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Home/People/North Korea Releases American Missionary

North Korea Releases American Missionary

Written by Stefan J. Bos | Saturday, February 6, 2010

Officials with the United States Embassy in Beijing said Robert Park arrived there early Saturday, February 6, and was expected to be flown to the U.S. later in the day.

Amid international pressure, North Korea, released an American missionary Saturday, February 6, and sent him to China after holding him for more than a month, officials confirmed.

Officials with the United States Embassy in Beijing said Robert Park arrived there early Saturday, February 6, and was expected to be flown to the U.S. later in the day.

In an earlier statement, the U.S. State Department stressed that no deal with North Korea was made for the release of the missionary.

The 28-year-old Korean-American, from Tucson, Arizona, was detained on Christmas Day, December 25 after he crossed into the North from China.

Shouting “I came here to proclaim God’s love,” the missionary carried a Bible and letter a letter to North Korean leader Kim Jong II asking him to release political prisoners, including those persecuted for their faith, and open the country for aid, fellow activists said.

“Please open your borders so that we may bring food, provisions, medicine, necessities,and assistance to those who are struggling to survive,” he reportedly wrote. “Please close down all concentration camps and release all political prisoners today.”

North Korea holds at least 154,000 political prisoners in six large camps, according South Korean government estimates. However many more people, including Christians, are held in camps across the country, said well-informed Christian rights group Open Doors.

North Korea has denied the existence of these camps.

Media in the isolated nation quoted Park admitting having a “wrong understanding” of the North and that he now knows the country “respects the rights of all people and guarantees their freedom.”

The report said his admission, which colleagues suggested was made under duress, led the Pyongyang government “to forgive” and release him.

Park was inspired to go there by a biography about the “first Christian martyr” of present day North Korea, according to a BosNewsLife investigation published December 27.

Park wrote in an e-mail obtained by BosNewsLife that he was “amazed” by the book ‘Chosen for Choson’ on the life and violent death of another 19th century missionary, Robert Jermain Thomas, written by Stella Price.

“I want to thank you and [author] Mrs. Price for the amazing biography of missionary Thomas’s life,” he wrote to the author and her husband Dr. Stephen Price.”I don’t know if I had the chance to tell you, but I was very moved by it and not only I but also my dad has had a chance to read the brilliant book and he to was very moved,” Park wrote in the e-mail.

Born in Wales, Missionary Thomas traveled with Bibles on an American armed trading ship to Pyongyang,the present-day capital of North Korea. In 1866, the ship became stuck on a sandbank in a nearby river and was attacked by Korean soldiers.

Thomas, 27, reportedly stood on the deck of the burning ship, opening his cases of Bibles and flung the books to those who lined the banks of the river. Before he was beheaded, he apparently also gave Bible to his executioner.

Several Koreans reportedly rescued Bibles and brought them home to be used as wallpaper. After reading the texts on the walls of their homes, many became Christians, according to the biography.

Fast forward, in the 21st century that event apparently made an impact on Park and his family. “My Dad’s family is from the north, and were Christians there before fleeing because of the persecution and war,” wrote Park.

Dr. Price, who founded medical mission group Emmaus Road Ministries (ERM), told BosNewsLife that he and his wife received the e-mail “a few days” before Park left for North Korea.

Source: www.bosnewslife.com/11457-breaking-news-north-korea-releases-american-missionary

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