The Philippine Star

N. Korean Catholics asked to attend pope’s mass

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SEOUL ( AP) — South Korean Catholic officials have renewed a request for North Korea to send about 10 Catholics to a mass to be celebrated by Pope Francis during his August visit to Seoul, a Catholic official said yesterday.

The Aug. 14-18 trip will be the first visit by a pope to the Korean Peninsula in 25 years. During the visit, he is to participat­e in a Catholic youth festival, preside over a beatificat­ion ceremony for 124 Korean martyrs and bring a message of peace to the war-divided peninsula, according to Catholic officials.

South Korean Catholic officials first asked North Korea to send Catholic believers to Seoul for the pope’s visit about six months ago and later repeated the request as the North hasn’t responded, according to the Archdioces­e of Seoul. Spokesman Father Hur Young-yup said the North is expected to respond by early August.

North Korea’s constituti­on guarantees freedom of religion, but in practice only sanctioned services are tolerated by the government. Defectors from the country have said that the distributi­on of Bibles and secret prayer services can mean banishment to a labor camp or execution.

Hur said there were about 50,000 Catholics in North Korea before the 1950-53 Korean War. He said North Korean Catholics’ visit to Seoul would be symbolical­ly significan­t but he said they may not be allowed to come.

The Korean Peninsula remains divided along the world’s heavily fortified border following the war that ended with an armistice, not a peace treaty. North Korea has recently proposed a set of steps it says would reduce tension but it has also been conducting a barrage of missile and artillery tests that Seoul calls a provocatio­n.

 ??  ?? pope Francis is set to visit South Korea on aug.14.
pope Francis is set to visit South Korea on aug.14.

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