Sunday, November 08, 2009 Last Update:11:25 am ET

World|Tue, Sep. 04 2007 11:11 AM EDT

Pastor: Slain Korean Hostage was Killed for Refusing to Convert

By Eric Young|Christian Post Reporter

The youth pastor who was leading the group of 22 South Korean aid volunteers in Afghanistan was killed for refusing to convert to Islam, the head pastor of the church revealed after the final 19 former hostages arrived home.

  • korean hostages
    (Photo: AP Images / Lee Jin-man)
    Two relatives of the South Korean victims killed by Taliban hold their portraits as one of the released South Korean hostages weeps during a news conference at Incheon Airport in Incheon, west of Seoul, South Korea, Sunday, Sept. 2, 2007. Nineteen South Koreans freed last week from a six-week captivity by Taliban insurgents in Afghanistan arrived in South Korea on Sunday, an airport official said. The portraits show Shim Sung-min, right, and Bae Hyung-kyu, left.

“Among the 19 hostages who returned on the second (of September), some were asked by the Taliban to convert and when they rejected, they were assaulted and severely beaten,” reported Park Eun-jo, pastor of hostages’ home church – Saemmul Presbyterian Church in Bundang, just south of the South Korean capital Seoul.

“I heard from the hostages that they were threatened with death,” he added, according to the Seoul-based Christian Today newspaper. “Especially it is known that the reason Pastor Bae Hyung-kyu was murdered was because he refused the Taliban’s demand to convert.”

A hospital chief also said on Monday that some of the 5 South Korean men freed from captivity last week reported being beaten by their Taliban abductors for refusing to convert to Islam and for protecting their female colleagues.

“We found through medical checks that some male hostages were beaten,” Cha Seung-gyun told reporters, according to Agence France-Presse.

“They said they were beaten at first for refusing to take part in Islamic prayers or for rejecting a demand to convert.”

Meanwhile, medical examinations showed no signs that the last 12 women were raped and none reported being sexually harassed despite reports from the first two released hostages – both women – who said they were repeatedly raped by their captors, according to an ABC News report on Saturday.

Mirajuddin Pathan, the governor of Ghazni province, had also said he received reports that “various Taliban commanders were fighting over the women hostages” and that “[t]hey were abused over and over," according to ABC News.

Although Park had heard that some of the female hostages were in danger of being raped, he said they were able to “overcome the crisis” through strong resistance.

Furthermore, at least two male hostages were beaten or threatened with death when they refused to leave behind female hostages, according to hospital chief Cha.

While all the men were said to have fully recovered and now show no external signs of their beating, Cha reported that six or seven female hostages show symptoms of insomnia and depression and continue to worry about their lives even after returning to Korea. Moreover, some of the patients still suffer from shock from news that two of their male colleagues were murdered.

The hospital chief predicts that the former hostages will need about two weeks of treatment.

More reports on the freed hostages’ six-week ordeal have been emerging since the release of the final 19 aid workers – 14 women and five men – last week and their safe return to their homeland on Sunday.

The original group of 23 Korean Christian volunteers had been kidnapped by Taliban militants on July 19 while on their way to provide free medical aid to poor Afghans. Over the course of their 40-day captivity, the rebels killed two men and freed two women before releasing the last groups of hostages last Wednesday and Thursday.

To free the remaining hostages, South Korea promised to ban Korean missionaries from Afghanistan and pledged to pull out its 210 troops by the end of the year – a move it was already planning to make prior to the hostage crisis.

Ally countries such as Canada, Germany and Afghanistan have publicly criticized Seoul for negotiating with the Taliban – which they consider a terrorist group – and seemingly giving into them.

Christian Post reporter Michelle Vu in Washington and Christian Post correspondent Lee Dae-won in Seoul contributed to this report.

Sort by: Newest | Oldest | Agree | Disagree
All comments on this page are subject to our Terms of Use and do not necessarily reflect the views of The Christian Post or its staff.
  • Thu Sep 06, 2007 5:26 pm Agree: 0   Disagree: 3

    The United States will fall under the control of the AntiChrist just as all the nations of the world will. It is just a matter of time.

    Be prepared to defend your faith and lose your life, or, deny your faith for the sake of your own life. Nonetheless, be ready.

    The return of the Messiah draws closer.

  • Tue Sep 04, 2007 1:57 pm Agree: 8   Disagree: 0

    You're right, budger63. Nothing in the mainstream media about this, whatsoever. However, the ACLJ has been covering similar instances in Egypt, where radical Muslims are performing what is called "The Knock of Death." They put a letter on a Christian's door, telling them that they have a certain amount of time in which to convert to Islam or move away. If they don't, their families will be killed.

    Link: http://www.aclj.org/News/Read.aspx?ID=2708

    Also in Gaza, Christians are being forced to convert at gunpoint. A female Christian professor was kidnapped, forced to convert to Islam, and then was married off to a Muslim man. Her family, who knows she would not willingly convert, is being told that she no longer wants anything to do with them unless they also convert to Islam.

    My gut feeling is that this is just the beginning. For a while now I've believed that the Muslim "Messiah" (the Imam Mohammed al-Mahdi) is the Antichrist we are to look for. The Muslim hadiths about him are eerily similar to the Bible's description of the Antichrist, except that their viewpoint is in reverse.

    For example, at the end of the 7-year "peace" (which is also spoken about in the hadiths, and is supposed to be made by the Imam with the Jews and Christians), the evil "Dajjal," or Muslim "Antichrist" is supposed to appear in the sky, riding a flying white donkey, and "fooling" the Jews and Christians into calling him the "Son of David." Of course, Christians know that JESUS CHRIST is the One coming in the sky at the end of the 7-year Tribulation, riding a white horse, and every eye will behold Him. At that time, the Jews will see Him for who He is, and finally recognize Him as their Messiah.

    Even the plague of sores from Revelation 16 is given a positive spin in the hadiths - supposedly, they are going to break out only on the FAITHFUL FOLLOWERS OF ALLAH! As for the mark on the forehead, the hadiths speak of such a mark ... from putting your head down on the ground during Muslim prayers.

    My advice is to keep praying for the safety of Christians in that area, and for their spiritual strength if they are victimized and their captors try to force them to convert. We also need to keep our eyes open for the signs that Jesus told us to look for. Time is short.

  • Tue Sep 04, 2007 12:40 pm Agree: 6   Disagree: 1

    Why is it that we hear nada about this in the regular media? If it were radical Christians spitting on the sidewalk it would be a "Special Report". Isn't it because they are defeatist and want to make us all believe that Islam is a "peaceful" religion.

Please help us to monitor our message boards by flagging comments that are unlawful, harmful, threatening, abusive, harassing, defamatory, vulgar, obscene, libelous, hateful, or racially, ethnically or otherwise objectionable.
Contact Us if you have any questions, comments, or concerns.
Comment on this story
ID Password

Don't have a Christian Post ID? Signing up is easy. Click Here

  • icon1
  • icon2
  • icon3
  • icon4
  • icon5
The Christian Post reserves the right to terminate the account of any User who violates our Terms of Use.
Advertisement
Advertisement
Zondervan

Struggling to succeed in the Nashville music scene, talented singer/songwriter Parker James finds the competition fierce even deadly. A young woman's murder, industry corruption, a

Featured Advertiser Links