Precious Guideline 

   Kim Jong Il visited the Wangjaesan Revolution Museum. In a room of the museum he, pointing to some materials on a wall, which include cuts from publications about the noble qualities of President Kim Il Sung and notebooks used by the fighters of the Korean People’s Revolutionary Army for their political studies during the anti-Japanese revolutionary struggle, said that they had to put on display a lot of things like the materials. Then, he said: You have exhibited a lot of photographs and pictures, and I don’t think it’s good. It would be advisable to extensively find out newspaper data of the time when they fought against the Japanese imperialists and put them on display. If you put a lot of photographs and pictures, it would look like an art museum. People come to the revolution museums not to appreciate artworks but to see real materials that substantiate the revolutionary activities of President Kim Il Sung….
Now officials concerned felt quite remorseful. After a while, the Chairman told them to put down needless pictures and exhibit more valuable real materials, instead. And he proposed to bring some materials of historical importance from the Korean Revolution Museum and put them on display in the Wangjaesan Revolution Museum.
The officials realized that the real materials that prove the history of revolutionary activities of the President are the treasure of lasting value for the Workers’ Party of Korea, the country and the people, which are more precious than any artworks.