User:Dckewon5131/김응두

Kim Eung-du (1892–?) was a bureaucrat and operative during the Japanese colonial period, and his hometown was Gyeongseongbu.

Life
He majored in law at Meiji University in Japan and served as principal of Jeju Myungshin High School. In October 1939, he visited the Joseon Governor-General's Office as a representative of Korean community leader in Jaeman and petitioned for educational support for Korean community leader in Jaeman, and since he was appointed as a representative of Korean residents in Jeonman in November 1939, he has launched a campaign to establish a secondary school. He served as president of Bukman Industrial Co., Ltd. (elected in February 1940), the first permanent secretary of the Gyerim Industrial Club (elected on August 19, 1940), and the president of Shinjing Dong-A Business Co., Ltd. (elected from 1940 to 1943).

On August 20, 1940, he was appointed as the chairman of the Jaman Korean Education Support Association (an organization established for the Jaman Korean Education Project) and led the implementation of Hwang Min-hwa's education policy in Manchuria. In 1941, he led the campaign to recruit army volunteers in the Korean society in Korea, including sending a request for application for volunteers to Korean residents in Korea, and actively cooperated with the National Gaerundong, a movement that claimed Koreans' labor security in 1942.

On October 30, 1940, influential Koreans in Manchuria, including Park Seok-yoon, Yoon Sang-pil, and Lee Seong-jae, were appointed as the general affairs of the Southeast District Special Operations Support Committee, an organization formed by the Japanese to support the anti-Japanese armed forces in southeastern Manchuria. It also distributed propaganda materials recommending surrender to anti-Japanese militants and launched donations to more than 50 branches in each region, including the Shinjing headquarters.

It was included in the overseas list of pro-Japanese biographical dictionaries of the Institute for National Affairs, and the 705 pro-Japanese anti-national activities announced by the Pro-Japanese Anti-National Act.