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Among the Intellectualoids

Potemkins in Pyongyang

The international religious left flacks for North Korea.

In a rare moment of curiosity, a recent World Council of Churches (WCC) visitor at a North Korean Potemkin-style government-run church in Pyongyang apparently asked why no children were present. Perhaps this WCC official felt like the Dick Van Dyke character in Chitty Chitty Bang Bang who, upon arriving in sinister Vulgaria, wonders where all the children were, not yet realizing that Baron Bomburst, at the behest of the child-despising Baroness, imprisons all of them, with help from the royal Childcatcher.

In the spirit of Vulgaria, the WCC delegation was assured that the children “are involved in a broad range of other activities and some will at a later age come to church.” Evidently the WCC forgot that communist North Korea prohibits any religious education for children, though the Potemkin churches would have been a little more persuasive with some child props.

By most accounts, North Korea’s Stalinist paradise is the worst place to be a Christian or any kind of religious believer. So naturally the Geneva-based World Council of Churches (WCC) recently visited North Korea and has joined with the Christian Conference of Asia to demand the lifting of international sanctions against the dictatorship’s nuclear weapons program.

Seemingly, groups like the WCC only worry about nukes if they belong to the U.S.

“An effective way of working towards peace and reconciliation on the Korean peninsula needs a multifaceted approach,” WCC chief Samuel Kobia told an ecumenical gathering afterwards in Hong Kong. Kobia and the head of the Christian Conference of Asia had just visited North Korea for the first time and evidently had a smashing time, courtesy of Kim Jong Il’s nasty regime. “The WCC in its established polices has always rejected any sort of confrontational approach to settle conflicts and disputes. We called on member churches to use every effort to overcome divisions and conflicts.”

Of course, the WCC was not always so non-confrontational. In the 1970s and 1980s it actively funded violent Marxist liberation movements fighting colonial regimes in southern Africa.

If Kobia had any thoughts on how North Korea’s monstrous regime likes to incarcerate, torture, and kill its Christians, the WCC did not report it. Evidently, Kobia was received warmly by the North Korean tyranny, which predictably showed him the handful of government-run puppet church congregations in Pyongyang. From North Korea, Kobia went to Hong Kong, where he and other Asian church leaders strategized on how to remove international pressure against North Korea and advocate Korean unification. Naturally, the Korea Christian Federation of North Korea, which is the communist regime’s puppet front group for international diplomacy, was a high profile participant.

“After my visit to North Korea, from my engagement with the church leadership and my observations, I am now very convinced that time has now come to end the economic sanctions,” Kobia told Ecumenical News International (ENI), fretting that sanctions are a “collective penalty.” Kobia enthused that WCC churches will persuade their governments to end sanctions, which should take priority over Six Party Talks (involving the U.S., Japan, China, Russia, South Korea and North Korea) on North Korea’s nukes.

Insipidly, the head of the Asian Christian Conference rejoiced that in North Korea the “Church still has the freedom to carry out its mission, but of course, still has some limitations.” He suggested the “challenge” was for Christians to operate in a “different societal system.” This was perhaps his polite way of saying that in North Korea, Christians who talk about their faith get thrown in a prison camp.

During their North Korean junket, the WCC-led delegation was honored to meet for over an hour with North Korean President Kim Yong-Nam. He told the fawning church delegation, no doubt to vigorously nodding heads, that the Six Party talks are unfair since they involve “all nuclear powers or enjoy nuclear protection by the United States,” except for poor little North Korea. Evidently, Supreme Leader Kim Jong-Il did not have time for the visiting churchmen. But Kim Yong-Nam was able to boast to Kobia et al., again undoubtedly to nodding heads, that North Korea has generously rebuilt churches that the U.S. had bombed during the Korean War. Of course, he was referring to the several show churches that North Korea has flamboyantly erected primarily for the benefit of naive global visitors.

Movingly, the North Korean President also told the churchmen that creating a nuclear free Korean peninsula was “one of the last instructions from the Great Leader,” the late North Korean “eternal leader” Kim Il-Sung, whose “eternal” leadership of the national prison camp he created apparently continues from his new, post-death location. In response, Kobia told President Kim that the WCC thinks “those who have nuclear weapons should get rid of them and those wanting them should no longer seek them.” And he assured his hosts that the WCC will continue to “work for peace.”

Kobia’s delegation naturally was charmed by the three churches they visited in Pyongyang A WCC photo shows every pew filled with happily singing women clad in beautiful silks. According to a WCC report, one church was “thoroughly modern with a full sound system, balcony and music text on a large screen in front of the church, a video camera system, a high-lofted ceiling and an area for a large choir. Bibles and songbooks line the seating areas for the congregations. Within the church compound is a recently constructed theological seminary where 12 students are now enrolled to earn degrees in evangelism.” How wonderful! It sounds just like a suburban megachurch in the U.S.

