Pope Francis smiled, waved and hugged hundreds of underprivileged people during his visit to South Korea this week, amplifying his image as the people’s pope.
The top cleric of the Catholic Church met disabled children, North Korean defectors and former sex slaves of the Japanese military during his event-packed five-day tour of Korea.
But Pope Francis’ brief meeting on Saturday with the father of a victim of the Sewol ferry disaster left a strong impression on South Koreans.
On Monday, the last day of the papal visit, the pope will hold a Mass at the Myeongdong Cathedral near downtown Seoul to pray for peace and reconciliation between North and South Korea.
North Korean escapees who have resettled in the South will be invited. Many North Korean defectors living in the South struggle financially as they adjust to a capitalist society.
They are also often separated from families still living in the North. Many of the left-behind families are imprisoned in one of the North’s political gulags as punishment for letting their families flee to the South.
Women who were forced into sexual slavery by the Japanese military during World War II will also attend the morning Mass. Most of them are in their 80s or older, and have suffered from the aftereffects of forced sexual servitude, including diseases to the womb or indelible psychological scars.
They are sometimes referred to as “comfort women,” a euphemistic term some of them dislike. The Japanese government refuses to take legal or financial responsibility for them.
“I will tell everything to the pope,” Kang Il-chul, a former sex slave, said in a recent television interview.
The pope’s visit to a welfare center run by Catholic officials in Eumseong, North Chungcheong Province, on Saturday also left a strong impression. There, Pope Francis talked to disabled children, most of whom were abandoned by their biological parents. His brief prayer at a memorial to unborn children behind the care center also hinted at the pope’s philosophy against abortion.
But just before Saturday’s beatification ceremony, Pope Francis made one of his most emotional acts since coming to Korea, when he got out of his car in an unusual move.
Pope Francis consoles the father of a victim of the Sewol ferry disaster, who has been on hunger strike for more than a month demanding an independent investigation of the accident. (Committee for the Papal Visit to Korea) |
The pontiff slowly walked to speak to Kim Young-oh, the father of a high school student killed in the Sewol accident.
The car was conducting a slow tour of Gwanghwamun Square amid millions of spectators who had gathered to watch Saturday’s beatification Mass.
Kim has been on a hunger strike at the square since July 14 to protest the government’s response to the Sewol accident and failed rescue efforts.
Pope Francis patiently listened to Kim, holding hands with the 47-year-old man.
“Please, do not forget the Sewol (accident),” the bearded Kim said as he gave a letter to the pope.
The pontiff silently nodded apparently to show he understood, as he put the envelope in his pocket.
Kim and other bereaved families have been urging lawmakers to pass a special bill that will create an independent inquiry panel to investigate the most senior government authorities in relation to the Sewol accident.
Lawmakers, government executives and even members of the presidential staff have been accused of making mistakes during follow-up rescue operations.
Rival political parties have been in a weekslong deadlock over the bill.
By Jeong Hunny (hj257@heraldcorp.com)