Jeju “Mayflower Church” denied asylum, faces potential repatriation to China and persecution

The South Korean government has denied the second appeal for asylum for the 60 members of Shenzen Holy Reformed Church, including its Pastor Pan Yongguang. The group, dubbed the “Mayflower Church” by global religious freedom advocates, fled China in 2019 for Jeju Island, where they have been supporting themselves by doing menial labor during their asylum process. The denial means the group must leave Korea and return to China in the next few weeks.

Dr. Foley teaches the Mayflower church about ways they can Biblically handle the trauma they received as a result of persecution.

Voice of the Martyrs Korea has been training the group for the past two years how to respond to the persecution experts believe they are likely to face upon their return.

The original ship called the Mayflower carried 102 Pilgrims to the ‘New World’ in 1620 as they fled persecution in England. This “modern-day Mayflower” group looks like they will not be granted the religious freedom they were seeking here in Korea, but they still have freedom in Christ, which no government can take away.

The congregation continues to trust God despite the denial of their request. They are a well-trained congregation, not only by us through our persecution training but also by Pan Yongguang, their pastor. The pastor and church members continue to pray that God may yet open a door for asylum in another country like the U.S., but they are fully prepared to be faithful witnesses to Christ no matter what the cost if the Lord sends them back to China.

Pastor Pan founded the church in 2012 under the oversight of Philadelphia Bible Reformed Church in the United States. Because of his connection to the foreign religious group, Pastor Pan began to be interrogated by authorities at least twice a week beginning in 2014. When Pastor Pan refused to affiliate the church with the Chinese Communist Party-approved Three-Self Patriotic Movement (TPSM), authorities pressured the landlord of the building where the church-run elementary school was located to evict them. Church members didn’t want to send their children to state-run schools to be indoctrinated into atheism and communism, so they voted to flee China as a whole church in 2019.

Pastor Pan is pictured with one of the youngest Mayflower Church members.

The group, which consists of twenty-eight adults and thirty-two children, posed as tourists and arrived on Jeju Island with almost nothing. In order to avoid being detained during their departure, they had not communicated their plan to anyone, including us. We learned about them and met them for the first time after they arrived. Along with China Aid and other international organizations which help persecuted Christians, we’ve done what we can to help them. Churches in Jeju have also done a lot. Everyone who meets this group loves them, because they are completely non-political and they are all hard-working. They really just want to worship God freely and educate their children to love and serve the Lord.

In June, the South Korean government denied their original asylum request. They filed an appeal shortly afterward, but according to Representative Foley they were denied a second time on October 5th. Facing a deportation to China on October 19th, they filed yet another appeal, in order not be sent back to China. They are uncertain as to how long they can stay in South Korea.

South Korea only accepted an estimated 0.4% of refugees in 2020.

Voice of the Martyrs Korea concurs with other China persecution watchdog groups China Aid and Christian Solidarity Worldwide that if the “Mayflower Church” returns to China, they will be subject to extreme punishments including imprisonments, forced disappearances, and torture. Recently, the CCP has questioned three of the church’s members who remained in China when the group fled, demanding information about the group and also demanding that the members break off all contact with them.

Pastor Foley talks with Pastor Pan about the Christian persecution in China. 

Voice of the Martyrs Korea will continue to stand with the church and share their story, no matter where they are sent. We’ve come to deeply love and respect Pastor Pan and each of the church members since we first met them and learned of their story when they arrived here in 2019. We’ve trained not only the adults but even the young children again and again what the Bible teaches about persecution in the life of the believer. We know that even if God sends them back to China, it is only because he has an even bigger plan and purpose for them, and they will be faithful.

Four hundred years after the original Mayflower Pilgrims, Christians still remember and are inspired by their story. We will do our best to continue to tell the story of these “modern Mayflower Christians” to inspire and challenge people here in our country and around the world.

Individuals interested in donating to Voice of the Martyrs Korea’s work in partnership with the house church Christians of China can visit www.vomkorea.com/en/donate.

Please note “China” on all donations.


These Mayflower Church children practice the principles of worship so that their families can participate in daily family worship in their homes. 
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India: Pastors “paying the price” for rapid growth of Christianity among Saura people

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According to researchers, the number of Christians among the Saura tribe of eastern India has increased from 2,000 30 years ago to more than 200,000 today, an estimated 60% of the Saura population.

That growth has led to resentment and violence against the Saura pastors who live in the majority-Hindu Saura villages in India’s Odisha State. That’s why Voice of the Martyrs Korea is “adopting” 18 of these pastors in partnership with our sister mission, VOM Poland. It’s a project designed to help meet their basic needs while also training them to face potentially worse persecution in the future.

While many of the Saura villages in eastern India are Christian, there are Saura Christians who live as a very small minority of the population in Hindu villages. It’s the Christians living in these villages who face persecution on a daily basis. Pastors are typically the most persecuted, since the Hindu villagers see them as the cause of the spread of Christianity.

Persecution of the Saura Christians and pastors includes rejection by their families, being barred from common wells and local shops, beatings, and the burning of church buildings. Among the persecuted pastors in the majority Hindu villages, only three have had any formal bible training. Bible training is needed even among pastors in the majority Christian areas, where whole Saura villages were converted in the early 1900s by Canadian Baptist missionaries.

Generations have passed and some of these Christian villages have become quite nominal in their faith, so they are in great need for sound Christian teaching, In many ways, it’s as serious a problem as the persecution being experienced in the Hindu villages.  

Accessing the villages is a challenge, which means a customized educational model is needed.

The Saura villages are spread out across many hills, and it can take hours to get from one village to the next, even in a 4-wheel drive. The 18 pastors we are adopting are all married, each with 2 to 4 children. It can be dangerous for them to leave their families and church buildings unattended. When you add in the time it takes them to make a living to feed their families, you can see why taking time away for bible training can seem like an impossible luxury.

