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adhitthana99 
Wed Jul 12, 2006 5:07 am (PST) 

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I wrote the following article with the assistance of
my wife Jenny 
Lim in the the spring of 1996 shortly after arson
attacks on Buddhist 
temples in Suyuri section of northern Seoul. I
presented it at a 
panel entitled "Buddhist and Christian Cooperation for
Social Action 
in Korea" which I organized and moderated for the 1996
Society for 
Buddhist-Christian Studies Conference "Socially
Engaged Buddhism and 
Christianity" hosted by Depaul University in Chicago. 

The panel was composed of Venerable Shin Bop Ta, abbot
of Eunhaesa 
Monastery and chairman of the One Korea Movement;
Venerable Pomnyun, 
leader of the Join Together Society and the Buddhist
Academy for 
Ecological Awakening; Professor Kim Kyong Jae of
Hanshin University, 
an ordained minister of the Korean Presbyterian Church
and author of 
Christianity and the Encounter of Asian Religions
(Bockencentrum, 
1994); and Professor Chung Hyun-Kyung, a eco-feminist
liberation 
theologian who teaches at Union Theological Seminary
in New York. 
Frank M. Tedesco presented the focal paper reproduced
below. 

The Society for Buddhist-Christian Studies was so
moved by the 
revelation of fire bombings of Buddhist temples and
tensions between 
the faiths in Korea that officially issued a Statement
of Concern and 
Support for Korean Buddhists at the end of the meeting
which was 
endorsed with signatures by hundreds of the
participants at the 
conference. The SBCS has set up a fund to redress the
destruction. 

Unfortunately attacks on Buddhist sanctuaries have
continued to be 
perpetrated throughout the country (1998). Protests
and demands for 
justice within the Buddhist community seem to have
inspired 
reflection among some liberal Protestant leaders in
Korea who have 
apologized publicly for the acts of extremists who
call 
themselves "Christians". 

----------------------------------------------------------
---------- 

QUESTIONS FOR BUDDHIST AND CHRISTIAN COOPERATION IN
KOREA Frank M. 
Tedesco 

1. Introduction: Religious Freedom in Korea 

The Korean peninsula is known throughout the world for
the stark 
bifurcation between the communist North and the
capitalist South. 
North Korea (DPRK) is one of the most closed societies
in the world 
where the public is prohibited access to international
communication. 
Reports tell us that the North is a starving
totalitarian state where 
the people have no freedom or civil rights and where
the thought of 
the Great Leaders Kim Il Sung and his heir Kim Jong Il
dominates all 
aspects of life like a ultra-nationalist cult. The
major 
institutionalized religions of the North- Buddhism,
Christianity and 
Chondogyo- have been subject to purges and are
strictly subordinated 
to the state and its all pervasive ideology of Juche
(self-reliance). 
Authentic interreligious dialogue and cooperation is a
non-issue 
except for praise of the Great Leader. Survival of the
original 
religious impulses and authentic traditions of the
North is at stake 
after nearly fifty years of political repression. What
is happening 
in the South? 

South Korea (ROK), in contrast, is renowned as a
economic superstar, 
an Asian industrial dragon, who rose from the
devastation of the 
Korean War to host the very successful 1988 Olympics
and join the 
club of developed nations in the OECD in record time.
South Korea, 
too, has had its authoritarian leaders we know well
(Rhee, Park, 
Chun, Roh...), but none have been so idolized like the
father and son 
duo in the North. Quite the contrary, retired
dictators in the South 
have been denounced as scoundrels and put behind bars
for corruption 
in a sudden wave of democratic reforms propelled by
the freely 
elected President Kim Young Sam, a Presbyterian elder
and former 
dissident, despite their reputed leadership through
the economic boom 
of the eighties. 

A tradition of authoritarianism notwithstanding,
institutionalized 
religions have fared much better in South Korea than
in the North 
since the Korean War. Strongly influenced by Western
democratic 
political ideals since the founding of the ROK
government in 1948, 
the present Constitution of the Republic of Korea
(Sixth Republic, 
1987) guarantees privacy of correspondence and freedom
of religion, 
conscience, speech, press, assembly and equality
before the law 
regardless of religion. Free to follow their religious
predilections 
without serious constraints on their behavior for the
most part, the 
religious world of Korea is very rich. There is a wide
diversity of 
religious options open to "spiritual seekers" and
"society seekers" 
alike. They may choose from the oldest native and
traditional folk 
and shaman beliefs and practices (nature worship and
national 
foundation myths included) or they may investigate the
over 1600 year 
old Buddhist tradition (and Confucianism if it is
considered a 
religion). They may also opt for the relatively 'new'
indigenous 
religions of Chondogyo and Won Buddhism and others or
they may, as so 
many have done since the Korean War, embrace the
recently introduced 
Western faiths of Catholicism and Protestantism with
their various 
orders and permutations. 

While South Koreans are free to follow whatever
religion they wish, 
according to government statistics, only 54% of the
population (43 
million) in 1991 claim religious affiliation. Of this
54%, about 12 
million identify themselves as Buddhist (51%), about 8
million as 
Protestant (34%), 2.5 million as Catholic (11%),
roughly 2 % as 
Confucian and 2% others. The National Statistics
Office indicates 
that Buddhists are the fastest growing segment of the
religious 
population in Korea. Buddhists have grown from 46.9%
of the religious 
population in 1985 to 51.2% in 1991 while the
Protestant population 
has declined 3.3% and Catholics 0.2%. 

The figures cited above vary widely from those
published in the 
Religious Yearbook 1995 of a Protestant research
group. This source 
estimates that Korea has "as many as 18 million
Christians, or 41% of 
the population." Protestant and Methodist
denominations account for 
the majority of the Christians. Following Shim, Jae
Hoon in the Far 
Eastern Economic Review, the handbook says that the
"total number of 
South Korean Protestants slipped O.4% to 15 million
between 1991 and 
1994, a sharp contrast to the growth of previous
decades. The Roman 
Catholic Church says it has continued to expand, to
3.5 million 
adherents, but church officials say the growth rate
slowed to 3.4% 
last year, down from 6.3% in 1991." We would like to
add that the 
number of believers most commonly claimed on banners
during 
demonstrations by Buddhist activists and in news by
the Buddhist 
press is 20 million. The complex issues of
questionnaire design and 
survey methodology cannot be elaborated on here but we
will assume 
that there is a rough balance between Christians and
Buddhists 
throughout the Korean population with about half the
total populace 
claiming no strong religious affiliation. There is no
other country 
in the world where these two religions are so equally
represented in 
the general population. 

