Global Policy Forum

The Rev. Moon's Last Stand?

Print

By Bill Berkowitz

June 2, 2004

 

Better financed than George W. Bush and more visible than Dick Cheney, the Rev. Sun Myung Moon is hoping to rock the United Nations

It's practically impossible to keep up with all the projects and conferences, rallies and summits, front groups and businesses, and political machinations involving the Rev. Moon's Unification Church -- currently known as The Family Federation for World Peace and Unification. Having recently celebrated his eighty-fourth birthday, the Rev. Moon seems rejuvenated and desiring to increase his visibility, while at the same time the master of mixed and often convoluted messages appears to be preparing his final farewell to America. Along the way, however, he is trying to plant the seeds of his political legacy -- with help from some powerful political friends.

On the evening of March 23, a group of the Rev. Moon's associates gathered at the Dirksen Senate Office Building in Washington. There, the Rev. presided over a ceremony presenting "Crown of Peace" awards to a number of honored guests. Several U.S. Congressmen -- Democrats Sen. Mark Dayton of Minnesota, Rep. Danny K. Davis of Illinois, Rep. Sanford D. Bishop Jr. of Georgia; Republicans Rep. Roscoe G. Bartlett of Maryland, Rep. Christopher B. Cannon of Utah, and Rep. Curt Weldon of Pennsylvania -- received "Ambassadors for Peace" awards.

Decked-out in a campy floor-length cape, the Rev. Moon was presented with an ornate gold crown and a lifetime achievement award. Introduced by a shofar-blowing rabbi, the Rev. told the star-studded audience -- made up of congressional members and a number of religious leaders -- that a "new era" had come: "Open your hearts and receive the secrets that Heaven is disclosing in this age through me."

The Rev. Moon may have turned a few heads by pointing out that while he is as human as the next guy, "in the context of Heaven's providence, I am God's ambassador, sent to earth with His full authority. I am sent to accomplish His command to save the world's six billion people, restoring them to Heaven with the original goodness in which they were created."

Inexplicably, a day after his coronation the Rev. Moon seemed ready to bid the U.S. goodbye. During an address at the Sheraton National Hotel in Arlington, Virginia, he said that after 34 years in America he was heading home to Korea. Even before this surprising announcement, the Reverend, sounding Rodney Dangerfield-like, talked about how he came to the U.S. decades before and had worked "hard to support and develop America to save America and Christianity." Although he had been "persecuted in this country" he gave it his all. "Dark Forces tried to kick me out of America, but I overcame," the Rev. said. "Now a great transition is on. The Jewish and Christian people have been at odds but now the solution has come. Now the homosexuality is coming out. It is worse than an animal lifestyle. However we will solve it."

Why would the Rev. Moon think about leaving the U.S. when he's got a gaggle of congressional buddies, as well as friends in the White House? "He's contemplating the move but I don't know how serious he is," John Gorenfeld, a freelance writer whose web log keeps close tabs on the Rev. Moon's operations, told me in a recent phone conversation. "He changes his mind very often, whimsically renaming his church or frequently setting new 'conditions' for his followers. He's mentioned moving in a few recent speeches, tying into his new theme of building the 'Fatherland' in 2012."

On his way to becoming a powerful, influential and controversial political figure, the Rev. Sun Myung Moon has developed a special relationship with the Bush family. After supporting Dubya's election through his flagship publication, The Washington Times, the newspaper's foundation sponsored a prayer luncheon attended by some 1,700 religious, civic, and political leaders the day before Bush's inauguration. The guest list contained a host of religious right luminaries including the Rev. Jerry Falwell, former National Evangelical Association President Don Argue, Trinity Broadcasting Network's Paul Crouch and a host of leaders from the Southern Baptist Convention.

Five years earlier, former President George H. W. Bush was the featured speaker at a Moon-sponsored Buenos Aires banquet -- for which he was reportedly paid $10,000 -- that launched the Rev. Moon's latest Latin American publication "Tiempos del Mundo" (Times of the World). "A lot of my friends in South America don't know about the Washington Times but it is an independent voice," the former president said. "The editors of the Washington Times tell me that never once has the man with the vision interfered with the running of the paper, a paper that in my view brings sanity to Washington DC."

