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Moscow congregation fights for its building
From
"NewsDesk" <NewsDesk@UMCOM.ORG>
Date
Thu, 18 Dec 2003 16:04:18 -0600
Dec. 18, 2003 News media contact: Tim Tanton7(615)742-54707Nashville, Tenn.
7 E-mail: newsdesk@umcom.org 7 ALL-AS-KOR-I{595}
By Felix Corley
Forum 18 News Service*
A Korean United Methodist church in Moscow fears it may lose its church
building after the city's justice department allowed outsiders to change the
building's ownership documents.
On Dec. 9, just three days after the prosecutor's office dropped its
investigation into the disputed transfer, guards loyal to the new "owners"
seized the building. The pastor and some 30 church officials and members
remained holed up inside as of Dec. 18.
"We are staying here round the clock to try to prevent the illegal seizure,"
church administrator Svetlana Kim told Forum 18 News Service from inside the
church. "But we know they won't pay any attention to us."
The Kwan Lim (Kvanrim in Russian) United Methodist Church was founded and
registered in 1991 and gained re-registration with the Moscow justice
department in December 1999. The congregation, which Kim said has some 180
members, built its own church in northern Moscow in 1995 with financial
support from Methodists in South Korea. Services are held in Russian and
Korean.
The United Methodist Church in Russia is registered with the federal
government as a centralized religious organization. It is led by Bishop
Ruediger Minor.
In an e-mail message to United Methodist News Service, he said a "group of
business people" was attempting to steal the building.
"This is a problem that deeply disturbs the Methodist community in Moscow,"
Minor told Forum 18. "Though it seems to be one of the 'usual' business
quarrels, it has some religious undertones. Propaganda against 'this Korean
sect' and other invectives are used. And, in my judgment, the whole thing
could only happen because of some (at least silent) support from
administrative and other structures."
The Kwan Lim church center was built with gifts from the Kwan Lim Methodist
Church in Seoul for about $1 million, Minor wrote in his e-mail. "It is
really the 'gem' of all Methodist property in Moscow."
A Christian law firm is helping the church defend its rights, he said.
"In our opinion, there are grave violations of legislation and procedure by
the Moscow city legal department, as they recognized the 'legal documents' of
the new 'owners,' Minor wrote. "Furthermore, Moscow bureaucracy, well known
for its slow motion and endlessly twisted paths, did work in record speed in
this case. This raises indeed very serious doubts and questions."
Aleksandr Buksman, head of the local registration department for religious
organizations, said the ownership documents were amended in compliance with
the country's religion law. He said the amendments to the document and
approval of new leadership occurred at a church meeting in April 2002, but
church officials said no valid meeting took place.
Kim, who signed the original founding document, said problems began when the
church belatedly discovered that another group unconnected with the
congregation managed to change the founding document after holding a meeting
in April or May 2002.
"They did not meet in the church, claimed to have changed all the leaders and
had no connection with us, but even so, the justice department accepted the
new founding document," she said. "No one from the justice department even
checked up with us." The new "owners" then sold the building to others.
Maksim Zubov, an official of the federal Justice Ministry department dealing
with religious organizations, said he was not familiar with the United
Methodist case but promised that his office would follow up the issue with
the Moscow city justice department. "No one has the right to change the
founding document of a religious organization without its knowledge," he
said.
Kim said this is not the first time religious communities have faced such
problems over ownership of buildings, though the problem is more acute in the
business world.
The church's attempt to challenge the Moscow justice department's recognition
of the new founding document in district court got nowhere. "We lodged our
appeal there in September 2002, and it still hasn't been considered," Kim
said.
Kim reported that about 20 guards arrived on Dec. 9, breaking the lock and
smashing a door to gain access. She said the police came but didn't
intervene.
Since the seizure, guards representing the new "owner" have the building
under their control. Kim said the church was able to hold its Sunday service
Dec. 14, but only because it persuaded the guards to allow in church members,
some of whom remain in the building.
# # #
*United Methodist News Service contributed to this report. F18 News is
operated by Forum 18, an Oslo, Norway,-based organization dedicated to
promoting implementation of Article 18 of the Universal Declaration of Human
Rights, dealing with issues of religious freedom. More information is
available at http://www.forum18.org/.
*************************************
United Methodist News Service
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