The Supreme Court docket of South Korea dominated on Thursday {that a} Buddhist statue presently in authorities custody should be returned to a Japanese temple, ending a decade-old dispute between temples in each international locations.
South Korean thieves stole the 20-inch gilded bronze statue in 2012 from a Buddhist temple on Tsushima, a Japanese island midway between the 2 international locations. The incident added yet one more dispute to the contentious relations between the 2 international locations, which have lengthy bickered over historical grievances.
The thieves have been caught in South Korea whereas attempting to promote the statue, which has been designated an necessary cultural asset in Japan. However Buseoksa, a Buddhist temple in western Korea, claimed the artifact, saying it was made there within the 14th century. The temple received a court docket injunction in 2013 stopping its return to Japan.
A authorized battle ensued between Buseoksa and the South Korean authorities. The Japanese temple, Kannonji, and Tokyo weren’t a part of the lawsuit however have demanded the statue’s return. There was no proof that the artifact had been delivered to Japan illicitly, Kannonji mentioned.
In a ruling in 2017, a provincial court docket in South Korea mentioned the statute needs to be given to Buseoksa on the grounds that it had been taken centuries earlier by Japanese pirates. However in February, an appeals court docket dominated that the statue belonged to the Japanese temple as a result of it had owned it lengthy sufficient peacefully and publicly.
In a remaining say on the matter, the Supreme Court docket mentioned on Thursday that the present Buseoksa was more likely to be the identical temple the place the statue was initially made. But it surely added that the rightful proprietor was the Japanese temple for a similar cause cited by the appeals court docket.
Buseoksa known as the ruling outrageous. “It primarily legalized the plunder of cultural belongings, saying that in case you preserve the plunder lengthy sufficient, it turns into yours,” Buseoksa’s head monk, the Venerable Wonwoo, mentioned on the telephone. “It implies that in case you lose one thing by means of looting, you lose it perpetually.”
The statue represents a bodhisattva often known as Kanzeon in Japan and Gwaneum in South Korea.
Even after the statue is returned to Japan, Buseoksa mentioned that Buddhists in South Korea would proceed their marketing campaign to influence Japan to return 1000’s of historical artifacts that they mentioned had been taken centuries in the past by pirates and invaders from Japan.