A Priest missiologist working in the Seoul Chancery writes about his  experience while studying in Rome many years ago. His column appears  weekly in the Peace Weekly giving us interesting facts about missions.  During vacation time, he wanted to spend some time in England to learn  English and prepare his thesis. Staying at a house  for missioners while  in London, he met an Irish missioner who was retiring from the missions  and returning to  Ireland. He  invited the young missioner to go with  him and he quickly accepted.
While in Ireland he met a young man  and shared an evening meal with him.  When the young man heard that he  was studying mission theology in Rome, he told him about his experience  in Africa with about ten others who were interested in getting first  hand  experience of mission.
The youth confided that in the  beginning it was very difficult getting used to African life but,  getting over the awkwardness and  stress of the experience, he learned a  great deal about their way of life, especially their way of eating with  the hands; he in turn explained his way of eating with fork and spoon.  The young man also told the Korean  how he fell in love with the way the  Africans offered  Mass with dance and the drums. He explained all this  with a great deal of pride and joy, confessing that it  brought change  into his life.
The priest goes on to mention an Italian assistant  priest who had spent a month in Africa in a student camp years before.  The Korean priest was dumbfounded to hear these stories knowing that  although the West  has a lack  of priests they are not only sending  missioners overseas but young people are also going for an on-the-spot  experience of mission. With  this experience, they get to know the life  of the missions  and  another people's culture.
The priest also  mentioned that the leadership of the mission groups periodically go on  mission trips to different areas of the world to encourage the  missioners and help them to resolve some of their difficulties. These  visits have helped to give the Church of the home-country a perspective  on the meaning of Church that has a more  universal understanding of the  meaning of Catholicism.
The Korean Church will gradually be  sending more missioners overseas. There will  be studies made of the  missions and information gathered that will give Korea a different  vision of  Church. The information and interest will invigorate the  missioners, and those on the home front will know about the difficulties  of the missions and be able to help with their prayers and financial  donations. The visits of the young people to the missions will also  bring news of the missions back to Korea, helping not only the missions  and the home country but the visiting young people as well.
The  article mentions that the missioners themselves should keep in touch  with the home country to inform them of the work in the  missions;   this will increase interest in the missions and give missioners some  feedback that will help them to see their work as a great gift from  God. This increased interest in the missions is becoming part of  normal  Korean life. 
Catholic media are carrying more stories of the missions, and more dioceses are getting involved. Today we can look back on  the Korean experience with missionary help from the West as a success story. It was not long ago when Korea needed missioners and financial help--a part of history;  the Catholic Church of Korea now  has the   privilege to return what they have received.
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