2. Early Protestant Missionary Attitude toward
Buddhism in Korea 

Can we not learn something more about the nature of
these major 
traditions in Korea by observing their interactions in
close 
juxtaposition, millions of believers living in the
same communities 
side by side? What may we expect for the future of
Eastern and 
Western interreligious dialogue? No! Interdependent
religious 
dialogue? No! Interdependent religious co-habitation,
as our world 
grows closer and closer? How do Christians and
Buddhists get along in 
Korea today? And how does their present relationship
compare with 
what we know about Korea at the beginning of this
century? What does 
this mean for the challenges the Korean people will
face in the 
immediate future? And the rest of the world? 

"Except for the religiously exclusivistic attitudes
upheld by the 
vast majority of present day Korean Christians",
Koreans were 
traditionally "generally flexible towards different
faiths" states 
Professor Oh Kangnam in a recent article. He quotes a
passage from an 
American missionary Homer Hulbert who went to Korea in
1886 to 
describe the Korean "eclectic or pluralistic attitude"
which is "now 
hardly found among many Koreans, especially among
Korean Christian 
leaders and their followers." Hulbert wrote : "...the
reader must 
ever bear in mind that in every Korean mind there is a
jumble of the 
whole, that there is no antagonism between the
different cults... As 
a general thing, we may say that the all-round Korean
will be a 
Confucian when in society, a Buddhist when he
philosophises and a 
spirit worshipper when he is in trouble." 

"A jumble of the whole... there is no antagonism
between the cults!" 
Putting this insulting judgment aside, there is an
element of 
surprise at the novelty (to Hulbert the missionary at
least) that 
there is no conflict among the different belief
systems in 
traditional Korea at the time of the advent of his
missionary work. 
The religions seem to have co-existed in peace.
Hulbert went to Korea 
at the end of the Yi Dynasty. The Confucian
authorities had long ago 
driven Buddhist monks from the cities and into the
mountains and 
controlled the government and all positions of
influence in 
education, commerce and the military. The Buddhist
sangha was at its 
nadir in Korean history. Shamanism, folk Buddhism and
indigenous 
beliefs were the domain of the majority of the people
- the farmers 
and women - but they were relatively powerless and
also subordinate 
to Confucian men. Korea was just on the brink of
defending itself 
against the political and cultural assault of Japanese
colonial 
aggression which was to last until 1945. 

Into this relatively placid, if not somewhat
depressed, plural 
religious milieu entered Western missionaries with
their undisguised 
goal to convert all Koreans to Christ, "forcing its
way in after a 
fight of centuries," according to missionary scholar
Charles Allen 
Clark. One of the most articulate and erudite among
the American 
missionaries, Dr. C. A. Clark, author of the classic
Religions of Old 
Korea, was a missionary in Korea for twenty eight
years at the 
beginning of this century. Clark delivered lectures on
Korean 
religion at a number of theological schools in the
United States 
beginning with the Princeton Theological Lectures of
1921. 

Clark's observations of religious life in Korea were
very perceptive 
and informed with much reading in comparative religion
of his day and 
reflections on religions in other parts of Asia where
he traveled. He 
was convinced that his Christianity was the
culmination of all the 
imperfect faiths "in various stages of mental and
spiritual 
development" which had preceded it in Asia. Reviewing
the history of 
religion in Korea, he saw the "religions of old Korea
destined to 
pass away to make room for brighter things." 

Clark sounded a death knell for Buddhism in Korea and
damned it with 
mixed praise in the process. His concluding paragraphs
on Buddhism 
from his classic book on Korean religions are worth
citing for the 
attitude toward Buddhism they reveal. This, too, was
taught and 
transmitted to Korean converts of the "modern" Western
faith both in 
Korea and in seminaries in the United States. 

Buddha's sun seems to be setting in Korea. Korea owes
it a debt of 
gratitude. it came to Korea in 372 AD, and was vastly
superior to the 
degraded spirit worship and Shamanism which it found.
It gave Korea a 
moral code, more or less defective yet infinitely
better than 
nothing. It has collaborated with Confucianism all
down the ages, 
giving "sanctions" to make even Confucian ethics
operative. It gave 
education of a sort and stood for education always. It
has always had 
faults, glaring ones, but it also had a contribution
to make to 
Korean life and culture in those dim ages of the past.
Its sun rose 
in 372. It reached its zenith in the Koryu Age. It has
steadily gone 
down ever since. Buddhism seems to have no message for
the present 
age. Efforts will be made to keep it alive. It will
not die all at 
once, but 'Ichabod' seems to have been written over
it, and it must 
go. 

As the sun of Buddhism sets, it should be a joy to all
lovers of 
Korea that a greater Sun of Righteousness has arisen
to give light 
suitable to this new day. May the Buddhists themselves
soon come to 
see that a Messiah greater than Miryuck has come, a
Savior more real 
than Amida, a compassionate Friend Who loves more than
Kwanseieum or 
Chijang, and Who has power far all that of Taiseiji!
Christianity 
coming now can thank Buddhism for making all these
ideas familiar to 
the whole people, and for making it easier for them to
receive them. 
May the whole land accept this new, true statement of
those ideas as 
eagerly as it did the Buddhism in the Koryu Age, and
may the whole 
people become one in serving Christ, our King! Our
revered elder 
brother, wise and all-knowing thankful teacher, who
loves us and our 
nation more than we do ourselves, Clark intoned the
last words at the 
funeral of Korean Buddhism, he hopefully assumed! 

