Error message

Deprecated function: implode(): Passing glue string after array is deprecated. Swap the parameters in Drupal\gmap\GmapDefaults->__construct() (line 107 of /home/cfmain/prev/public_html/sites/all/modules/gmap/lib/Drupal/gmap/GmapDefaults.php).

First Steps for Peace

Fr. Thomas with parishioners
Fr. Thomas with parishioners

Prayer for Reunification

By Fr. Thomas Seungwon Nam

My name is Fr. Thomas Seugnwon Nam, and I am a South Korean Columban missionary priest. Currently, I am the Vice regional director of Korean region and in charge of the Vocation Office, Associate Priest and the Peace Office. In addition, I am the Chairman of Committee for reconciliation/peace of the Korean People under Conference of Major Superiors of Korean Men’s Religious Institutes and Societies of Apostolic Life, and involving the ministry for peace on the Korean Peninsula.

“You have the wrong number. This is the North Korean embassy.”

Fr. Thomas and friend
Fr. Thomas and friend

It was sometime in 1999 when I did my First Missionary Assignement (F.M.A) in Peru. I had to renew my passport, but the first time in my life that I spoke to a North Korean was because the Peruvian secretary couldn’t distinguish the South/North Korean embassy in Lima, Peru, and contacted the North Korean embassy. To further my embarrassment, I heard the embassy staff beyond the handset say, “The people from South Korea are often confused and making calls.” My hand was shaking as I held the phone, because like all south Koreans, my childhood education about the military dictatorship of North Korea was deeply ingrained.

She said, “It is a pity that the Korean peoples are divided into two embassies here in Peru, just like the reality of our countries in Korean Peninsula.” Then she talked about the unification of Korea. At that time, in South America, there were many countries that established diplomatic relations with North Korea earlier than South Korea. After this dramatic experience at foreign government offices, I sometimes noticed North Koreans, and I felt sad that I didn’t know them. From this experience, I learned that if I can’t see them, I don’t accept them in my heart. Therefore, one day, when I had the chance, I had the hope of studying about North Korea and working for all Koreans.

After mission in Peru, when I was studying at Catholic Theological Union in Chicago, Illinois, I had the opportunity to meet parishioners at the Korean community, where Columban Fr. John Smith was pastor. A family of an old couple in the parish was appointed as a family to help a North Korean young man who worked at a Russian logging camp and filed for refugee status adjust to living in the United States. The young man lived with the older couple for over a year. Sometimes I went to visit them, but I couldn’t talk to the young man who was wary. I was able to hear the story of the young man through the old couple. I learned about North Koreans who escaped from North Korea and went to China or Russia to live during the “Affliction March” that started in the mid-1990s. When I heard that they were living in South Korea, the United States, and Europe again, I became more interested in North Korean pastoral care. Looking at photos of people who died on the Amrok River (Yalu River) and the Dooman River (Tumen River) during their escape, and discovering that there are North Koreans sold by brokers all over China, I felt the urgency to do something for them. I prayed that God would give me an opportunity to work for North Koreans.

In 2015, the Committee for reconciliation/peace was launched at the Conference of Major Superiors of Korean Men’s Religious Institutes and Societies of Apostolic Life. In the fall of that year, I participated in a tour of the North Korean and Chinese border regions, I could better understand the situation of those who have fled for their lives. The following year, the Korean Region opened the North Korean ministry in earnest in the name of “Peace Pastoral.” Although the reality is that there is a pastoral limitation due to the influence of the situation surrounding the Korean Peninsula, we have been working steadily, especially working to meet and accompany North Korean refugees.

Many people in the church who are interested in reconciliation, healing, and peace on the Korean Peninsula can be the first step to establishing peace on this land and even in Northeast Asia.

I am currently registering as a North Korean refugee resettlement helper at the North Hana Center helping male refugees. We visit Hanawon (“hana” is “One” and “won” is a “place” or “house”) and celebrate the Masses with Brothers and priests from religious orders and mission societies and the priest who is in charge from Suwon diocese on Sunday morning. In addition, Hanawon also programmed the “One-night and two- days Family Culture Experience” (an organization belonging to the Ministry of Unification that helps North Korean refugees prepare for settlement in South Korean society after entering Korea) and invited Catholics and Buddhists to run the program together. Some dioceses joined the program and Columban and donors as volunteers are participating in the “One-night and two-days Family Culture Experience” program for female North Korean refugees, where they live for the first time with South Korean volunteer families. This program is a good opportunity to change their minds about others and make feel we are family.

After the program finished, I invited some of the donors and female North Korean refugees who met while participating in the program, to meet at 3 o’clock on the third Monday of the month, at the chapel in Columban mission center to celebrate Mass for reconciliation/peace in Korea peninsula. The place where the Mass is presented has a special meaning as it is a church that commemorates foreign military priests, including the seven Columban priests who died during the Korean War. And since last year, the Columban peace office delivered scholarships to North Korean youth group homes and the youth individually. We are also helping them to live well in Korean society and cheering for the Sisters who run the group home.

When the Korean War broke out, Bishop Gu Inlan (Columban Bishop Thomas Quinlan), and Columban Father Philip Crosbie, were captured by the North Korean army. Like other foreign prisoners of war, they witnessed many deaths.

The two missionaries returned to Korea, where the scars of the war remained, and prayed for peace and reconciliation while living with the people of this land for the rest of their lives. In total, seven Irish missionary priests were killed and martyred by the North Korean army. The Korean Catholic Church is promoting a Beatification for the 81st martyrdom during the Korean War, including the two, and will soon lead to the Canonization. I can tell you that the beginning of the Columban Peace Pastoral has continued from these people.

The Korean church has been praying and working for peace on the Korean Peninsula. It is not just about remembering the past sacrifice or reviving the past of North Korean church, but also we hope that you will continue to pray for peace in the Korean Peninsula through reconciliation and healing of the nation, and to create a society where Koreans and North Korean refugees live in harmony with each other. Many people in the church who are interested in reconciliation, healing, and peace on the Korean Peninsula can be the first step to establishing peace on this land and even in Northeast Asia. I hope that the members of the Missionary Society of St. Columban will also pray together for the reconciliation and unity of the nation.

Columban Fr. Thomas Seungwon Nam lives and works in South Korea. 

Issue: 

About us

Columban logoThe Columbans are a society of missionaries, including priests and lay people, who minister to people of various cultures as a way of witnessing to the universal love of God.

We go in the name of the Church to announce, by deed and word, the Good News of Jesus Christ.

Quick Contact

Missionary Society of St. Columban
1902 N. Calhoun
St. Columbans, NE 68056
Phone: 877-299-1920
Fax: 402-291-4984
email: mission@columban.org