Kim Jong Il’s official biography says he was “heaven sent,” born in a log cabin in Mount Paektu while his father was fighting the Japanese.
“Wishing him to be the lodestar that would brighten the future of Korea, they hailed him as the Bright Star of Mt. Paektu,” his biography reads.
Lore has it soldiers spread the news of his birth by inscribing the announcement on trees across the country — a practice that North Koreans continue today by carving the leaders’ messages into rocks and mountainsides.
Soviet records, however, reportedly indicate Kim Jong Il was born the year earlier in the Siberia.
The account of his death was just as mythic. His obituary in state media called him the “illustrious commander born of Heaven,” and on Wednesday, KCNA said a Manchurian crane spotted in the city of Hamhung circled a statue of Kim Il Sung for hours before dropping its head and taking off toward Pyongyang. The crane is a traditional Korean symbol of longevity.
The mythmaking for Kim Jong Un has begun as well, with an editorial in the Rodong Sinmun newspaper calling him “born of heaven.” However, details of his birth, and the accompanying legend, have not yet been revealed.