Anachronistic as Clark's remarks may appear in this
age of ecumenism 
and interreligious dialogue, the self-righteous and
anti-Buddhist 
sentiments he expressed unfortunately still prevail in
Korea today. 

3. Contemporary Protestantism in Korea and
Interreligious Dialogue 

A victim of this exclusivistic and imperialistic
ideology was Dr. 
Pyôn Sôn-hwan, the late former president of the
Methodist Seminary in 
Seoul, who was dismissed from the presidency of his
school and also 
deprived of his professorship and ministerial
privileges in 1992. He 
was virtually excommunicated from the church "mainly
because of his 
sympathetic understanding toward other religions,
particularly toward 
Buddhism. When he stated to the effect that there is
salvation 
outside the church, he was severely criticized by his
fellow 
Christians from almost every denomination in Korea." 

Dr. Pyôn was the leading figure in Buddhist-Christian
dialogue in 
Korea until his death in 1995. He was a frequent
participant in 
international Buddhist conferences as well as
Buddhist-Christian 
dialogue meetings such as at the Academy House in
Seoul. He 
demonstrated in his own life the kind of personal
honesty, openness, 
modesty and courage which is needed to make
interreligious dialogue 
more than a pleasant academic exercise but a living
interactive 
reality with others of different faiths. 

The last meetings I had with Dr. Pyôn included an
unexpected 
encounter on the grounds of Chogyesa Temple in Seoul
in 1994 during 
the demonstrations of the reformist sangha to oust the
former corrupt 
administrative head of the Chogye Order headquarters
Sô Ûi-hyôn. We 
took 'refuge' in Venerable Bopta's One Korea Buddhist
reunification 
movement office when the action at the Order's
Headquarters seemed at 
a lull and it began to rain. We were both impressed
with Ven. Bopta's 
North Korean experiences and his insights into
Buddhism there. Our 
last meeting was at the Academy House when the famous
Vietnamese 
peace activist Venerable Thich Nhat Hanh was invited
to speak with a 
group of Christian leaders and demonstrate his form of
mindful 
walking meditation (in the rain!) in April, 1995. 

In an important article published in the spring of
1995 in Tabo, the 
quarterly journal of the Korean Buddhism Promotion
Foundation, Dr. 
Pyôn addressed the United Nations 1995 announcement of
the Year of 
Tolerance and Understanding. The UN called upon
religious followers 
of the globe to play a decisive role in building a
brighter future 
for the world by denouncing and eliminating any form
of intolerance 
and discrimination caused by differences in religions
and doctrines. 
Why is it, he asked, that while peace seemed to made
significant 
progress in the Middle East with the truce between the
Israelis and 
the Palestinian guerrillas, that while the Cold War
between East and 
West seemed at an end, that even while the Roman
Catholic Church had 
declared the decision of the Inquisition on Galileo
was wrong, that 
while the troubles in Ireland might be over, why was
there still no 
progress in dissolving tensions and making true peace
between North 
and South Korea at the DMZ? And why is Christianity in
Korea 
provoking public condemnation because of the
missionary work of its 
aggressive, conversion-oriented Christian leaders who
are following 
extremely conservative and fundamentalist theology
from the States? 
Rev. Pyôn quipped "that Korea, once known as 'the land
of the morning 
calm' was quickly becoming the 'land of the evening
noise' or worse 
yet the 'land of the morning and evening noise'
because of fanatical 
Christians who engage in combative conversion-hungry
missionary work. 
Nothing is wrong with propagation or missionary work
itself, only the 
exclusive and obsolete method that slanders and
condemns other 
religions," he wrote. Dr. Pyôn then went on to cite
newspaper and 
magazine reports to illustrate the breath and
magnitude of insults 
and outright slander perpetrated against Buddhists by
zealous 
Christians. 

A more extensive listing of incidents against Buddhism
including over 
twenty serious arson attacks against temples in the
last fifteen 
years will be enumerated in the next section. Five
arson attacks 
against temples in Suyudong, Seoul just prior to the
year's (1996) 
Buddha's Birthday celebration has been the primary
impetus for this 
compilation. Three assaults were made on the Seoul
International Zen 
Center at Hwagyesa, the home monastery of one of
Korea's major 
Buddhist leaders in interreligious dialogue and
practice, world 
famous Zen Master Seung Sahn. Two closely neighboring
temples were 
even more seriously victimized; a bell tower housing
religious 
instruments was destroyed at Samsông-Am up the
mountain from Hwagyesa 
and two extraordinary traditional Dharma Halls were
burnt to the 
ground at Pônwon Chôngsa, cost: US $5.6 million. The
latter two 
temples were attacked just past midnight the same
night (April 20). 
The International Zen Center at Hwagyesa attacked
repeatedly three 
times within three weeks of the April 20 catastrophes,
the first time 
on April 21st! We must be careful to point out that no
one has been 
positively identified, arrested or definitely
associated with any of 
these crimes as of this writing. We have interviewed
the chief of 
police involved who is actively pursuing the cases and
he concurs 
with general public opinion that it is probable that a
fanatical or 
mentally disturbed religious extremist is connected
with the 
incidents based on the nature of the crimes and the
pattern of 
successful investigations and arrests in other cases
of Buddhist 
temple burnings. These incidents may never be resolved
but they have 
opened the topic of religious violence in Korea which
should not be 
suppressed, slighted or ignored again. 

4. Questions for Buddhists and Christians in Korea 

Occasions of insults and violent assaults against
Buddhist teachings 
and Buddhist images and places of worship, including
the homes of 
Buddhist clergy in Korea like those cited above, had
very little 
notice in the local or national press or other media
in Korea. Why is 
this? Does someone need to be hurt or killed before
it's "news?" They 
have only been reported in the small, private Buddhist
press for the 
most part but almost ignored by larger agencies? Is
there a policy to 
quash reports of incidents of religious conflict or
attacks against 
Buddhists in order to keep a lid on the events?Are the
incidents so 
sensitive that certain authorities fear a backlash
from an informed 
Buddhist constituency? 

