From the Open-Publishing Calendar
From the Open-Publishing Newswire
Indybay Feature
Korean Church Ignored Warning on Missionaries in Afghanistan
Originally From New America Media
Saturday, September 1, 2007 : The Saemmul Church ignored a Korean Foreign Ministry warning earlier this year and sent more missionaries into the lion’s den in Afghanistan without informing their families of the dispatch. And since 23 members of the church were abducted by Taliban militants in July, the church has been busy dressing up their missionary activities as volunteer work rather than reviewing its reckless missionary activities.
On Feb. 5, the Foreign Ministry wrote to the Korean Foundation for World Aid asking it to stop members from traveling to Afghanistan, saying that the Islamic militants were known to be plotting abductions of Koreans as a way to win the release of Taliban prisoners. However, the Saemmul Church ignored the warning and kept taking applications for short-term missionary activities in the war-ravaged country until April 1.
Twenty applicants studied Afghan languages once or twice a week for three months and armed themselves with medical and educational volunteer skills to aid their missionary activities. However, the church failed to prepare the volunteers for any possible abduction or other dangers. The young Korean Christians traveled at night using a rented bus, making them sitting ducks for kidnappers.
After the abduction, the church concentrated on playing down its responsibility, asking the press to describe the activities of the captives as “volunteer work” and trying to keep religious terms like “church” and “reverend” from appearing in reports. Yet all the time the church’s leading pastor Park Eun-jo continued making provocative remarks during service. In a sermon on Aug. 12, he suggested the abduction of the church members might be “a revelation of God” and the blood of the two hostages killed by Taliban kidnappers was “not spilled in vain” but would “bear religious fruit some day,” according to a Protestant online newspaper.Read More
Twenty applicants studied Afghan languages once or twice a week for three months and armed themselves with medical and educational volunteer skills to aid their missionary activities. However, the church failed to prepare the volunteers for any possible abduction or other dangers. The young Korean Christians traveled at night using a rented bus, making them sitting ducks for kidnappers.
After the abduction, the church concentrated on playing down its responsibility, asking the press to describe the activities of the captives as “volunteer work” and trying to keep religious terms like “church” and “reverend” from appearing in reports. Yet all the time the church’s leading pastor Park Eun-jo continued making provocative remarks during service. In a sermon on Aug. 12, he suggested the abduction of the church members might be “a revelation of God” and the blood of the two hostages killed by Taliban kidnappers was “not spilled in vain” but would “bear religious fruit some day,” according to a Protestant online newspaper.Read More
For more information:
http://news.newamericamedia.org/news/view_...
Add Your Comments
We are 100% volunteer and depend on your participation to sustain our efforts!
Get Involved
If you'd like to help with maintaining or developing the website, contact us.
Publish
Publish your stories and upcoming events on Indybay.
Topics
More
Search Indybay's Archives
Advanced Search
►
▼
IMC Network