By the WCC news service
In preparation for the World Council of Churches (WCC) 10th Assembly
in Busan, Republic of Korea (South Korea), pastors and peace activists
are holding a 40-day “fasting prayer” in front of the Busan City Hall.
They are protesting the dangers of nuclear radiation and asking to shut
down South Korea’s oldest and incident-prone Kori Nuclear Power Plant,
some 20 kilometres from the venue of the WCC Assembly.
The 35-year-old Kori Nuclear Power Plant has broken down 120 times.
There are 3.4 million people living within 30 kilometres of the Kori
Power Plant. Local residents fear a meltdown, mindful of the disasters
at Fukushima in Japan and Chernobyl in Ukraine.
South Korea has the highest geographic density of nuclear power
plants in the world. Korean Christians participating in the fasting
prayer want to remind the world’s Christians that the WCC Assembly is
taking place in the most dangerous part of the world in terms of threats
from nuclear power plants and from the nuclear stand-off involving four
countries with nuclear weapons--United Sates, Russia, China, and North
Korea.
The protesters are asking the WCC Assembly to tackle the issue of
nuclear weapons and power generation as central to the proposed
“ecumenical pilgrimage of justice and peace.”
One of the Busan prayers repents for having “stopped our ears to the
dangers of nuclear power generation despite the warning from Fukushima.”
Another asks that all Christians “abandon the great catastrophe of
nuclear weapons and power plants” and “walk together toward the path of
peace” instead.
The 40 day fasting prayer began on Sept. 30 and will end on Nov. 8, the last day of the WCC Assembly.
Busan lies just across a strait from Hiroshima and Nagasaki. Massive
quantities of radioactive water are still seeping into the ocean from
the stricken Fukushima plant each day.
Prayers of the Korean ministers and peace activists:
We repent that our lives that have caused catastrophic problems
for the ecology and have threatened the survival of all humankind by
indiscreet use of nuclear energy;
We repent that we have turned blind eyes and stopped our ears to
the dangers of nuclear power generation despite the warning from
Fukushima;
We pray that we can turn from the road to nuclear power generation which can be disastrous to ecology and humanity;
We pray that a world of peace is realized and the dignity of life
is protected as we convert nuclear energy into renewable natural
energy;
We pray that the world's Christians may abandon the great
catastrophe of nuclear weapons and power plants and instead walk
together toward the path of peace for all.
Source: 10/25/2013 Newsline
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