Why aren't Korean Buddhists themselves more assertive
about 
rectifying the ill treatment they have been receiving
from certain 
factions within Korea? Why hasn't the Chogye Order
Headquarters 
published a policy statement about this issue? Why
haven't more 
liberal Korean Christian leaders and congregations
(including 
Catholics) extended sympathy and support to Buddhists
who have been 
victimized by religious extremists or unknown
assailants? If such 
basic neighborly concern is truly missing in the
Korean religious 
world, isn't it time to actively do something about it
and bridge the 
icy chasm of indifference which has kept Koreans
separate and 
isolated from each other within their own small
country? Who can 
blame the other for their aloof silence? Radical
students and 
professors in South Korea righteously blame the United
States and the 
USSR for the painful division of their country at the
end of World 
War II. Can they really blame the superpowers for the
religious 
tensions and alienation their own people perpetuate in
the South? 

These questions arise from a hope that the Korean
Buddhist and 
Christian communities can help those of us who care
about Korea get a 
clearer sense how inter-religious cooperation for
effective social 
action can be implemented in Korea and other parts of
Asia. A good 
place to begin is at the beginning. Just what is going
on in Korea? 
Christians and Buddhists look at each other
suspiciously over stony 
walls. Like the new tall buildings which have gone up
everywhere in 
Seoul (and have come crashing down like Sampoong
Department Store!), 
they wear a thin veneer of stone that hides a tempest
of activity 
within. Can we not acknowledge this simple fact and
recognize that we 
are all in our own private way trying to make sense of
this confusing 
and ever more crowded and polluted world? Is it
"ecologically 
correct" to pretend that we can really separate
ourselves from 
others? An "ecological awakening" to our
interconnectedness is in 
order. Don't we share the results of our karma and our

interdependence with the natural world around us? 

Buddhists and Christians alike need to seriously
consider the 
description of the Christian critique of Buddhism
which was written 
by Venerable Chi Myong in 1990. Dr. Pyôn selected his
words as 
representative of a wise Buddhist response to the
widespread 
Christian challenges and attacks. It can be summarized
as follows. 

Many Korean Christians claim : 

1) Buddhism is superstition 2) Buddhism is idol
worship 3) Jesus is 
God but Shakyamuni is (was) a human being 4) Buddhism
is too 
difficult to understand. It is a philosophy, not a
religion. Belief 
in Jesus is easy to understand and to do 5) Buddhism
is baseless. It 
has no substance at its root. It is responsible for
the wrongdoings 
of its monks and nuns. 6) Buddhism is an evil religion
which must be 
eradicated from the face of the earth. 

In response to these hateful accusations Ven. Chi
Myông encourages 
people to: 

1) Deal with clannish attacks perpetrated by followers
of other 
religions (Face them. Do not ignore them. Engage
them). 2) Set up an 
organization(s) to dissolve hostility and show
bodhisattva action. 3) 
Eliminate one's own exclusivistic and aggressive
inclinations. 
Fighting against violence is against Buddha's
teachings. Refrain from 
habitual, nervous reactions.Practice the bodhisattva
spirit in 
silence with friendliness without angry retorts. Avoid
fighting 
provocateurs who want to see Buddhism disappear from
earth. And the 
outraged Dr. Pyôn adds in aggravation: "People who
damage and 
desecrate Buddhism. People who are bound to the
letters of bible and 
church. Christian fanatics who attempt to destroy
their own cultural 
assets and smash their own traditional religion.
Puppet-like pseudo-
Christians. These people are the enemy of the open
democratic society 
toward which our nation is striving." 

5. Steps toward Cooperation 

In the face of the strong conservative Christian
resistance which we 
have delineated above, and the caution of Buddhists
who suspect a 
conversion agenda under the guise of dialogue, there
yet occurs some 
very encouraging cooperative activities among
religious leaders and 
their followers in Korea. 

Most recently in the summer 1996 was the Religious
Leaders' 
Pilgrimage for National Reunification which marched
through eleven 
cities in South Korea from June 25 to July 4, 1996 and
involved about 
3,000 clergy in all. This was the first time that
Protestants, 
Catholics, Buddhists and Won Buddhists actually worked
together and 
walked together for a greater cause beyond mere
ceremonial photo 
opportunities of inter-religious harmony and academic
discourse. A 
very positive result of this pilgrimage was the
establishment of nine 
new city branches of the Religious Council for
National 
Reconciliation and Reunification (Chonggyo-in Hyôp-ûi
Hoe) outside of 
Seoul. 

We must also mention the activities of the Korean
Conference on 
Religion and Peace (KCRP) which was originally
initiated in 1965 as 
the Association of Korean Religionists. The present
KCRP is comprised 
of members from the six major faiths in Korea:
Buddhism, 
Confucianism, Catholicism, Protestantism, Won Buddhism
and Chondogyo. 
The former AKR includes members from new religions
like the 
Chonrigyo, Taejongyo and the T'ongilgyo (Unification
Church) but not 
the Protestant and Catholic churches. The Christian
members withdrew 
because they chose not to share in the organization
with the 
Unification Church. 

According to Dr. Kim Sunggon, a professor at Youngsan
Won Buddhist 
Seminary, both the AKR and the KCRP "aim at improving
mutual 
understanding and creating a better society by
cooperation among 
religions, but there is no dialogue and cooperation
between these two 
interfaith organizations. What an irony this is!"
Inter-religious 
organizations must stand for more than theoretical
understanding 
among the religions. Meetings and proclamations and
books are not 
enough. The proof of an organization's effectiveness
is in its 
ability to create new harmony among religious
communities who 
hitherto were disinterested on account of beliefs in
their own 
supremacy. 

Perhaps Buddhism's great virtue in interreligious
dialogue and 
cooperation is that it already had an acceptance of
diversity of 
opinion and experience about the mental life of man
from the 
inception of the religion with Shakyamuni. From the
beginning, it 
never had to try to bridge differences with other
paths since it had 
already recognized them from the beginning. This is
its 
great "pangp'yôn" (upaya), expedient means of teaching
Buddhist 
truths. 

