Writing  in the Kyeongyang Magazine, a professor of social  justice at the Incheon Catholic University recollects his experience  with foreigners--mostly American foreign missionaries working in the  Incheon Diocese--when  he was a child. (Tomorrow's blog will deal with  his own overseas  experience and with the experience of  foreign workers in Korea.) 
When the professor was a child, coming in contact with a foreigner was  not a frequent experience. However, he did see a foreigner at least once  a year and that was the ordinary of the diocese, Bishop William  McNaughton, on his pastoral visit to the parish. "Wow, he's tall," he remembers thinking, "not  everything  I see is ordinary." 
 
As an altar boy he served at the Confirmation Mass, and seeing  the shoes the bishop left in the sacristy, they looked like a model for an  aircraft carrier. Out of curiosity he put his small feet into the shoes  and thought that all Americans must be tall and have big feet like the  bishop.  At that time, there were many foreigner missioners from America in the  diocese and he wondered about the country and about the people. 
He remembers that his father was rather fluent in English.  Later,  he learned  that his father worked in an  American military base and   during the Vietnam war volunteered to go to Vietnam, like many other  Korean fathers, to work to help support his family. And, like many  others,  he spent many years overseas doing this. 
After ordination he lived as an assistant to an American missioner who is now  retired in a mission station. He was able to learn much during  this one  year living with the foreigner, and praises him for being a good  pastor. But there was one problem. 
The missioner did not use any salt in his food. He would have a  large bowl of lettuce and  sprinkle it freely with olive oil. He  did tell the cook not to be concerned with his needs but to serve the  assistant what he wanted.. However, the instruction fell on deaf ears, for he was the  pastor and he came first.
In his heart, the assistant couldn't understand how someone who had been in the country  for over 30 years could still have a problem eating Korean food. With his own bias,  he saw the priest as discriminating against Koreans.
One day the missioner asked the assistant very indirectly for help in  renewing his resident permit. He had moved into a different area of the  city and was required to report this to the county office. In the past,  he had difficulty in doing this and wanted the assistant to accompany  him to the county office, and if necessary assist him with the permit. 
The assistant quickly agreed to go with him to the county office, where  everything went smoothly, taking no more than 30 minutes  to complete. On the trip home, the missioner thanked his assistant  priest, "Father, many thanks; because you came with me I could finish  what was to be done very quickly."
The assistant priest then  realized that in the past the foreigner had to visit the county seat a  number  of times to  register before successfully completing the papers  required, sometimes because a person was not present or because not all  the papers were in order and, at other times, because the missioner was  not familiar with what was required. It was here that the Korean priest  came to appreciate some  of the difficulties foreigners have in Korea. (To be continued)              
 
