Pope has tough sell on materialism in South Korea

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DAEJEON, South Korea (AP) — Pope Francis called Friday for Catholics to combat the allure of materialism
during his five-day trip to South Korea. In the newly rich and hyper-competitive country, that might be
a hard sell.

Far from being considered an evil, the trappings of wealth are often linked here to the hard work,
sacrifice and gritty persistence of generations who hustled their nation out of war, dictatorship and
poverty into an Asian powerhouse.

"I don’t want to knock successful people off their pedestal just because they have a lot of
money," said Kim Eui-kyun, a 61-year-old from Seoul who described himself as a lapsed Catholic.
"If someone has made a fortune for himself, fair and square, and has a lot of money, I don’t think
that’s something to be condemned. I look up to them, actually, and I wonder, ‘What did I do
wrong?’"

Francis made the call during his first public Mass in Asia. He received a boisterous welcome from tens of
thousands of young Asians gathered for a Catholic festival in the central city of Daejeon. During his
homily, Francis urged the faithful to reject "inhuman" economic policies that disenfranchise
the poor and "the spirit of unbridled competition which generates selfishness and strife."

It’s a theme he has raised frequently during his pontificate, railing against the "idolatry of
money" and the excesses of capitalism that leave the poorest even further on the margins of
society. While his message has been met with skepticism among some conservatives in the U.S. who have
branded him a Marxist, it has been welcomed in much of the developing world and even some South Koreans
said Friday he had a point.

"We are living in the age of limitless competition. But are we truly achieving happiness?"
asked Chang Seouk-kyung, a 57-year-old youth counselor. "If such a message is given by someone as
powerful and revered as the pope, it will help people wake up, stop and look around them."

South Koreans have also been charmed by Francis’ simple and humble manner — and surprised that he hopped
into a modest compact car after arriving at the airport instead of the big luxury rides favored by the
South Korean elite.

Francis was expected to stress his message later Friday during a meeting with some 6,000 young Catholics
from 23 nations gathered in the sanctuary town of Solmoe, where Korea’s first Catholic priest was born.

Many South Koreans, however, are proud of the national doggedness that has lifted the country from the
destruction of the Korean War in the 1950s into Asia’s fourth biggest economy. Competition is a fact of
life in a crowded country surrounded by sometimes hostile neighbors, and those who succeed are often
lionized. The flip-side, of course, is stress, misery and the rich world’s highest suicide rate.

Francis referred to the toll such competition can cause, saying it can lead to an emptiness that leads to
a despair that grows "like a cancer" in society. "Upon how many of our young has this
despair taken its toll!" he said.

A glimpse into the country’s complicated relationship with materialism can be seen in the Gangnam
neighborhood south of Seoul’s Han River, the epicenter of Korean materialism.

South Korean rapper PSY made Gangnam world famous with his surprise hit video. Luxury cars, clothes,
jewelry and a uniform concept of beauty that often comes from a surgeon’s knife are glorified in the
neighborhood. Many of the residents became rich almost overnight when a real estate investment frenzy in
the early 2000s caused land prices to skyrocket.

There’s envy among many ordinary South Koreans, but there’s also an aspiration to achieve the same things
— especially in the realm of in education, which Koreans see as the surest way to climb in a
hyper-competitive society.

The students of Gangnam, whose parents shell out big money for prestigious private tutoring and prep
schools, are reportedly much more likely to be selected for the country’s most prestigious university
than students from less affluent areas.

"That reflects what materialism can do," Kim, the Seoul resident, said. "Kids can get a
better education, and they then have a better edge."

But the breakneck push by South Koreans to modernize has a dark side, which can be partly seen in an
April ferry sinking that killed 300 people, mostly high school students. Francis made sure that he
reached out to victims of a disaster that has prompted widespread soul-searching over the nation’s
neglect of safety as it rapidly developed.

While there’s pride here of local industrial titans that rival the best companies in the world, the
country also has a history of disregard for basic safety practices, including in the ferry industry. The
tragedy exposed regulatory failures that appear to have allowed the ferry Sewol to set off with far more
cargo than it could safely carry.

Before Mass got under way, Francis met privately with about a dozen survivors of the ferry disaster and
relatives of the dead. One of them, Lee Ho Jin, whose son was killed, asked the pope to baptize him, and
Francis agreed to perform the ritual on Saturday, said the Vatican spokesman, the Rev. Federico
Lombardi.

Lee, who has been in catechism classes for two years, participated in a 21-day pilgrimage undertaken by
relatives of the victims, carrying a cross in honor of the slain children. The families said they gave
the cross to the pope.

The relatives also presented the pope with a tiny yellow ribbon, a symbol of support for the ferry
victims. The pope took the ribbon and wore it on his robe during the Mass.

A larger-than-normal crowd of more than 10,000, according to police, on Friday joined what has become a
regular rally by family members of victims of the ferry sinking.

In his final prayer, Francis offered words of comfort to survivors and families. "May this tragic
event which has brought all Koreans together in grief confirm their commitment to work together in
solidarity for the common good," he said.

Francis arrived in Seoul on Thursday and issued a plea for peace and unity on the war-divided peninsula.
North Korea fired three projectiles into the sea just before he landed and another two soon after.

On Friday, North Korean media quoted a rocket researcher as dismissing the idea that the tests had
anything to do with the pope, and said the launches were conducted on the 69th anniversary of Korea’s
independence from Japan.

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Choi reported from Seoul. Associated Press writers Foster Klug and Youkyung Lee in Seoul contributed to
this report.

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Follow Nicole Winfield on Twitter at twitter.com/nwinfield

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