There are many serious issues in Korea to unite
Christians and 
Buddhists. National reunification and environmental
issues are 
critical without exception for the entire population
of Korea. 
Resolution of these issues will require more than
cosmetic treatment. 
The lives of all Korean people are at stake. Buddhist
and Christian 
cooperation can provide an atmosphere for more
openness and 
communication at the governmental level. Religious
leaders among the 
Buddhists and Christians in Korea can make a
difference in the course 
of Korean history as they have in the past as during
the Independence 
Movement. But they should come together not just
because they face a 
common enemy but because they realize their mutual
interdependence 
and shared human concerns. Religions need not lose
their identity 
when in dialogue and cooperation. They can demonstrate
the greatest 
wisdom, love and compassion they are capable of when
they move closer 
to their neighbors with whom they live. As the
"sleeping wisdom" of 
modern Korean Buddhism awakens, it will be in a
stronger position to 
share its virtues with people of all faiths in Korea
and lead their 
mutually cooperative efforts for social concord. 

An English and French version of this article can be
viewed at a 
website constructed by Eric Rommeleure at a Zen
Studies site in 
Paris. 

Buddhism under Siege 1982-1996: A Chronology of
Fifteen Years of 
Incidents Against Buddhism in South Korea The
following is an 
incomplete listing of defamations, acts of vandalism
and arson 
attacks against Buddhist temples and facilities in
South Korea which 
have occurred since 1982 and which have earned the
attention of the 
news media and the dismay of the Buddhist population
in the country. 

Buddhism under Siege 1982-1996 : Fifteen Years of
Incidents Against 
Buddhism in South Korea including at least twenty
temples or Buddhist 
shrines seriously damaged or totally destroyed by
arson since 1986. 

Sources : Newspapers : Dong A Ilbo daily newspaper
(Seoul), May 2, 
1990, p. 1 Pulgyo Shinmun weekly newspaper (Seoul),
May 28, 1996, p. 
4 Pôp Po Shinmun weekly newspaper (Seoul), May 15,
1996 Hyôndae 
Pulgyo weekly newspaper (Seoul), May 22, 1996 Kitokkyo
Shinmun weekly 
newspaper (Seoul), July, 1996 advertisement (Other
major dailies and 
such weeklies as the Haedong Pulgyo and regional
papers have not been 
consulted at this time.) 

Reports : We have also corroborated and compared
reports of incidents 
with records maintained in the headquarters of the
Chogye Order in 
Seoul and the official written police report on the
incidents at 
Hwagyesa, Pônwôn Chôngsa and Samsông Am (Hermitage). 

TV : A cable TV report (BTN) of the Pônwôn Chôngsa and
Samsông Am 
incidents was also consulted. 

(The modified McCune-Reischauer system of
transliteration as appears 
in the Korea Journal of the Korean National Commission
for Unesco is 
utilized for Korean names) 

1982 May.A man by the name of Myông Chinhong organizes
religious 
gatherings in Seoul to publicly denounce Buddhism. He
erects a 
banner "Jesus Heaven, Buddhism Hell!" He claims to
have once been a 
Buddhist monk who has "repented," though no records
can be found to 
support the claim of his ordination. Using this claim,
he puts up 
posters claiming: "A Dharma Hall is a hall of demons."


1983 March 1. During a Christian revival meeting held
on the occasion 
of Korean Independence Day observations, a woman
falsely claims to 
have been the daughter of a famous Zen master and
revered national 
independence hero, Paek Yongsông. She makes statements
denouncing 
Buddhism. 

1984 February. Red crucifixes are painted on priceless
temple wall 
paintings at Muryangsa Temple and Ilsônsa on Samgaksan
Mountain 
outside Seoul. Dirt is smeared on the paintings and on
a statue of 
the Buddha located outside one of the temples. A large
ancient 
carving of the Buddha chiselled into stone is damaged
with axe-like 
instruments. 

May. Ignoring the pleas of Buddhist leaders, the Roman
Catholic 
Church invites Pope John Paul II to visit South Korea
to celebrate 
the bicentennial of the church in Korea. This event
happens to fall 
during the annual national Buddha's Birthday holiday
celebrations. 
Because it is the first ever visit of a Roman pontiff
to South Korea, 
and because the Vatican announces that 93 Koreans and
10 French 
missionary martyrs will be beatified as saints during
the visit, the 
visit becomes a major national event. It is the first
time that a 
canonization ceremony is held outside of Rome and the
largest number 
ever canonized at one time. This ceremony gives Korea
the fourth 
largest number of Catholic saints in the world. When
the Pope tours 
the country, in the days immediately preceding and
during Buddha's 
Birthday, there are immense traffic jams which
diminish attendance at 
Buddhist events in several key cities. Buddhist
leaders protest the 
timing of the event as "disrespectful" and "in bad
taste" because the 
Korean and Roman Catholic Churches schedule the mass
beatification 
ceremonies to take place during Buddha's Birthday
celebrations, a day 
sacred to Buddhists and a national holiday. 

November. In an official Korean textbook, Buddhism is
called " a 
fading religion." 

1985 April. Four major daily newspapers accept and
publish 
advertisements which assert that the content of the
Buddhist 
scriptures are "selfish" in intent. 

May. A Protestant minister named Kim Jingyu publicly
claims to have 
once been an ordained monk in the Chogye Order. Though
there is no 
record of his ever having been a Buddhist monk, he
hangs up banners 
which read "Why I Became a Protestant Minister," and
organizes 
meetings to denounce the Buddhist faith. 

September. An individual by the name of Kim Sônghwa
organizes a 
series of mass gatherings to denounce Buddhism in the
cities of 
Pusan, Taegu, Kwangju, and Taejon. (This individual
and his wife Kim 
Mija regularly advertise their mission to convert the
"25 million 
Buddhists of Korea" in the Christian Newspaper
Kitokkyo Shinmun, July 
1996). 

October. An unidentified man disrupts a Dharma talk at
the Nûngin Zen 
Center by driving nails into the tires of believers'
automobiles 
parked outside. The perpetrator also pours corrosive
chemicals into 
various car engines. An accomplice meanwhile uses
portable 
amplification equipment to sing Gospel songs up at the
Buddhist 
gathering, located on the third and fourth floors. 

