But what’s impressive about the Catholic
Church in Korea is that they encourage pilgrimages to Catholic pilgrim sites
scattered all over the country. The Korea Tourism Organization even helps in
this campaign by providing online pages for these sites and publishing tourist
brochures just for these religious places which also have their own websites
that provide information to visitors.
And in the middle of the Yongsan District
in Seoul, there’s a small and quiet hill surrounded by tall apartment
buildings. This hill is the Danggogae Martyrs’ Shrine, where, on December 27
and 28, 1839, ten Korean Catholics were martyred. On those two dark winter
days, they gave up their lives for their faith. Of the ten, nine are now saints,
while the last one, Blessed Mary Yi Seong-rye was beatified. She was the mother
of Father Thomas Choe Yang-up, the second ever Korean priest. Father Thomas’ father, who was executed with
his wife, is also a saint with the name Saint Francis Choe Kyeong-hwan.
In 1839, when Father Thomas’ mother was
about to be executed, her children asked the executioner that in order for her
“to go to heaven without suffering long, he must cut their mother’s head with
one stroke”. One can just imagine the
pain, the trauma and the suffering her own children had to go through by
watching their parents’ public execution. Their mother was just 39 years old.
Father Thomas was not in Korea when she was
executed. He was studying in Macau, then a Portuguese colony at that time. But
due to subsequent disturbances in Macau, Father Thomas left for Manila. Learning
about the story of the second ever Korean priest setting foot in the
Philippines in 1839 was a surprise for me. He must have sought refuge and
continued his religious studies in the Philippines, being the only Catholic
country in the Far East.
But in 1861, when Father Thomas was already
in Korea, Catholic persecution was widespread. Unfortunately, that year, he succumbed to
typhoid fever. On his deathbed, he received the Last Sacraments and could
barely speak. But the last words he uttered were the holy names of Jesus and
Mary. He was only 40.
The execution of the Korean Catholics, not
only on this hill but on different parts of the Korean peninsula, is a
testament to the faith of the Catholics in the country since Christianity
arrived here through Christian literature written in Chinese in the early 17th
century. And from the late 17th century until 1866, more than ten
thousand Korean Catholics, including the ten martyrs of Danggogae Shrine, were
executed. On May 6, 1984, in the first ever canonization ceremony outside the
Vatican, 103 Korean martyrs were declared saints by Pope John Paul II.
One of those canonized by Pope John Paul II
was Saint Andrew Kim Taegon, Korea’s first-ever Catholic priest. He was
baptized at 15 and also studied in Macau and in Bocaue, Bulacan, Philippines,
where a church is now dedicated to him. Yes, there is a church in the
Philippines dedicated to a Korean saint!
He was ordained in 1844, but in 1846, Saint Andrew Kim Taegon was
tortured and beheaded near the Han River in Seoul. He was just 25.
This is why the Danggogae Shrine is special
to the Catholics in Korea. It is a witness to the birth of Christianity in
Korea and to the devotion and faith of Koreans to God. Until today, it gives
inspiration to all pilgrims, local and international. That is why it is part of
the Catholic pilgrimage in Korea. Though the shrine is surrounded by tall
apartment buildings, it is serene and quiet. It has a chapel and a museum, and
on the garden above, there is a Way of the Cross which gathers the faithful
during Holy Week.
The Danggogae Shrine is also called a Mother’s
Shrine because three of the six women who were martyred on this spot were
mothers who had very young children. Blessed Mary Yi Seong-rye had a one-year
old baby from whom she was separated when she was captured. She was beatified
by Pope Francis during a beatification mass in Seoul, Korea, which I attended
on August 16, 2014.
So, if you're a Catholic and want to do a pilgrimage in Seoul, do include the Danggogae Martyrs' Shrine, it's one shrine where faith has been professed and ordinary Christian followers became saints and martyrs for their ultimate sacrifice.
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