"Who in our society are the most alienated?" It's a question she often
asks herself. " Since society is not interested," she says, "we have to
find and
help them." Park Sun-young (Teresa), a former
lawmaker, is recognized for her work with the marginalized in Korean
society. Called the Godmother of North Korean defectors
living in the South, she worked as a lawmaker for their human rights.
She fasted for eleven days in front of the Chinese Embassy in Seoul to
bring
the public's attention to China's policy of returning North Korean
defectors in China back to North Korea.
Most of the 20,000
North Koreans who have defected to South Korea have come from China.
In China, they would be considered illegal
migrants and are sent back to North Korea where they are severely
punished, even though International law prohibits the forcible
repatriation of any
individual to a country where they are at risk of facing persecution.
World opinion continues to appeal to China to abide by International
law.
Teresa, besides working with the defectors, concerns
herself with the
"comfort grandmothers" (Korean young women forced by the Japanese
military to become prostitutes for the pleasure of their soldiers; also
with the Sakhalin stateless people, ( the children of Korean workers who
were conscripted to work on this Russian island by the Japanese and
have not received Korean citizenship.); with former prisoners of the
Korea War, and all those who are suffering and society has forgotten.
She
said that when she became a lawmaker she was going to live the Catholic
vision of social justice and be concerned with the forgotten in our
society, in the way Jesus showed us. She was saddened when her
fellow Catholic lawmakers approved of abortion, the death penalty,
and were against the culture of life movement.
She left politics,
she said, because it was an obstacle to doing what
she wanted for human rights. Many saw her activities in the service of
others as political; others poked fun at her efforts as merely
disguised attempts to make the limelight. She was unconcerned about the
personal attacks, and was happy to put aside the lawmaker's credentials
and concentrate on
working for the rights of those who were not recognized by society.
Unfortunately, Catholics have not been as active, she says, as the other religions have been in helping
the North Korean defectors. Today, she still teaches
in the law department of a Korean University, while continuing her
activities for the marginalized of Korean society.