Christians living in the Saura villages of eastern India face persecution on a daily basis.

Arrangements have been made with the closest Bible college, in Raighar, northwest of Odisha state, to provide a six-month training program to the pastors which will enable them to continue to care for their families and churches while enrolled. In order to enable the pastors’ participation, Voice of the Martyrs Korea will be covering their family living expenses for a year.

The financial assistance is a way that Christians outside of India can “share the cost of persecution”.

So far, these pastors have been “paying the price” personally for the rapid spread of Christianity among their whole tribe over the past 30 years. Radical Hindus are angry that Christianity is spreading, and they are making these pastors suffer for that.

Voice of the Martyrs Korea helps Christians who have decided to stay and make a faithful witness to Christ in the face of persecution. There are many organizations who help Christians flee, and we appreciate that important ministry. But our own purpose is to stand with those whom God has called to stay, like these 18 pastors and their families and congregations.

Donations toward this effort can be made until October 31, at www.vomkorea.com/en/donation or via electronic transfer to:

국민은행 463501-01-243303

예금주: (사)순교자의소리 

Please include the phrase “India” on the donation. 

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North Korea: Going low-tech to evade state surveillance

As the North Korean government implements its new anti-reactionary thought law, which promises even harsher punishments for anyone found accessing foreign content, a return to low-tech methods of information distribution is essential to protecting those who are distributing and receiving gospel outreach inside North Korea.

A listener tunes in to a Voice of the Martyrs Korea shortwave radio broadcast, one of five daily broadcasts the ministry does on shortwave and medium wave into North Korea each day.

Technology always leaves a trail, and often the more advanced the technology, the more obvious the trail. As North Koreans increasingly access information from the outside world on SD cards, USBs, cell phones, and computers, it actually becomes easier for the North Korean government to apprehend those who are accessing foreign content. That’s true not only of those who are watching Korean dramas and KPOP but also those who are accessing Christian content electronically.

The strategy of the North Korean government is not always to stop the spread of electronic devices but instead to let the devices themselves do the spying work.

Several years ago, software was installed on phones and computers which made non-state approved files un-playable or deleted them. But now, programs like ‘Trace Viewer’ record user activity and even take screenshots every few minutes that are then accessible to the authorities. USBs are automatically infected with government software that records every device they are plugged into and what files get uploaded or downloaded. It is a very efficient way to spy, and ordinary North Koreans have less options for identifying and getting rid of malware from their electronic devices than users in the rest of the world do.

International human rights organizations inadvertently aid the North Korean government’s surveillance efforts by relying increasingly on high tech methods for information transmission into North Korea.

We see outside groups focused on getting as many SD cards or USB devices as possible inside North Korea. This doesn’t mean SD cards and USBs are bad. Certainly they’re helpful, and we use a lot of them, too. But high tech devices should only ever be a supplement to low tech strategies, because generally speaking, the lower the tech, the more manpower it takes for the government to search and the harder it is for them to trace and apprehend the users.

This is why Voice of the Martyrs Korea continues to use technology that may at first appear to be outdated.

A North Korean defector announcer records the Bible for use on Voice of the Martyrs Korea’s daily radio broadcasts and electronic media.

People may think, “Who listens to shortwave radio anymore? The sound quality of an MP3 player is so much better.” But the reason why we do five shortwave and medium wave radio broadcasts into North Korea every day is because radios are a great example of a ‘non-networked device’—that is, a device that doesn’t transmit information about its use the way a computer or phone does. It’s also why we continue to use printed Bibles wherever possible. They can be made as small as many networked devices, and these days with the North Korean government emphasizing electronic surveillance, the use of printed materials is often easier to conceal.

Christians are especially well equipped to evade high tech surveillance because traditional methods of evangelism and discipleship don’t rely on physical materials at all.

Long before individual Christian believers had their own printed Bibles, they accessed scripture through memorization. And they shared it through discrete one-on-one conversations. For underground Christians in North Korea and around the world, scripture memorization and personal evangelism remain the most important ‘technology’ for the transmission of gospel content.

Voice of the Martyrs Korea’s strategy is always to use the lowest-tech strategy available and to convert information to memorization as quickly as possible.

Our most strategic technology is not SD cards or USBs, though we use those. Our most strategic technology is our North Korean underground church hymnal. Several years ago we worked with underground Christians to select and record hymns that contained a lot of good theology and were easy for North Koreans to sing. Most South Korean worship songs are not done in a musical style which North Koreans can learn easily, and they generally feature one or two simple lines sung over and over, without much doctrine. But hymns can carry a lot of doctrinal information, and when they are sung in the musical style North Koreans are accustomed to hearing, they can be easily learned by the people who tune into our daily radio broadcasts. The North Korean hymnal is also frequently requested by North Korean defector churches and individual North Korean defectors in South Korea.

Voice of the Martyrs Korea produced a North Korean underground church hymnal using North Korean style harmonies and instruments and songs designed to convey theology. The hymnal has become popular among North Korean defectors in South Korea as well.

Evidence of the success of low-tech methods of information transmission into North Korea can be seen through government efforts to restrict them. Balloon launches are the best example of low-tech information transmission, and they were the first technology to be criminalized. At that time, the South Korean government also said that in the future it might look into the question of whether radio broadcasts into North Korea should be restricted. The lower the tech, the greater the likelihood of a ban. This is one reason why we must use the widest variety of technologies possible—both low-tech and high-tech: Because restrictions on sharing the gospel in North Korea aren’t likely to go away anytime soon.

More information about Voice of the Martyrs Korea’s North Korea radio ministry and Bible distribution efforts is available at https://vomkorea.com/en/project/northkorea/.

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