Houston Chronicle

Kim invites pope to N. Korea, vows ‘rousing welcome’

But will the Vatican accept the offer for first-ever visit?

- By Choe Sang-Hun

SEOUL, South Korea — Kim Jong Un, the leader of North Korea, which has been condemned as one of the worst suppressor­s of religious freedom in the world, has invited Pope Francis to visit his country, South Korea’s government said Tuesday.

The invitation will be relayed by South Korea’s president, Moon Jae-in, a Roman Catholic, when he visits the Vatican for two days next week to seek the pope’s help in easing tensions on the divided Korean Peninsula, said Kim Eui-kyeom, a spokesman for Moon.

Moon met with Kim in Pyongyang, the North Korean capital, last month.

“If the pope visits Pyongyang, we will give him a rousing welcome,” Kim told Moon, according to Moon’s spokesman.

There was no immediate comment from the Vatican on whether Francis would accept the invitation, but it is considered highly unlikely.

No pontiff has ever visited North Korea, whose totalitari­an government cracks down on religious activities, instead promoting a personalit­y cult around Kim and his father and grandfathe­r, who ruled the country as godlike figures.

Improbable as such a visit may sound, this is not the first time that North Korea has tried to invite a pope.

In 1991, as the Soviet bloc began disintegra­ting, North Korea campaigned to invite Pope John Paul II to Pyongyang to help ease its deepening diplomatic isolation, according to a memoir by Thae Yong Ho, a North Korean diplomat who defected to South Korea in 2016.

The government even found an older woman who still held on to her Catholic beliefs from the days before the Communists took over at the end of World War II. The woman, who still practiced her faith in secret, was taken to the Vatican to meet the pope, Thae said.

But the North eventually abandoned its campaign for fear that such a visit might fan religious zeal in the hermit nation, he added.

Francis has shown interest in helping build a lasting peace on the peninsula.

When he visited South Korea in 2014, Francis said he came here “thinking of peace and reconcilia­tion on the Korean Peninsula.” North Korea fired three shortrange rockets off its east coast shortly before the pope’s arrival. After the pope landed, it fired two more rockets.

Still, Francis called for forgivenes­s and renewed dialogue on the peninsula and for more humanitari­an aid for North Korea.

“Peter asks the Lord: ‘If my brother sins against me, how often must I forgive him? As many as seven times?’ To which the Lord replies: ‘Not seven times, I tell you, but 70 times seven,’” the pope said in reference to decades of hostilitie­s and mistrust that have divided Korea. “Unless we are prepared to do this, how can we honestly pray for peace and reconcilia­tion?”

Such a message usually does not go down very well with conservati­ve South Koreans, including right-wing Protestant­s who are some of the most vocal opponents of the Communist government in Pyongyang. These Protestant activists have burned Kim in effigy during outdoor rallies and released large balloons that spread anti-Kim leaflets over the North.

But should the pope accept the offer, he would wade into a country widely accused of torturing and even executing the faithful.

“The North Korean government’s approach toward religion and belief is among the most hostile and repressive in the world,” the U.S. Commission on Internatio­nal Religious Freedom said in its annual report this year. “Freedom of religion or belief does not exist in North Korea. The regime exerts absolute influence over the handful of state-controlled houses of worship permitted to exist, creating a facade of religious life in North Korea.”

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