Experts seek ways to end Korea-Japan conflict

Experts seek ways to end Korea-Japan conflict

SEOUL (UCAN): Ahead of the visit by Pope Francis visit to on November 23 to 26 focusing on global peace, some 50 scholars from Japan and South Korea met for an international symposium from October 30 to 31 in Seoul after diplomatic relations plummeted to a new low in recent months.

Caritas (love) and Reconciliation of the Catholic Church in Japan and Korea was the theme of the symposium, which was organised by the Critical Global Studies Institute and the Theological Study Institute of Jesuit-run Sogang University in South Korea.

 “The road to reconciliation should be a continuation of asking for forgiveness and forgiving,” said Korean Jesuit Father Alexander Pak Sang-hun, director of the Jesuit Research Centre for Advocacy and Solidarity.

Father Pak was referring to the heart of the dispute between the nations—compensation for some 200,000 Korean comfort women the Japanese forced into sexual service during the Second World War.

Japan claims the compensation issue was settled as Japan gave more than US$800 million ($6.2 billion) in economic aid and loans to Korea in 1965 when diplomatic relations were normalised.

Japan also apologised for its crime of using women as sex slaves and, in 2015, promised to set up a US$9 million ($70.5 million) fund to help the surviving victims, all of them considered to be above the age of 80 now.

Lim Ji-hyeon, director of the Critical Global Studies Institute, introduced a letter sent by the Polish Bishops’ Conference to its German counterpart in 1965 that expressed forgiveness for Nazi atrocities in Poland.

“The letter was unacceptable at the time, but it acted as momentum for peace between the countries. The exchange meetings of Japanese and Korean bishops for the past 20 years will be the foundation of peaceful solidarity between the two rival countries,” Lim said

The works of the “Churches of Japan and Korea go beyond Church circles to bring peace through solidarity,” said Jesuit Father Mitsunobu Ichiro, a professor at Sophia University in Tokyo.

The bishops of Japan and Korea have been holding annual exchange meetings since 1996.

The Catholic scholars met as South Korean president, Moon Jae-in, and Japanese prime minister, Shinzo Abe, were preparing for the meeting of the Association of South East Asian Nations (ASEAN) in Bangkok. 

The leaders had a brief meeting on November 4, the first in over a year after the long-running dispute between the nations spilled over to affect economic and business ties.

The diplomatic tension continues as Pope Francis prepares to visit Japan and its nuclear-bombed cities of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, when he is expected to speak against nuclear weapons and call for global peace.

Pope Francis, while meeting with Japanese bishops, is expected to discuss their efforts to bring peace in the region, where communism, nuclear threats and historic rivalries force the nations to perceive each other as enemies.

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