperity."
On Monday, North Korea announced it would restart some of the joint projects, including the reunions of families divided for decades by the 1950-53 Korean War.
Several dates are given for his birth, but Kim was born into a farming family in South Jeolla province in Korea's southwest when the country was still under Japanese colonial rule.
Kim went into business after World War II ended Japanese rule, but as South Korea's fledgling government veered toward authoritarianism after the peninsula's war, he resolved to go into politics.
After three losing bids, he was elected to the National Assembly in 1961. Days later, Maj. Gen. Park Chung-hee staged a military coup and dissolved parliament.
Kim ran for the presidency a decade later, nearly defeating Park. The close call prompted Park to tinker with the Constitution to guarantee his rule in the future.
Just weeks after the presidential election, Kim was in a traffic accident he believed was an attempt on his life. For the rest of his life, he walked with a limp and sometimes used a cane.
In another apparent assassination attempt in 1973, suspected South Korean agents broke into his Tokyo hotel room and dragged him to a ship where he claimed they planned to dump him at sea. But the U.S. intervened, sending an American military helicopter flying low over the ship, and the would-be assassins abandoned their plan.
Upon his return to Seoul, Kim was put under house arrest by the Park government and then imprisoned. His release came only after Park's assassination by own his spy chief in late 1979.
Kim was pardoned a few months later. But the drama did not end there.
Weeks after Park's death, military leader Chun Doo-hwan seized power. Five months later, tens of thousands in the southern city of Gwangju took to the streets to protest the junta's rule.
Tanks rolled in to suppress the uprising; the official toll was 200 dead but activists say the real count was far higher.
Accusing Kim of fomenting the uprising in his political stronghold, a military tribunal sentenced the opposition leader to death. Washington intervened again, and the sentence was commuted to life and later reduced to 20 years in prison.
A few months later, his sentence was suspended and he left for exile in the U.S., remaining there until 1985.
After two more unsuccessful runs for the presidency, Kim was elected to the nation's top office in 1997 at the age of 72. He served from 1998 to 2003.
The defining moment of the Kim Dae-jung's presidency was his historic meeting with North Korea's Kim in Pyongyang in 2000.
The summit eased decades of tensions and ushered in a new era of unprecedented reconciliation. Families divided for decades held tearful reunions, and South Koreans began touring North Korea's famed scenic spots.
His efforts won him the Nobel Peace Prize, and he remains South Korea's only Nobel laureate.
"In my life, I've lived with the conviction that justice wins," he said in accepting the honor. "Justice may fail in one's lifetime, but it will eventually win in the course of history."
But critics accused him of propping up the communist regime with aid, reportedly up to $1.3 billion.
And his legacy was tarnished by revelations that his administration made secret payments to North Korea before the 2000 summit. Kim defended the payments as a way to secure peace with the North.
Kim is survived by his wife and three sons: Kim Hong-up, Kim Hong-il and Kim Hong-gul. His first wife, Cha Yong-ae, died in 1960.
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Associated Press writers Hyung-jin Kim and Jean H. Lee contributed to this report.
Copyright 2009 The Associated Press.
Valenda Newell
October 26, 2016 | Indianapolis, IN
May God bless you and your family in this time of sorrow.
John Lowder
April 21, 2013 | Monroe, NC
Remembered By
willaim krisel
June 30, 2010
My condolence to the family and country of S.Korean. You have really loose a man.
Take heart
Kofi
Accra Ghana
Kofi Adan
November 11, 2009 | Accra
My thoughts and prayers are with you in your time of grief. May your memories bring you comfort.
JON LOWDER
September 08, 2009 | MONROE, NC
My condolences go to the family of this man of honor. We can observe many changes that fit in his legacy and the many people he touched.
The Brothers and Sisters of the Holy Trinity, MonDak Synod prayers are with the family on their loss..
Paxico
Abbot R.H. Bain
Montana, USA
Abbot Bain
September 07, 2009 | MT
You have truly lived your life to the fullest. Your memories will forever serve as an inspiration to us :D
Villy Buenaventura
September 01, 2009 | Daejon
My thoughts and prayers are with you in your time of grief. May your memories bring you comfort.
Cherise (John 11:25)
September 01, 2009
Our thoughts are with the family during their grief. May it help to know that God is your comfort. Isa 61:2
L Ellis
August 29, 2009 | Charlotte