United World Project

Workshop

Peace Train arrives in Korea

 
3 November 2013   |   , ,
 
Peace Train2

 

One of the passengers who arrived in Busan on Monday evening was Daniel Jung. The 29-year-old German travelled the whole distance from Berlin. Last year he completed a spell of practical work abroad as a vicar in Seoul, where he helped the National Council of Churches in Korea prepare the journey. What especially impressed him was that not only Koreans, but people from 16 nations in all, took part in the trip. “It was incredible to see how many people worldwide are interested in the situation in Korea and are willing to do something to promote reunification.” The participants were aged between 19 and 77 and came from as far afield as Brazil, Ethiopia, Indonesia and Nigeria.

A journey you only make once in your life

The route initially took the travellers from Berlin – as a symbol of a reunited Germany – via Moscow and Irkutsk to Beijing. In two cars the participants, who also reported on the project on Facebook, first took the Berlin-Moscow Express, boarded the Trans-Siberian Railway and then went on the Trans-China Railway. At their stop-offs in Moscow, Irkutsk and Beijing, they met with local church representatives. “There are easier things to do than living in a very cramped space for three weeks,” says Jung about the journey and laughs. Yet it didn’t bother him. “It was exciting to be able to get to know so many people with different life stories to tell and from such diverse nationalities and religious denominations,” he says. “This was a journey you only make once in your life.”

After the participants arrived in Beijing, the organizers had originally planned for them to journey on to North Korea’s capital Pyongyang by plane. They had hoped for the go-ahead from North Korea up to the final minute – but it didn’t come. Instead, the participants travelled by train to the Chinese city of Dandong, located on the border with North Korea, where they held a church service with a Chinese community that also includes North Koreans. They then took a ferry to the South Korean port of Incheon, and they continued on a bus to Seoul. The group completed the last stage – to Busan – by the train again. The participants were not disappointed about not being able to make the journey to Pyongyang. “The trip is an initial impetus,” says Jung. Although the journey ended on Tuesday with a closing church service, “our commitment will continue,” he adds.

Many of the travellers will take part in the Assembly of the World Council of Churches in Busan in the coming days, after which they will return home. The initiators are already thinking ahead. They aim to make the journey again next year – and, if possible, to Pyongyang as well.

 

 


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