1986 December 6. Several days before the annual
Buddha's 
Enlightenment celebrations, the Taejôkkwangjôn, the
main Dharma Hall, 
a large building of ancient origin at Kûmsansa Temple
is completely 
burned to the ground in an event which makes top news
throughout the 
nation. The Hall is listed as National Treasure Number
476, and is 
the central hall in a temple which is a regional
headquarters and 
major monastic training center for the Chogye Order. A
man active in 
a local church is apprehended at the scene, but is
released because 
the police claim that, since the fire consumed
everything, there 
is "no evidence." Although he admitted to the crime,
he is released 
without being charged. Discounting widespread opinion
and belief, 
local police claim that "religious heretics" are not
suspected. 
However, in an unprecedented move, the Korean
government pays to have 
the building quickly rebuilt. It is widely believed
that this unusual 
action was undertaken to preempt the possibility of
interreligious 
strife. (1 building) 

1987 December. A fundamentalist Christian by the name
of Yang Shinha 
from the Tamna Church on Chejudo Island is apprehended
after setting 
fire to two temples - Kwanûmjôngsa and Taegaksa -
completely burning 
them to the ground. (2 buildings) 

1988 September 25. In the early morning hours, a fire
is set at 
Pômôsa Temple in Pusan, a major monastic training
center of the 
Chogye Order and regional headquarters. The fire
completely destroys 
the Myôngbujôn (Chijang Bodhisattva Hall- a funeral
hall), taking 
with it 16 priceless altar paintings of the Buddha.
The paintings 
were considered treasures and the hall a registered
Cultural Asset. 
The cause of the fire is unknown but deemed "highly
suspicious" by 
Pusan city authorities. (1 building) 

December 8. Several days before the annual Buddha's
Enlightenment 
celebrations, the Chônggagwôn, the main Dharma Hall on
the Kyôngju 
campus of Dongguk University is completely burned to
the ground. 
Arson is suspected but no one is apprehended. (1
building) 

1989 January. A stone lantern and pagoda is destroyed
and statements 
attacking Buddhism are painted on the temple's gates
Okch'ôn Am 
Hermitage located in the Sôdaemun (Hongûndong), Seoul.


March. Several individuals enter Kupok Am Hermitageon
Samgaksan 
Mountain on the outskirts of Seoul and destroy a stone
lantern and 
stone pagoda, seriously damage a Ch'ilsônggak (Big
Dipper Hall), and 
paint red crucifixes on a large gilded Buddha statue. 

April. Five to six individuals destroy a Buddha statue
and paint red 
crucifixes on a large outdoor Ma-ae Buddha figure
carved into the 
rock on Samgaksan Mountain on the outskirts of Seoul.
In all, some 10 
temples are severely damaged or desecrated in the days
immediately 
before and after the national Buddha's Birthday
holidays. 

April. The Hyangmok Committee of the Seoul City
Government gathers 
military reserve forces under its control for a
(taesônghoe) church 
service. Some of the members are compelled to attend
even though they 
are not Christian. 

July 29. The huge main Dharma Hall and a temple
dormitory at Potasa 
Temple, Oksudong, Sôngdonggu, Seoul are completely
burned to the 
ground. A 23-year old follower of the Taesônjillihoe
(Great 
Conversion Truth Church) is arrested at the scene.
Damage is 
estimated at $1.1 million according to the Chogye
Order report. (2 
buildings) 

October 27. The huge Taeunjôn, the main Dharma Hall,
and a temple 
dormitory at Pohyônsa Temple in Taegu are completely
burned to the 
ground. Though the modern buildings were erected in
1985, the police 
determine that each building must have suffered an
"electrical short 
circuit," and no further investigations are conducted.
(2 buildings) 

1990 May 2. Two men break into the Buddhist
Broadcasting System (BBS, 
the first Buddhist radio station in Korea) in Seoul,
two days before 
it is due to begin broadcasting a combination of
popular music and 
Buddhist teaching and cultural programs. They tie up
two guards, and 
proceed to destroy all of the radio station's
recording and 
transmission equipment. They smash expensive
electronic gear and tear 
up several state-of-the-art recording booths. At one
point, they use 
a statue of the Buddha as a battering ram to break
through several 
plate-glass recording booth windows and use the
Buddha's head to 
damage computer equipment, sound boards, reel-to-reel
decks, and 
screens. Damage is estimated in the millions of
dollars, and delays 
the opening of the station by several months. No
arrests are ever 
made. 

November. A man by the name of Myông Chinhong falsely
claims to have 
been a Buddhist monk some 20 years before, and
organizes mass 
spiritual revivals under the heading, "Why I Became a
Minister." In 
the course of his "revivals," this purported
"ex-monk-turned 
minister" makes inflammatory and abusive statements
about the 
Buddhism. There is no record of his ever having been
ordained a monk, 
or living in any temple. (See May 1982) 

Students and parishioners at a Christian theological
school in Pusan 
misinterpret an ancient, traditional Buddhist death
ceremony as 
being "slanderous" of Jesus Christ. The name of the
ceremony, for 
many centuries called "Yesu-jae," sounds similar to
the Korean 
pronunciation and Korean spelling of "Jesus" (Yesu),
though the 
Chinese characters are unrelated to Christian
vocabulary or 
sacraments. (It is a traditional merit-making ceremony
in 
anticipation of death). The students and parishioners
mail a letter 
of "warning" to Buddhist leaders at several area
temples, schools, 
and organizations. The letters slander Buddhist
teachings, and are 
plastered on the walls of Buddhist temples and
organizations 
throughout the city of Pusan. 

1991 April. Yun Ch'anggyu and Shim Yôngch'o, teachers
at the Taesông 
High School in Kôch'ang, direct their students (many
of them 
Buddhist) to recite Biblical passages and sing
Christian hymns in 
class. In the same month, the Buddha statue of the
Buddhist student 
club at Ch'ôngju University is vandalized. 

