Tuesday, December 15, 2015

North Korea to allow ‘regular’ visits by South’s Catholic priests


A friend drew my attention to this report in the Japan Times of Monday last week describing a mission initiative, and, indeed, a wonderful breakthrough, for Christians in North Korea. 


South Korean Archbishop Kim Hui-jung speaks at a press conference in Seoul 
on December 7, 2015 after his recent trip to North Korea. 



Changchung Cathedral in Pyongyang, North Korea 


SEOUL – South Korea’s Catholic Church said Monday it had reached an agreement with North Korea to send priests there on “a regular basis,” seeking an opening in a country with a long history of tight religious control.

The agreement, which should see priests leading services in Pyongyang on major holy days starting next year, followed a visit to the North Korean capital by South Korean bishops last week.

Pyongyang’s state-run Korean Catholic Association (KCA) has no ties with the Vatican and is often referred to as the “Church of Silence” by Catholics in the South.

Although religious freedom is enshrined in the North’s constitution, all religious activity is subject to extremely tight restrictions and completely banned outside of state-sanctioned institutions.

There is no resident Catholic priest anywhere in the country and just one Catholic church building in Pyongyang, Changchung Cathedral. Experts say it holds no confessions, baptisms or any other sacraments.

The South’s Catholic Bishop’s Conference of Korea (CBCK) said in a statement that priests from the Seoul Archdiocese will visit the cathedral “on major holy days each year and hold a Mass on a regular basis.”

CBCK spokesman Lee Young-sik said the first visit is scheduled for Easter next March.

“And then we will iron out details on how frequently they would visit and lead a mass there,” Lee said.

The KCA claims there are 3,000 Catholics in the country, while the U.N. estimates around 800.

In the early 20th century, Pyongyang was a regional missionary hub with scores of churches and a thriving Christian community that earned it the title of “Jerusalem of the East.”

For North Korea’s founding leader Kim Il Sung, Christianity threatened his monopoly on ideology and had to be effectively eradicated, a goal he reportedly achieved with executions and labor camps.

The current regime allows Catholic organizations to run aid projects in North Korea, but direct relations with the Vatican are nonexistent.

When Pope Francis visited South Korea last year, he held a special Mass in Seoul dedicated to reunification of the two Koreas.

“All Koreans are brothers and sisters, members of one family, one people,” the pope said in an address that was cloaked in a religious context and avoided any overt political statement or mention of religious oppression in the North.



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