ABSTRACT Paik Ki-wan, an 89-year-old Korean democracy activist, passed away on 15 February in 2021. He wrote the original poem, from which the lyrics of the song “March for the Beloved” (im-eul wihan haengjingog) originated. Many protesters across Asia sing this song, even in an ani-coup protest in Yangon recently. He has fought against dictatorship, and was tortured by it. As a result of the torture, he lost 38 kilograms, while he was in prison from his normal 82 kilograms. He never went to college or earned wages stably. He was an awakened warrior, poet, and teacher who helped poor children learn how to read. The dictatorial government broke down in 1987, and the Korean society went onto the transition road to democracy. In the presidential election in December 1987, the two representative democratic leaders—Kim Dae-jung and Kim Young-sam—both ran for the president and were divided into hostile competition. At this historical point, he was honored to run for president and pressured those two candidates in order to prevent the military candidate from coming into power. As they got old, many of those who fought for democracy on the streets together in 1987 were included in the middle-class group or became high-ranking officialis, but he insisted to stand on the streets beside the underprivileged and the weakest people, fighting against the military dictatorship, and even the liberal democratic government led by Kim Dae-jung and even the current Moon Jae-in.