Sept. 23. Pudo Am Hermitage at Tonghwasa Temple is
destroyed by fire. 
(1 building) 

Oct. 15. Haeundae Buddhist Mission Bldg in Pusan is
destroyed by 
fire. (1 building) 

October. The huge main Dharma Hall (Taeunjôn) at
Pongwônsa Temple in 
the Shinch'on district of Seoul is totally destroyed
by fire. The 
hall was registered as Seoul city Cultural Asset
Number 68. This 
temple was the headquarters of the T'aego Order, the
second-largest 
Buddhist sect in Korea at the time of the incident. A
guard at the 
temple testified to seeing two men flee into the
mountains behind the 
temple as the building burst into flames. Local police
conclude that 
there is no evidence, that there was probably an
"electrical short 
circuit," and the fire was quickly declared "an
accident." Three 
large Buddha statues and altar portraits considered
treasures are 
destroyed. (1 building) 

November. Military reserves stationed in Kyôngnam
Province (many of 
them Buddhist) are forced to attend a Protestant
revival meeting, 
presumably by a superior officer. 

The Kwanûmjôn, the Kwanûm Bodhisattva Hall and a large
Dharma 
Teaching Hall (Sôlpôpchôn) at Sôngjusa in Changwôn
city are 
completely burned to the ground. (2 buildings) 

P'yo Ch'ajong, a member of the Pedel Church in Pusan,
publicly 
declares that the world-famous Sôkkuram Buddha statue
is a subject 
of "idol-worship" and the product of "a heretical
religion". He 
attempts to damage the priceless statue, but is
stopped. The Sokkuram 
Buddha was declared a "World Cultural Treasure" by
Unesco in 1995, 
and has twice been renovated and preserved with Unesco
financial and 
technical involvement. 

1992 April. The Main Dharma Hall on the Kyôngju campus
of Dongguk 
University is completely burned to the ground a second
time. The 
event makes national news. No arrests are made. (1
building) 

December. An unknown assailant cuts the two arms off a
statue of 
Maitreya Buddha at Puljosa Temple in Wonju. Various
temple artifacts 
are burned and over 100 threatening phone calls are
made to the 
temple office. 

1993 February. Colonel (battalion commander) Cho
Pyôngshik of the 
17th Tank Battalion, claiming a lack of warehouse
space, has the 
Dharma Hall on his base dismantled. The gilded statue
of the Buddha 
is taken from the Hall, burned, and openly discarded
behind the 
mountain. Taejon. The event makes national news. (1
building) 

April. Within two months of Cho's actions, the Dharma
Hall and stone 
lantern are damaged at Kimhae Air Base. 

The Yôngdo Church in Pusan organizes to prevent a
temple from being 
built beside them, claiming that they "cannot accept
the construction 
of a place of idol worship" near them. 

May. At Hyundai High School, all students are required
to attend 
church services, and their attendance at these
services is reflected 
in their school records. 

Lee Yun-sun, a teacher at the Paegun Primary School in
Uidong, Seoul, 
teaches the Christian Bible in his class and declares
that any 
Buddhist children in the class are "followers of the
Satan," and 
excludes them from certain class activities. 

Professor Im In-hûi rejects the admission application
of a Buddhist 
student. He claims he was only following the orders of
the board 
chairman of Taejôn Junior College Lee Pyông-ik. 

Lotus lanterns prepared for Buddha's Birthday
celebrations are 
destroyed at Pongguksa Temple and Chonjôngsa Temple in
the Chôngnûng 
district of Seoul. 

July. An assailant severely damages the Buddha statue
and other 
Buddhist artifacts in a Buddhist meeting room at
Sônggyungwan 
University in Seoul. Valuable religious objects are
not stolen but 
thrown into a garbage basket. 

1994 May. Before and after Buddha's Birthday, various
acts of 
vandalism and desecration are inflicted upon the
properties 
(especially the richly painted gates) of Daesôngsa
Temple and 
Kwanûmsa Temple in the Saegômjông and Shinch'on
districts of Seoul. 
Approximately 30 acts of vandalism against Buddhist
temples in Seoul 
are recorded during this period. 

The Rev. Yu Sûng-hwan of Yuchongni Church declares
that Buddhism 
is "idol worship." He forcibly attempts to "convert"
the abbot of 
Sudosa Temple to Christianity, even mentioning Korean
President Kim 
Young-sam, a Presbyterian. 

According to Dr. Pyôn Sôn-hwan, "the thoughtless
speech and behavior 
of this minister who understood that the government
was protecting 
Christianity simply because Kim Young Sam is an elder
and the alleged 
remark by the President that he would make 'hymn songs
reverberate 
throughout the Blue House' at the time of the
presidential election 
damaged confidence in the government that was
supposedly based on the 
principle of religion and state (politics). 

June. A fundamentalist Christian enters Mirûk Chôngsa
Temple in 
Kwangju and damages the Buddha statue and Dharma Hall.


1995 September. A fundamentalist Christian by the name
of Pak Oh-Sun 
is apprehended after entering and causing serious
damage to five 
temples on Chejudo. He burns Buddha statues at the
temples, in 
addition to other damage. 

A Protestant minister is apprehended after painting a
large red cross 
onto the altar painting behind the Buddha at Mu-ûi sa
Temple in 
Kangjin, Chollanamdo. He is released without charges.
Later an 
unknown person carves a crucifix below the same Buddha
image. 

1995-96. Students belonging to a fundamentalist
Christian group begin 
an aggressive campaign of proselytizing on the campus
of Dongguk 
University (Seoul), Korea's main Buddhist university.
The students 
proselytize directly in front of a large statue of the
Buddha - the 
campus symbol and central meeting-point - making
anti-Buddhist 
statements and handing out Christian literature to
ordained sangha 
members. 