The former president added that he was certain that "Tiempos del Mundo is going to do the same thing." As the New York Press' Michelangelo Signorile recently reported, sometime after "Bush called Moon 'the man with the vision,' the reverend gave him $1 million for his presidential library."

Even if the Rev. Moon is threatening to leave the U.S., however, one of his long-term projects -- developing a faith-based path to peace by re-vamping the United Nations -- is still on the organization's front burner.

As with most things Moon-sponsored, this project has been brewing for several years. A 1999 press release issued from the "Family Ethics and World Peace" conference called attention to the Reverend's intentions: "Citing the ultimately ineffective efforts of current peace organizations in securing world peace, Reverend Moon said that... world peace in the next millennium hinges on the involvement of united, world religious leaders."

Gen. Alexander M. Haig, Jr. -- who served as President Richard Nixon's chief of staff and President Ronald Reagan's Secretary of State -- introduced Rev. Moon to the assembly, and according to the press release, "credited Rev. Moon as being instrumental in overthrowing international communism."

In early 2000, the Rev. Moon fleshed out the idea, suggesting that the UN needed to transcend the narrow national interests of members states and form "a religious assembly, or council of religious representatives within" its structure. According to Rev. Moon, this new body, consisting "of respected spiritual leaders in fields such as religion, culture and education," could "speak for the concerns of the entire world and humanity at large." Atheists need not apply.

After several years of virtual silence, in October 2003, the Rev. organized the Inaugural Assembly of the Interreligious International Peace Council (IIPC) in New York City, which drew some 300 delegates -- including about a dozen former heads of state -- from 160 countries. According to the Moon-owned United Press International, attendees heard the Rev. Moon talk about eliminating the "boundaries" that "cause division and conflict," which would bring about "a world of peace."

The Rev. Moon-owned Washington Times reported that "Hundreds of demonstrators, in yellow baseball caps and bedecked in ribbons [sponsored by another Moon front group, the Interreligious and International Federation for World Peace], rallied near the United Nations... in support of what they called 'a faith-based approach to world peace.'"

"While the UN itself has given him the brush-off, he's had a great deal of success getting leaders in Africa and South Pacific countries interested in it," John Gorenfeld told me.

And the Bush Administration apparently has shown some interest. According to a number of published reports, the Philippines agreed to sponsor a Moon-backed resolution in the General Assembly. And during a May 2003 meeting with President Bush at the White House, Philippines President Gloria Macapagal Arroyo suggested that the United States might consider co-sponsoring the proposal, the conservative online news magazine, NewsMax.com, reported. According to that report, the president "expressed deep interest and asked his national security adviser, Condoleezza Rice, to study the matter."

Showing some impatience at how slow the process was moving, the Rev. Moon gave attendees at last October's IIPC meeting their marching orders. Go back to your homes, he told the assembled delegates, "and be the first to practice true love in your family, society, nation and world for purpose of building the Kingdom of Heaven on Earth and in Heaven. I believe that you will devote your full efforts to the IIPC -- this is my direction, my order -- which we have formed together here today as a body on the level of a new United Nations."

If all this seems a bit, well, Moon-like, consider the following posting by the Google news group, alt.religion.unification:

On Wednesday April 21, 2004, forty-two participants representing the Member-States and the UN Secretariat attended the Interreligious and International Ambassadors' Luncheon held at the UN headquarters. Sponsored by the Interreligious and International Federation for World Peace (IIFWP) and the Interreligious Peace Council (IIPC), members heard moderator Karen Judd Smith, Director of the IIFWP Office of UN Relations, remind "the audience of the 2001 report by Mr. Kofi Annan, Secretary-General of the United Nations, in which he recognized that religions and religious organizations can play a role in preventing armed conflict."

With so many other things on its plate these days it's hard to imagine the UN actually taking up the Rev. Moon's challenge. But then who would have imagined the Rev. Moon, in cape and crown, parading about the Dirksen Senate Office Building?

 

 



 

FAIR USE NOTICE: This page contains copyrighted material the use of which has not been specifically authorized by the copyright owner. Global Policy Forum distributes this material without profit to those who have expressed a prior interest in receiving the included information for research and educational purposes. We believe this constitutes a fair use of any such copyrighted material as provided for in 17 U.S.C § 107. If you wish to use copyrighted material from this site for purposes of your own that go beyond fair use, you must obtain permission from the copyright owner.