Thousands of couples
— some in facemasks — tied the knot in a mass Unification Church wedding on Friday,
despite concerns in South Korea over the spread of the coronavirus outbreak.
The church founded by
Sun Myung Moon — revered as a messiah by his followers — distributed face
coverings to the 30,000 crowd, but only some donned them.
Choi Ji-young, who met
her husband — matched by the church — only two months ago said “I am
overwhelmed that I am getting married today,”.
“It would be a
lie if I said I was not concerned at all about the infection,” said the
21-year-old university student. “But I feel like I will be protected from
the virus today.”
South Korea has
recorded 24 cases of the novel coronavirus outbreak that emerged in
neighbouring China, where more than 30,000 cases have been confirmed, and Seoul
has barred entry to foreigners who have recently been in Wuhan, the epidemic’s centre.
Festivals, graduation
ceremonies, and K-pop concerts have been cancelled over fears large events
could facilitate virus transmission, and authorities have asked religious
groups to co-operate in preventing it spreading.
The church went ahead
with the event because it had been “four years in the making” as part
of the celebrations of the 100th anniversary of Moon’s birth, said official
Jang Young-chul.
But followers from
China were asked not to come, he added.
Nearly 6,000
identical-dressed couples from 64 countries — many of whom met for the first
time in recent weeks — married in Gapyeong, a festive mood filling the venue
as newlyweds took group photos and were congratulated by friends and relatives.
Mass weddings, often
held in giant sports stadiums with tens of thousands of couples, have long been
a signature feature of the church, whose followers have been dubbed
“Moonies” after its founder, who died in 2012.
They began in the
early 1960s, involving just a few dozen couples at first but with numbers
mushrooming over the years. In 1997, 30,000 couples took part in a joint
wedding in Washington, and two years later around 21,000 filled the Olympic
Stadium in Seoul.
Those who choose to be
matched by the church must confirm under oath that they are virgins, and after
their wedding the couple must refrain from sexual relations for a minimum of 40
days.
Kim Chang-seong, 27,
who was marrying a woman whom he met 20 days ago, said he was not concerned
about infection because the mass wedding had “special meaning” for
him.
The teachings of the
Unification Church are based on the Bible but with new interpretations, and
Moon saw his role as completing the unfulfilled mission of Jesus to restore
humanity to a state of “sinless” purity.
Evelyne Chimfwembe, who flew in from Botswana to attend the ceremony with her husband of 28 years, said she was not worried about the virus as she believed the event would be “under God’s control”.
See photos:
Gapyeong: A couple takes a nap before a mass wedding ceremony at the Cheong Shim Peace World Center in Gapyeong, South Korea