Fortunately for the North Koreans, groups like the WCC are easy to impress. At the Hong Kong meeting, Kobia sang the praises of Korean reunification. During the Cold War, he regretted, there were “deliberate and systematic efforts to create enemy images which demonized the other.” He also noted that previously in South Korea, national security restrictions had prevented WCC-supported activism for “aspirations for justice, peace and reunification.” Kobia did not comment on freedom of movement in North Korea. Maybe that would have been impolite.

During the Hong Kong gala, the head of the South Korean Council of Churches, itself left-leaning, expressed misgivings about Kobia’s insistence that international sanctions over North Korea’s nukes should be lifted. He cautiously suggested the need for “more advice.” But Kobia and the WCC probably have all the “advice” they need, after visiting the show churches and communist palaces of Pyongyang.

topics:
Nuclear Weapons, Religious Persecution, World Council of Churches

About the Author

Mark Tooley is president of the Institute on Religion and Democracy in Washington, D.C. and author of Methodism and Politics in the Twentieth CenturyYou can follow him on Twitter @markdtooley.


Letter to the Editor View all comments (30) |

Tim| 10.27.09 @ 11:48AM

1But mark this: There will be terrible times in the last days. 2People will be lovers of themselves, lovers of money, boastful, proud, abusive, disobedient to their parents, ungrateful, unholy, 3without love, unforgiving, slanderous, without self-control, brutal, not lovers of the good, 4treacherous, rash, conceited, lovers of pleasure rather than lovers of God— 5having a form of godliness but denying its power. Have nothing to do with them.

http://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=2 Timothy+3&version=NIV

christopher | 10.27.09 @ 1:23PM

I think that the failure of Rev. Moon in reaching the position of the Messiah do to his refusal to meet me and be given the Seal of the Living God has doomed North Korea and South Korea for mutual extinction.

What else can I say? I have no more tears left for Rev. Moon and no time left to save him; that "evil servant" who has now become the representative of the entire fallen "yellow race" as the "Scarlet Beast" of "Red China: from the Revelation.

Death now rules one fourth of the earth; through one race; the yellow race which Rev. Moon could have brought Immortality to: but will now die as a common mortal man: not the Messiah.

Say what, Christopher?| 10.29.09 @ 10:18AM

Can you make any sense out of what you just said, Christopher? I sure can't. Must have lost something in translation.

Big J| 10.27.09 @ 1:30PM

Next group on the Nork's welcome wagon - the esteemed Congressional Black Caucus.

If they were impressed by Fidel Castro, wait 'til they get a load of Kim Jong Il.

Bailey Kotyonok | 10.27.09 @ 3:41PM

Even Kim Jong Il can fool some of the people some of the time, if they allow it. A good piece on the absurdity of dealing with Kim can be found here: http://www.cuttothenews.com/th.....index.html

Big Leo| 10.27.09 @ 6:38PM

Excellent article, Mark. We in the conservative wing of the United Methodist Church strongly condemn the activities of the WCC and will continue to do so as long as they continue their current course. They will certainly not do so. As a WCC (then NCC) vice president said in Spain in 1932. "Spain is making great progress. Reports of Catholic churches being burned are received daily."

Big Leo| 10.27.09 @ 6:38PM

Excellent article, Mark. We in the conservative wing of the United Methodist Church strongly condemn the activities of the WCC and will continue to do so as long as they continue their current course. They will certainly not do so. As a WCC (then NCC) vice president said in Spain in 1932. "Spain is making great progress. Reports of Catholic churches being burned are received daily."

Reader | 10.27.09 @ 9:07PM

Just a little quibble...Kim Jong il is not the "President" of North Korea as he is referred to above. He is the Chairman of the National Defense Commission. His father, who died in 1994 is still "President".

Reader_not| 10.28.09 @ 8:41AM

Your reference to "Kim Jong il" as President is NOT found in the text above... The reference was to Kim Yong-Nam.
Kim Jong, Kim Yong, Kim Il... whatever, sigh! Even Aldus Huxley would have found it enigmatic.

Pingback| 10.30.09 @ 5:43PM

Doug Bandow » Blog Archive » Religious Useful Idiots links to this page. Here’s an excerpt:

…which sent a delegation to North Korea.  Alas, the churchmen lived up to the old standard of being useful idiots, apparently being taken in by what is probably the worst, most brutal regime on earty. Tooley observes: In a rare moment of curiosity, a recent World Council of Churches (WCC) visitor at a North Korean Potemkin-style government-run church in Pyongyang apparently asked why no children were present.…

70-431 | 11.22.09 @ 10:57PM

70-431,70-640

www.us-bapeoutlet.com | 4.3.10 @ 9:18PM

www.us-bapeoutlet.com

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