From the Worldwide Faith News archives www.wfn.org
Bloomington mourns death of Korean student
From
NewsDesk <NewsDesk@UMCOM.UMC.ORG>
Date
13 Jul 1999 14:02:42
July 13, 1999 News media contact: Tim Tanton*(615)742-5470*Nashville, Tenn.
10-21-30-71B{372}
By Mary Matz*
BLOOMINGTON, Ind. (UMNS) -- About 2,700 people gathered at Indiana
University's Musical Arts Center on July 12 to mourn and to celebrate the
life of Won-Joon Yoon.
The 26-year-old graduate student was killed during a driveby shooting
rampage that targeted Asians, blacks, and Jews. Yoon was shot in front of
the Korean United Methodist Church on July 4, just before Sunday worship
services. The accused gunman, white supremacist Benjamin Nathaniel Smith,
later killed himself during a police chase.
Speakers at "A Community Gathering to Heal and Unite" included U.S. Attorney
General Janet Reno, Assistant to the President Benjamin Johnson,
representatives of the Korean community, and state and city dignitaries. The
gathering was sponsored by Bloomington United, an ecumenical, community-wide
group formed a year ago in response to hate literature distributed by Smith
on the Indiana University campus.
The auditorium was filled to capacity, and the multi-ethnic crowd also
packed the lobby and overflowed to the outside of the auditorium building.
At the service, the Rev. SeungHo Park, a cousin of the slain student, held
out a Bible and a pair of golden-rimmed glasses to the audience. Speaking
through an interpreter, Park explained that Yoon's grandmother had given him
the Bible just before he began his journey to study in the United States.
"He was holding this Bible and wearing these glasses on the day he was
shot," the interpreter said in a strong, emotional voice. "We hear him speak
something with his sweet voice. ... (Now) we hear him speak loud and clear:
'I will forgive Benjamin Smith in the name of Jesus; I will forgive
America.' " Many hands rose to wipe tears, cradle chins and cover mouths in
efforts to stifle emotion.
"Please remember this Bible and these pair of glasses," the translator said,
as Park held them above his head. He turned and placed them on the floor of
the stage before the large photo of a smiling Yoon, wearing a white jersey,
his dark hair framing the glasses. The audience spontaneously broke into
applause and quickly rose to its feet.
The Rev. KilSang Yoon of Nashville, Tenn., a Korean-American representative
of the United Methodist Church, characterized the grief felt among the
participants as deeply inexpressible, a feeling that goes to the pit of the
soul.
"It isn't right, it isn't fair," he said. "It takes our breath away. And it
is nothing more or less than the very Spirit of God working in us. Let us
hear it and listen to it."
He cited an overheard remark, made in an effort to make sense of the
senseless tragedy: "Someone said Won-Joon happened to be at the wrong place
and at the wrong time. How can we say Sunday service was the wrong place and
the wrong time?"
He also addressed the slain man's parents, sister, cousin and other
relatives. "Some of us Koreans are very stoic," he told them. "But I would
like my brothers and sisters to cry today, tomorrow, and in the days ahead,
until -- until you are comforted." He added to the audience: "I know you
will be with the Yoons in the days ahead with your prayers. We need each
other."
Attorney General Reno told the audience that she has "seen the strength and
courage of Americans in Oklahoma City, in Jasper, Texas, in Billings,
Montana. People have stood up to hatred and those who hate."
Hate is learned, but it can be "unlearned," Reno said, and the Department of
Justice is developing a program for middle schools to uncover attitudes of
hate and prejudice. She said she is committed to strengthening laws against
violent hate crimes.
Johnson brought a message from President Clinton: "Hillary and I join with
all those gathered at Indiana University in expressing sympathy," he said.
"It's important to teach young people to have tolerance and respect. ... Our
diversity is not cause for division but is one of our greatest strengths."
In the message, Clinton urged passage of the hate crimes prevention act.
Near the end of the service, the family members gathered on the stage.
Overwhelmed, Yoon's father spontaneously recited the 23rd Psalm, his voice
strong and hoarse with emotion, the cadence of his Korean English giving the
well-worn words new texture and depth. He repeated the last line of the
verse, raising his Bible in both hands above his head and smiling
exuberantly.
"My son dwells in the house of the Lord forever!" he exclaimed.
Earlier, Yoon's mother was assisted to the stage, the scuffling of her feet
the only sound in the cavernous auditorium. With her head bent, wearing a
mantle of sorrow, she lit a Candle of Remembrance.
At the conclusion of the service, that single candle was used to light all
the small white candles carried by hundreds of participants who marched in
silence to the site of the killing, in front of the church. There,
participants joined hands in silence as the Rev. Byung Chill Hahn, pastor of
the church, prayed that the shooting would be the last hate crime in
Bloomington. The service ended with participants singing "Let There Be Peace
on Earth" as the candles slowly burned out and their smoke rose into the
sultry Indiana night.
In an interview after the service, Ann Glass, district superintendent of the
United Methodist Church's Bloomington District, said the Yoon family is well
on its way toward healing.
"They have modeled Christianity in crisis in a new way for us," Glass said,
"in their openness to show mercy and forgiveness."
Glass had met several times with the family. "In private conversations when
many of us were absolutely dissuaded, he (Yoon's father) showed us a deep
faith," she said. "They are moving on."
# # #
*Matz is interim director of communications for the United Methodist
Church's Indiana Area. Communications associate Eunice Dharmaratnam, serving
in Indiana as the United Methodist Communications
______________
United Methodist News Service
http://www.umc.org/umns/
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