North
Korea agrees regular visits by South Catholic priests
South
Korea's Catholic Church announced on Monday it had reached 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, AFP
reported. The agreement, which should see priests leading services in
Pyongyang on major holy days from next year, followed a visit to the North
Korean capital by South Korean bishops last week. The announcement by the
Catholic Bishop's Conference of Korea (CBCK) came at the end of a 4-day visit to North
Korea by a delegation of 4 bishops and 13 priests, on the invitation of
Pyongyang's state-run Korean Catholic Association (KCA), which has no link with
the Vatican.
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. But experts say it holds no confessions,
baptisms or sacraments. There are also two Protestant churches, but there
are no Catholic priests, Protestant
pastors or Buddhist monks in North Korea.
CBCK
spokesman Lee Young Sik told AFP the first visit was scheduled for Easter in
March 2016. "And then we will iron out details on how frequently
they would visit and lead a mass there," Lee said.
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". The KCA claims to have 3 thousand members, but
AsiaNews sources estimate
that there are less than 800
and these are mostly the very old people, baptized before the Korean War (which broke
out in 1950) who have no way to
practice their faith. In some special occasions like Christmas, it is possible
that the faithful meet exchange a
greeting of "peace", but nothing more than thatThe North Korean regime allows
Catholic organizations to run aid projects in North Korea, but direct relations
with the Vatican are non-existent. When Pope Francis visited South Korea
last year, he held a special mass in Seoul dedicated to reunification of the
two Koreas. (Source: AFP/AsiaNews)

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