A 19-year-old only son 
left home on a motorcycle one night 25 years ago, and did not return 
that night as the mother expected. After waiting for her son all night, 
she had been told by a police officer next day that he died in an 
accident and that his face was beyond recognition. This tragedy, 
documented in a recent TV series, was the subject of an article in a 
priest bulletin. 
The mother had to live with the memory of this tragedy for 25 years, 
until May of this year when her daughter received a call from the police
 station telling her 
that  Min-nam, the son they thought dead, was alive. The family had been
 offering the 
rites for the dead for the last 25 years, so it is not difficult to 
understand how the news was received. 
The man who said he was the son had an accident and had been admitted to a 
hospital, where he had brain surgery. The doctor who performed the 
operation said that what he knew about the man and what the mother had said 
were identical.
After the accident this man, later confirmed to be Min-nam, spent ten months
 in the hospital.  Not being able to remember who he was, he was thought to be mentally defective and was admitted to a mental 
institution. 
The man would often tell those who attended him his name, address and 
middle school from which he graduated, but no one  paid any attention to
 what he was saying. 
(This was before the fingerprinting of all citizens and a reason 
little was made of what Min-nam was saying.) The provincial office, with
 no fingerprints to certify what Min-nam was saying, also paid no 
attention to what they heard. It was a social worker who, on hearing the
 story, started 
checking and notified the family that he was alive. If it wasn't for the
 social worker, the writer has no doubt that there may well have been 
another 25 years of waiting for the family.   
"I will spend some  time looking into the case!" 
is the kind of response the writer feels is all too rare nowadays. Our 
busy lives do not allow most of us the time to look with sufficient 
attention into anything that doesn't seem immediately apparent to us.  
Is 
unconcern for what is going on around us the reality we 
live in? he wonders.  This unconcern is what the writer worries may be 
happening to him. There are  many in our society, like Min-nam, he says,
 who live with others and are at 
the same time isolated from them. He hopes he will be freed enough from 
bias and indisposition to hear the cries of despair of those who need 
our concern..