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Han Sorya
Han Sorya (; born Han Pyŏngdo; 3 August 1900 – 6 April 1970) was a Korean writer, literary administrator and politician making much of his career in North Korea. Regarded as one of the most important fiction writers in North Korean history, Han also ran the entire North Korean literary scene as the head of the Korean Writers' Union and minister of education. During his career, Han survived a number of purges that were caused by factional strife within the Workers' Party. Sometimes acting as the force behind the purges within the cultural establishment, Han was also motivated by personal grievances against his rival writers. Han offered some of the earliest known contributions to the cult of personality of Kim Il-sung. Han himself was purged in 1962. His influence is felt in North Korea even today, though his name has been forgotten from official histories. Han's best known work, the anti-American ''Jackals'', however has been invoked in the 2000s. ==Personal life== Han was born on 3 August 1900 in Hamhung, in the north of Korea. His father was a county magistrate. He graduated from middle school in 1919 and attended Nippon University in Tokyo from 1921 to 1924. He emigrated to Manchuria in 1925 but returned to Seoul in the south in 1927. In 1944, he returned to his native Hamhung but at after the end of the war he settled in Pyongyang.
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