1991: With Ursula Kokoska, Provincial of Germany, during her visit to Korea on the way to the Assembly of Provincials in Japan.
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1996: Son In Sook, as Provincial of Korea, opens the Provincial Assembly.
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1999: Son was President of AMOR (Asian / Oceania Meeting of Religious Women).
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2003: Son and Jane Maltby with students of Christ the King Primary School, Kibera, Nairobi, Kenya.
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I
am the third of five children in my family. I have two elder brothers
and two younger sisters. I was born on February 8, 1940. In 1963 I
entered the Society as pre-pre postulant and became a novice in 1966 in
Susono, Japan. I was happy but suffered difficulties due to my lack of
English. The novices showed appreciation of me as I was and valued my
experiences. I realized, praying over Genesis I: 26 - 3 I, that God
appreciated what He had made and He had made woman and man according to
his own image. Experiencing the love of my sisters led me to a
realization of God's love and to an acceptance of myself.
As
a second year novice I wondered if I were called to be a common laborer
among the poor rather than an educator. Sister Keogh returned from the
I967 Chapter and said that the Society was seriously concerned with the
poor and that our educational view had broadened. I made my vows saying
I had nothing to give except the love I had received.
After
my first vows I worked in the dormitory of the Sacred Heart College in
Chun Cheon while trying to find ways to serve outside the institution.
I was sent to work with prisoners and boys in a reformatory school.
These people are products of social sin. They need to be trusted as
persons, not according to our expectations. Through sharing deeply with
some of these boys I began to see more clearly the beauty of the human
person. My awareness of this beauty of the mystery that is each
individual person continues to grow.
After probation in
March I978 in the Philippines, I joined four of our religious in a coal
mining area in the Korean mountains. We went with a view of sharing the
life of the poor, of being good neighbors, of finding what needs
existed. But I felt the need of being involved in a definite work.
Wanting to know I am doing something to change people's lives caused
tension in my life. "Take up your cross and follow Me" meant doing
great things, yet one day I looked at the crucifix and was struck by
the wastefulness of the whole thing. Jesus was a young man just
beginning a great work. Yet it was this sacrifice - so wasteful - that
was the manifestation of God's glory. I still feet this tension of
wanting to see results and probably will be free of it only at death.
In
line with the needs of the province, I worked in initial formation, on
the provincial council for nine years and as provincial from I993 to
I999. After that I had a year's sabbatical course at the Graduate
Theological Union, Berkeley, California, USA. Since 2000 I have lived
in Rome as a member of the General Council. I accepted this service as
a call to show the hidden faces of the poor, who have been my teachers
in my spiritual life.
Witnessing to Christ's work, "I have made known your name to them..."
Jn. I7:26) is to be an educator and gives my life meaning as an
rscj...Fulfilling the mis-sion of education means finding the poor in
the Heart of Christ and finding the Heart of Christ in the midst of the
poor."
My
interest is in doing the theology of the life and experience of the
poor. My way of relaxing is to take a walk in nature. I also like
reading and meditating. Recently I became interested in Asian
spirituality and its prayer methods. This helped me to be aware of
myself, self-centeredness, of the many attachments within which enslave
me and can be obstacles to union with God, to peace of heart and to
love of others. Through this way of prayer I can experience more and
understand the Buddhist philosophy or spirituality of "Interdependent
Origination."
"As with the condition of Nature, there
exists Life. So does our country exist together with the condition of
our neighboring country. I also exist interdependently with you, in
your condition. This is the Principle of Life, the Principle of
Interdependence of Origination".
This is the principle
of the Universe. I find there are answers in Asian spirituality about
ecological issues. And I believe a vital concern for ecological
justice is also a means of bringing peace to this world which is so
seriously troubled at this moment. This is reason why I am practicing
this way of prayer.
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