User:Dckewon5131/최윤주

Choi Yoon-ju (27 January 1887 – 11 September 1969) was a bureaucrat and operative during the Japanese colonial period, and his hometown was Jongno, Gyeongseongbu. He served as an operative in the Manchuria area and served as a member of the Central Committee of the Korean Government-General.

Life
He studied Chinese literature from 1893 to 1905, and from 1907 to 1909, he attended a private Chungseong School in Chinese County, Pyongannam Province. He served as the chief of the palace of the Korean Empire around 1910, and in the 1910s, he served as the head of Samjeon-myeon, Hwangju-gun, Hwanghae-do. In 1916, he moved to Yeon-gil, Manchuria, and in 1920, he served as the head of the communications department of the Gando Korean National Association.

From 1922 to May 31, 1934, he served as chairman of the Korean People's Assembly of Gando, and actively cooperated with the Japanese government's policy of controlling Koreans living in Japan. He established the Gando Education Association in 1923 and the slum school Service in 1924, and served as a director of the Kukja Trading Company in 1925. On September 20, 1931, the ladle plotted with the chairman of the Japanese People's Association and caused the so-called "ladle arson incident." This incident served as an opportunity to promote the dispatch of Japanese troops to Gando Island during the Manchurian Incident. He actively cooperated in suppressing Japanese anti-Japanese forces by participating in the organization of the People's Livelihood Group on October 7, 1931, and served as a member of the Central Committee of the Japanese Government from April 17, 1934 to April 16, 1937.

He has accumulated so much wealth that he held KRW 480,000 in capital since September 1934, including serving as an advisor to the Gando Cooperative Association headquarters (October 30, 1936, 1939), President of Dongman Forestry Co., Ltd. (February 1938, 1943), Director of Dongyangjigwangsa, and Chairman of Yeongil Urban Finance Association). In 1934, he was presented as a recipient of the National Foundation Meritorious Service Medal of Manchukuo, and in 1935, he received a commendation from the Governor-General of Joseon to commemorate the 25th anniversary of the municipal government. On April 16, 1937, he was ranked seventh in the list, and on November 25, 1940, he received a certificate of commemoration of the founding of the National Cemetery of Korea from the Manchukuo government.

He served as a member of the headquarters of Manchu National Reconciliation Association Gando Castle (Zendao Castle) (September 1939-1940), a member of the Yeongil (Yenji) region of the Korean Education Support Association (elected on August 16, 1940), and a member of the Central Headquarters of the Manchu National Reconciliation Association (around 1943) and promoted the formation in February 1943.

On March 25, 1949, after Korea's liberation from Japanese colonial rule, he was arrested by the Special Investigation Committee on Anti-National Acts, but was later released on a bottle bail. pro-Japanese group It was included in the list of 708 people, in the list of pro-Japanese biographical dictionaries of the Institute for National Studies, and in the list of pro-Japanese anti-ethnic activities announced by the Committee on Pro-Japanese Anti-ethnic Behavior.