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Stations of the Cross

The Columban Group
Good Friday 2021, Seoul, Korea

By Fr. Donal O'Keefe

On Good Friday 2021, the Columban formation community in Seoul participated in the Holy Friday Liturgy organized by the Korean Branch of the Global Catholic Climate Movement (GCCM). Formally inaugurated in January 2020, GCCM Korea is now a national movement coordinated by a team of lay people, religious and priests. The liturgy was organized by the Coordinating Team of GCCM where one of the key persons is Columban lay missionary Noh Hyein Anna. In fact it was the invitation by Anna which spurred us to participate.

Ladato Si Movement formerly known as the Global Catholic Climate Movement
On July 29, 2021 the Global Catholic Climate Movement changed its name to the Laudato Si Movement

On Good Friday morning, about 70 persons gathered in Seoul city center dividing into teams of seven, the maximum allowed to move as a group in line with the Covid regulations. The fourteen Stations of the Cross were set up ahead of time at various places in the business heart of the city with the final one at the steps of Myongdong Cathedral. The Way of the Cross highlighted the passion, suffering and death of God’s creatures in our world today.

The participants, a mixed group of young and old, lay and religious, and priests came prepared with placards and posters highlighting the suffering world and displayed those while walking the way of the cross. For example, at Station 9, Jesus falls again, we reflected on the plight of organic farmers driven to their knees by competition from the industrial sized GMO farming. At Station 6, Veronica wiping the face of Jesus, we focused on the Korean solidarity with the present passion of Myanmar, a nation and its natural resources sacrificed due to greed of the Generals. At Station 12, Jesus dies on the Cross, we mourned the loss of diversity and life due to greed.

We started at 11:30 a.m., and the stations finished at about 1:30 p.m.. Walking through the business center of the city at this time we were constantly meeting with office workers coming and going to lunch. The placards and posters caught the eyes of the passersby, and although engrossed in conversations, it was clear that they were glancing at the content and reading the messages. One or two persons joined for the short prayer at the different stations.

Back in the formation house we shared about the event. It certainly was a Stations of the Cross with a difference! Some felt that the noise of traffic, people chatting as they went past, did not facilitate reflection on the event. For others this noisy, chaotic city center atmosphere was probably closer in reality to the original way of cross than any liturgy in the silence and prayerful atmosphere of a Church.

Walking in a public place carrying a placard was a new experience for most of our community and was a challenge in itself. Again, the action of carrying a poster highlighting the suffering of the earth caused us to question more deeply our own consumer lifestyle, our unconscious acceptance of the modern convenient way of living which keeps the exploitative system in place. This was and is a very uncomfortable thought, a serious challenge and invitation to us as disciples today. All in all, it was one of the most meaningful times of Holy Week for us in Seoul in 2021.

Columban Fr. Donal O’Keefe lives and works in Seoul, Korea.