Japan
called the ruling “regrettable” and urged the statue’s return. The
dispute is being closely watched by both governments, whose relations
are often roiled by historical disputes.
The 20-inch gilded bronze statue, of a bodhisattva known as Kanzeon in Japan and Gwaneum in South Korea, was taken from a Buddhist temple on Tsushima,
a Japanese island halfway between the two countries, by South Koreans
who also stole another statue from a Shinto shrine there. The thieves
were caught while trying to sell the artifacts in South Korea, and the
statue from the Shinto shrine was eventually returned to Japan.
But
a South Korean temple, Buseoksa, which says the bodhisattva statue was
made there in the 14th century, won a court injunction in 2013
preventing its return until it could be determined whether it had
originally been brought to Tsushima legitimately.
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Upbeat
monks at Buseoksa, in the west coast city of Seosan, prepared for the
statue’s homecoming. The temple’s chief monk, the Venerable Wonwoo,
hailed the ruling as a milestone that should inspire South Koreans to
try to bring home what he claimed were 70,000 ancient Korean artifacts
that had been looted and brought to Japan. Buddhists and other South
Koreans have rallied behind Buseoksa’s campaign.
The
Japanese temple, Kannonji, was not a direct party to the lawsuit, but
it argued at the trial that the statue had not been removed from Korea
illicitly, noting that there had been legitimate trade in goods,
including Buddhist statues, between Korea and Tsushima in ancient times.
The statue has been designated an important cultural asset in Japan.
After
an investigation, South Korea’s Cultural Heritage Administration said
in 2014 that the statue had probably been taken to Japan by plunderers,
though it could not reach a definitive conclusion.
Scholars
supporting Buseoksa’s cause cited a document found inside the statue’s
belly in 1951, which they said showed that the statue was manufactured
in Seosan in the 14th century. They said it did not record a transfer of
ownership to the Japanese temple, although such a document normally
would.
They
also presented the court with historical documents showing that parts
of Korea’s west coast near Seosan had been visited by pirates from Japan
during the 14th century. And they said the statue had burn damage,
which they said could be a sign it had been plundered by pirates.
“There is enough reason to think that the statue belongs to Buseoksa,” the presiding judge, Moon Bo-gyeong, ruled Thursday.
In
Tokyo, Chief Cabinet Secretary Yoshihide Suga called the ruling “very
regrettable.” He urged South Korea to take “appropriate” action to
ensure the statue’s swift return to Japan.
“The
Japanese government has appealed to the Korean government through
various diplomatic channels to request the return of this statue to
Japan as soon as possible,” he said at a news conference.
A
spokesman for the South Korean Foreign Ministry, Cho June-hyuck, said
the ministry would try to resolve the matter with Japan “based on mutual
trust.”
Correction: February 2, 2017
An article and a picture caption on Friday about a court ruling that South Korea could keep a statue stolen from a Japanese temple in 2012, on the grounds that it had been taken from Korea centuries earlier by Japanese pirates, misidentified the subject of the statue. It represents a bodhisattva, a person on the path to enlightenment, who is known as Kanzeon in Japan and Gwaneum in South Korea; it is not a statue of Buddha.
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An article and a picture caption on Friday about a court ruling that South Korea could keep a statue stolen from a Japanese temple in 2012, on the grounds that it had been taken from Korea centuries earlier by Japanese pirates, misidentified the subject of the statue. It represents a bodhisattva, a person on the path to enlightenment, who is known as Kanzeon in Japan and Gwaneum in South Korea; it is not a statue of Buddha.
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Hisako Ueno contributed reporting from Tokyo.
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