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Peace on the Korean Peninsula – NOW!

Photo: Grégoire de Fombelle/WCC

“We pray – Peace now – End the War!” This is the motto for the “Light of Peace” Prayer Campaign for the Korean Peninsula. “Peace now!” Now we are caught in the global coronavirus pandemic. The airtime in TV and radio is occupied by news related to the spread of the virus with many bad consequences for health and wealth of humankind. In this crisis we tend to forget other urgent needs. One of them is the call for peace for the Korean Peninsula.

On 25 June 1950 the Korean War started. Seventy years later Korean people are still waiting for an official end of the war. There is no peace treaty, just an armistice. Lots of money has been spent for weapons pretending protection against the other side; US-American nuclear arms are stored in South Korea and North Korea is responding with nuclear armament. Militarization has not only negative side effects on the environment, it also poisons the feelings and attitudes of people. Peace is needed – NOW - not despite of the coronavirus, but because of the crisis we are facing.

Now is the time to re-think the priorities in our personal lives, in the countries we belong to and in the international relationships. As followers of Jesus Christ we do not aim for back to what was normal when the coronavirus caused a push of the pause button. Sixty-seven years of an armistice which is not even signed by South Korea is not the normal we wish to continue with. Although most political decision-makers want us to believe that increasing armament is a means to appeasement, we know that the Korean Peninsula is a tinderbox.

Stronger sanctions on North Korea cause more harm to ordinary people; they impede an import of medical supplies urgently needed in a health crisis. The sanctions so far did not lead to a change towards peace nor did they minimize the violation of human rights towards the people in North Korea. Together with many others, the National Council of Churches in Korea, World Council of Churches and the World Methodist Council pray and work for a better future in Korea.

It is time for peace – now. Peace can only be achieved by peaceful steps. These steps include an end of the sanctions and the openness to let the people in Korea develop a process which helps them to overcome division and pain. In 2019, Rev. Dr James T. Laney, a former ambassador of the USA to South Korea, received the Peace Award of the World Methodist Council. At the celebration on 22 November 2019 in Atlanta, Georgia, USA, Laney offered three lessons learnt from his lifelong endeavor for peace on the Korean Peninsula: “Peace is not possible as long as we demonize the other side. Peace is best achieved through face-to-face conversations. We have to move in peace stage by stage.”

And he continued: “Peace is the foundation of all human flourishing. Modern warfare is the armageddon of life. Let us all promise each other that in our sphere of life, we will seek to be instruments of God’s peace and justice.” We pray for a better world now. We work for peace with justice. Now. Not despite of the coronavirus crisis, but because we learn the coronavirus lesson: There is only one earth and one humankind. That is why it is in our own interest to care for one another, work for healing and reconciliation and develop an economy of life.

About the author :

Bishop Rosemarie Wenner is a retired Bishop in The United Methodist Church. She currently serves as Geneva secretary of the World Methodist Council. Bishop Wenner is also a former president of the United Methodist Council of Bishops.

She was born in and grew up in Eppingen, nurtured by a small UMC congregation in southern Germany. She studied at the United Methodist Theological Seminary in Reutlingen and served as pastor of congregations in Karlsruhe-Durlach, Hockenheim and Darmstadt-Sprendlingen before her appointment as superintendent of the Frankfurt District in 1996.

In February 2005, she was elected bishop at the Germany Central Conference in Wuppertal - the first woman elected to the United Methodist episcopacy outside of the United States.

Bishop Wenner is married to Tobias Wenner and they live in Nussloch, Germany.

Photo: © Gottfried Hamp/EmK

Disclaimer

The impressions expressed in the blog posts are the contributions of the authors and do not necessarily reflect the opinion or policies of the World Council of Churches.