Pastor Lee and a child of God in The Drop Box |
“War
in Heaven”
A Review of The Drop
Box by Nick Olszyk
MPAA Rating, NR
USCCB Rating, NR
Reel Rating, 5 Reels
In the last few years, there have been a myriad of movies
that dealt with pro-life topics ranging in quality from just okay (October Baby, Bella) to pretty
good (Juno, Gimmie Shelter)
but all failing to miss the bullseye. The Drop Box hits it dead center,
and all it took was just showing the truth. Rather than approaching the issue
through fiction, The Drop Box is a documentary that follows a Korean
pastor who builds a sort-of “mailbox” with an alarm for desperate
women to anonymously drop off infants instead of abandoning them in the streets
as had become all too commonplace. Director Brian Ivie takes what could have
been a very dreary topic and makes it infinitely accessible, severe enough to
demand change but lighthearted enough to be enjoyable on a Saturday night date
with popcorn and soda. The Drop Box is one of the best films of the
decade so far.
In the 1970s, Jong-rak Lee was a
seminary student so skinny he earned the nickname “fish
bones.” He freely admits learning the guitar simply to
attract girls and soon earned the reputation of a ladies’ man
despite no actual experience. After school, he married and started a small church
in the capital city of Seoul. His life would change forever when his first son
Eun was born with several serious deformities. Eun would spend the next
fourteen years in the hospital, and Lee eventually sold his house to pay for
the medical bills. Several years later, Lee discovered an abandoned baby
outside the church gate; she had been exposed to the cold for several hours and
almost froze to death. He began to search for a way to help those poor souls,
especially ones with disabilities. He came up with the idea for his Drop Box
after seeing similar devices in the Czech Republic, based in part on medieval
monasteries which cared for infants that were left on their doorstep. The
documentary not only looks at Lee’s solution but examines the
serious social injustices that lead to such an inhumane practice. There is a
serious stigma surrounding unwed mothers. For example, girls in school who are
discovered to be pregnant are often expelled or beaten by their relatives. One
woman tells Lee over the phone that she is planning to “poison
herself and the baby.” Fortunately, he talks her out
of it.
Every frame of this film radiates human dignity. When Lee
discovers a new baby, he immediately prays over her, thanking God for another
gift. Many of these babies have serious health problems, and Lee is commonly
told that “it would be better if they just died.”
“No,” he replies calmly. “They
teach us.” His strong pro-life ethic comes not just from
personal experience but is a direct product of his Christian faith. “I
adopt others because God adopted me,” he explains at the end. Most
of the infants will enter state run orphanages or foster care, but if they
cannot be placed, Lee and his wife will often adopt them and now boasts a
family size rivaled only by the Duggars. These little miracles fill his house
with endless joy. One child with only four functional fingers trains in karate
and was recently elected president of his fourth grade class. Another four year
old with only one hand uses his stump to hold down a Christmas present while he
gleefully unwraps it. Rarely is anyone not smiling.
Pastor Lee is one
of those rare people who earn the title of “living saint,’ a
symbol of Christ present in this world. He has given up everything this world
has to offer for the sake of these children, a life that is “foolishness
to the Gentiles.” He shares not only in Christ’s sufferings, but His death as
well. Lee suffers greatly from diabetes and high blood pressure, exasperated by
the fact he rarely gets a full night’s sleep
with babies being dropped off nearly every night. He is dying for these
children. The only other person with this kind of singular devotion to the poor
in recent memory was Bl. Teresa of Calcutta; they will be fast friends in
Heaven.
Dr. King said that “in the end, we will remember
not the words of our enemies but the silence of our friends.”
The Drop Box illustrates how a Protestant minister, with no connection
to apostolic Christianity or even a mainline denomination, is storming the
gates of Heaven at full speed. Meanwhile in rich and comfortable America, many
Catholics are not only apathetic to the plight of the unborn but actively and
unapologetically pro-choice. It is a scandal of the highest order. Lee’s simple smile should call all
Catholics – anyone with a pulse really –
to righteous militancy. Catholics must end this genocide in our own country and
rescue as many victims along the way, child and mother alike. In Korea, women
do not abort nearly as much as in the United States, preferring abandonment. It’s still inhumane but at least
there’s a chance.
The best line in The Drop Box occurs right at the
beginning when one of Lee’s
children describes his home. “It’s like Heaven,” he explains. “People
are walking around like angels. But suddenly the alarm goes off and everything
changes. Everybody is rushing; it’s like a
war – a war in
Heaven.” I’ve never heard a better explanation of the
beatific vision outside the Bible, when the hosts of Heaven rush to the
immediate aid of the faithful on Earth. Lee and his ever expanding family are
living the Kingdom of God. This Kingdom includes someone very close to me, my
sister Dorothy adopted from the same city where Pastor Lee operates. She too
had a spinal condition that made her difficult to place, but my parents loved
her immediately. Today, she is a vibrant, funny, confident young woman with
much better social skills and fashion taste than myself, now wrapping up a year
with AmeriCore serving the most vulnerable of our society. Her life matters. Everyone's life matters.
Please see this film. Please, please see this film.
This article first appeared in Catholic World Report on March 11, 2015.
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