1996. President Kim Young Sam attends services at a
Protestant church 
located on the nation's central military base at
Kyeryôngsan 
Mountain. In an event which sends shock waves
throughout Buddhist and 
Catholic circles in Korea, many troops based there are
compelled to 
attend the service in order to create the appearance
of a larger 
number of Protestant troops. (Many of the troops are
not Protestant 
Christians, and many are not even Christian.)
Moreover, people 
attending services at a nearby temple and Catholic
church are placed 
under virtual "house arrest," their religious
sanctuaries being 
encircled with troops while the President makes what
is deemed 
a "preferential" visit to the Protestant chapel. Those
inside the 
Buddhist temple and Catholic church were made to
remain inside for 
several hours while President Kim completed his visit.
Buddhist and 
Catholic leaders lodge strong protests. Some Buddhist
leaders 
perceive the President's actions as a license, a
virtual "green 
light" for abusive actions to be taken against them,
citing the 
centuries-old tradition in Korea of leaders
signalling, through 
thinly-veiled actions, the unstated "allowances" that
the government 
will make for actions which coincide with
"non-legislateable" 
policies. 

1996. The long-awaited tentative plans related to the
new Education 
Law are announced by the government's Education Reform
Committee. The 
plans are based on the educational system of the
Renewal Church of 
Christ, and include plans to establish (with
government money) a 
special graduate school for the education and training
of Christian 
ministers. Buddhists lodge strong protests, which are
initially 
ignored. Eventually the Committee agrees to restate
their objectives 
at a later date. 

TheWônmi ward office of Puch'on city near Seoul sends
official 
letters to several Buddhist kindergartens, primary
schools, and other 
Buddhist organizations and temples. Language in the
letters beseeches 
them to find "the peace of God and the comfort of
Jesus Christ. 

The swastika - for centuries a symbol of good fortune
throughout 
Asia, and also a Buddhist symbol of the same - is
replaced on many 
flagpoles in Seoul with crucifixes. 

A large red crucifix is painted in a concrete shelter
used by 
Buddhist monks for meditation, located one hundred
meters above 
Hwagyesa Temple on Samgaksan Mountain on the outskirts
of Seoul. 

A school teacher by the name of "Lee" at Songwu
Primary School in 
P'och'ôn, Kyônggi Province, urges students to attend
church services 
as part of their lessons. She forces them to sing
certain Christian 
hymns in class to confirm their attendance, and does 
other "missionary work" in her capacity as
schoolteacher. 

April 6. Fires are set to the Abbot's quarters, the
lawn (dried from 
the recent spell) and nine other places
(out-buildings) at Pulguksa 
Temple in Kyôngju, the most famous Buddhist temple in
Korea, seen on 
travel posters everywhere. 

According to the report filed with the headquarters of
the Chogye 
Order, a Mr. Kim Yông-shik was caught on the spot and
reported to the 
police. The police transferred him to a Taegu city
mental hospital. 
Although he admitted to the crime as "a follower of
another 
religion," he was released without being charged
because there was no 
material evidence. (1 building) 

April 19. Two temples on Samgaksan Mountain on the
outskirts of Seoul 
are severely damaged by fires which are set within an
hour of each 
other. The two-year-old large bell platform at Samsông
Am Hermitage 
is burned to its foundation. The assailant(s) also
cause damage to 
the Main Dharma Hall, burning holes in the locked
doors while trying 
to gain access to the sanctuary containing the
temple's main Buddha 
statue. Damage to the ruined bell platform is
estimated at $250,000 
according to police. (1 building) 

April 20. Two recently-constructed Dharma Halls at
Pônwôn Chôngsa 
Temple are burnt to the ground, and another is
severely damaged by 
flames, just after midnight. The Nahanjôn enshrined
519 wood statues 
of arhats and bodhisattvas, each of which was
painstakingly hand-
carved and hand-painted over a period of seven years.
Damage at 
Pônwôn Chôngsa Temple is estimated at $5.6 million
according to the 
local police. The unfinished buildings were not
insured. (3 
buildings) 

April 21. The next day, fire is set to the
Taejôkkwangjôn, the main 
Dharma Hall at Hwagyesa Temple, also located on
Samgaksan Mountain, 
within a short walk of Samsông Am Hermitage and Pônwôn
Chôngsa 
Temple. Damage is minimal. Two police guarding the
temple fail to 
catch the assailant, who is interrupted in his task
when a monk spots 
him while walking to the outhouse. (1st attack on
Hwagyesa, home of 
the Seoul International Zen Center and living quarters
of more than 
twenty North American and European monks and disciples
of most 
successful Korean Buddhist international teacher,
Master Seung Sahn 
(Haengwôn Sûngsan sônsa). 

May 12. Arsonists attack the main Buddha statue in the
Taejôkkwangjôn 
at Hwagyesa Temple in Seoul for the second time. A lit
candle is 
placed in a box of papers and wisk brooms under the
main altar. The 
fire is quickly extinguished by a passing monk. At the
time, more 
than 30 police and army are patrolling the temple in
plainclothes in 
broad daylight, but fail to apprehend the assailant.
(2rd attack on 
Hwagyesa) 

May 14. Two days later, again with over 30 police and
military 
patrolling the temple, a massive fire is set beneath
the main Buddha 
statue in the Taejôkkwangjôn at Hwagyesa Temple in
Seoul for the 
third time. Superb altar paintings, ornate
woodcarvings and 
traditional wall paintings are lost. Damage estimated
at about 
$775,000 according to the police. (3rd attack, 1
building seriously 
damaged). 

May. Rev. Pae Sông-ho, a Protestant minister, enters
the main Buddha 
Hall at Ch'ôngryongsa Temple in Chinhae on the
southern coast of the 
peninsula. He swings a microphone over his head like a
bolo, smashing 
the main Buddha statue and damaging beyond repair the
altar paintings 
hanging behind the main altar. Witnesses who apprehend
him hear him 
shouting abusive statements about "idol worship" and
that "now [he] 
will go to heaven for destroying these craven images."
Though taken 
into custody by police, the minister is released
within hours with no 
charges filed by the local authorities. Damage to the
Dharma Hall is 
extensive. 

May 22. Two days before Buddha's Birthday, the main
Dharma Hall at 
Mangyông Am Hermitage in Sôngnam, a city bordering
Seoul, is burned 
to the ground. Christian fundamentalists active in the
area are 
suspected but not investigated. (1 building) 

http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/1156942/posts


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