When we are  too concerned with the details to see the big picture, we may be told  "You can't see the forest for the trees." This tunnel vision can mar the  historical record when we select some incident and think we  know what happened without understanding the background of the  incident. the society, and the mind set of the people living in a  different culture than our own.  Sister Im Keum-cha of Our  Lady of Perpetual Help Community has written a historical novel, " Break," which intends to show that the entrance of Catholicism in  Korea was not only a Catholic thing but affected all of society.
The   novel centers around the years 1830-40, as seen through  the eyes of  its two protagonists, who are not Catholic but are able to see the  problems  of the society from having traveled widely and benefited  from the status quo. They realized that this stratified society of   privileged and disadvantaged citizens has to be be broken; this goal to  break the status quo gave the novel its name. 
Catholicism  brought into  Korea a belief system that spoke about the equality of all. This  thinking was not  absent in Korea but Catholicism was showing how this could be  achieved by putting into practice its beliefs.  It was because  Catholicism was breaking down the  status quo that brought about the persecution.
Sister  has a doctorate in oriental philosophy,  studied in Taiwan and has  taught in universities here and in the States. Her intention in writing  history packaged in a historical novel was to make  available her more academic works in a genre that would be of interest  to all. She did this by introducing to us two protagonists whose primary  concerns where not for themselves but for all of society. They could   see the world as  bigger than their own life situation.
Both Catholic  papers reviewed the book, one review quoting the words of one of  the protagonists, who at the end of the novel whispers to his son:  "Those who  adhere to only one way will not allow for  change. But when we don't  have  change only a few will live well and the rest will live with  anguish and without meaning. Change means to look for a new way. That is  the way you should go. It is the  way to find meaning in  life." It is this message the sister wants to  leave with the reader.  (The word used in the title of the novel is the word I  translated as change in the above paragraph.)
 
