Thursday, August 7, 2014

North Korea rejects offer to attend Mass given by Pope Francis in Seoul


North’s Korean Catholics Association said visit would be ‘agonising’ and cites Seoul’s refusal to cancel a joint military drill with US forces for its decision
 
North Korea has apparently declined an invitation to send Catholic believers to a mass celebrated by Pope Francis in Seoul later this month, a South Korean Church official said.
In a letter, the North’s state-run Korean Catholics Association (KCA) cited Seoul’s refusal to cancel an upcoming joint military drill with US forces as the main reason for its decision.
 
Pope Francis waves during a Sunday Angelus prayer in Saint Peter's square at the Vatican.
Pope Francis waves during a Sunday Angelus prayer in Saint Peter’s square at the Vatican. Photograph: Tony Gentile/Reuters

Pope Francis is to conduct a special Korean reconciliation mass in Seoul on the last day of his visit to South Korea between 14-18 August, and church officials in the South had sent several requests to Pyongyang to send a group of Catholics to attend.
But the day of the mass coincides with the launch of the annual Ulchi Freedom Guardian joint military drill, which the North has condemned as a rehearsal for nuclear war.
“Under these circumstances, coming to Seoul would be an agonising step,” the KCA letter said.
“We interpret this as meaning the North finds it difficult to accept the invitation,” said an official at the South Korean Catholic Bishops’ Conference.
The Catholic Church, like any other religion, is only allowed to operate in North Korea under extremely tight restrictions, and within the confines of the state-controlled KCA.
It has no hierarchical links with the Vatican and there are no known Catholic priests or nuns.
The KCA claims 3,000 followers in the North but outside estimates put the figure at around 800. Some analysts believe the organisation is intended to give the impression that North Korea allows religious freedom, which defectors say does not exist in the secretive state.
A recent comprehensive report compiled by a UN Commission of Inquiry into human rights in North Korea concluded that practising Christianity outside the state-sanctioned church amounted to a “political crime”.
The Pope’s final mass, to be held in Seoul’s Myeongdong cathedral, will focus on a message of peace and reconciliation for the Korean peninsula.
 

  • The Guardian,
 

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