My Four and One Half Years
with
The Lord of The Flies
by
Allen Tate Wood
Click
to view this article on his website
Prologue
"I pulled the wings off the fly so that it couldn't get
away," explained Moon to a rapt audience of several hundred
young disciples. He had been telling us about one of his experiences
in prison. "I was dreadfully lonely," he said. "My
only companion was a fly. I spent hours each day watching it.
I watched it clean its legs. I loved it so much that I didn't
want it to escape. That is why I pulled it's wings off."
This occasion contrasted with those meetings in which Moon brings
his followers to a fever pitch by exhortations and threats. "Are
you willing to follow me?"
The response is a deafening "Yes" accompanied by clenched
fists raised in unison. Sun Myung Moon, a 76 year old Korean industrialist,
owns a munitions factory, a titanium plant, a ginseng refining
plant and he is a successful real estate entrepreneur in the U.S.
He is also the increasingly well known creator of, and alleged
messiah of the Unification Church. Moon founded the church in
Seoul, South Korea, in 1954. Today the church claims more than
half a million members in 50 countries of which the big three
are Japan, the U.S. and Germany. Seventy percent of the membership
has been claimed since 1971. In the State of New York in the last
few years Moon has purchased over nine million dollars worth of
real estate. Under the banner of the Second Coming, Sun Myung
Moon commands the allegiance of thousands of young people. They
finance and operate a network of front groups whose sole purpose
is to catapult Moon into a position of prominence and eventually
of absolute power in American politics. By the fall of 1969 the
church was acting as a political pressure group in the nation's
capitol. From March to December of 1970 I was head of the Unification
Church's political arm in the United States(The Freedom Leadership
Foundation). On Moon's behalf we sought to defuse the Peace Movement
and buttress the hawk position by convincing senators and congressmen
that there was substantial grass roots support for a hard line
stand in Asia. In 1969 we were just scratching the surface. Today
Moon's organization is in a position of vastly increased power
and prestige. Through the Freedom Leadership Foundation and it's
descendant CAUSA, Moon has won the gratitude and respect of many
congressmen and senators, not to mention former presidents Nixon,
Reagan and Bush. With The D. C. Stirrers, an inner city track
club, Moon parades as a conscientious church leader doing his
bit for black teenagers in the nation's capitol. The Little Angels,
a Korean Children's Folk Ballet gives him an entree into the entertainment
world. Thr ough the person of Jhoon Rhee, director of a mushrooming
chain of Korean Karate schools, he enters the world of amateur
and professional athletics. Through annual conferences on the
"unity of science," he presents himself as a philanthropic
patron of the sciences and the humanities. With his burgeoning
fortune Moon has the resources to underwrite scientific research
and to endow fellowships in Universities. If Moon's movement in
America continues unchecked, he will soon be able to directly
influence the outcome of elections.
In Korea Moon's is the only "Christian" group that
has not suffered at the hands of President Park's brutal suppression
of free speech and civil liberties. Moon far from repudiating
the Park government's beating and torture of Korean ministers,
sponsored and organized a pro government rally in which 1,200,000
people participated (according to a press release given by the
Unification Church in Washington.) Borrowing from Moon's historical
metaphor(The Divine Principle) this is the equivalent of Jesus
holding a pro government demonstration in Jerusalem in support
of King Herod. When I was in Korea in October of 1970, Moon told
me that when the Unification Church gains control of the South
Korean government," every South Korean Embassy in the world
will become an expeditionary force for the Kingdom of Heaven.
Setting out On The Journey
My path to the Unification Church began in 1966 when I matriculated
at the University of the South in Sewanee, Tennessee. I entered
college with little concrete notion of what I wanted to do in
life. I had rejected the establishment rewards that my secondary
education promised. To me the academic challenge at Sewanee was
meaningless. Absorbed in a search for values by which I could
live, the Peace Movement offered the only channel for my frustrated
idealism. From the steps of the burned out ROTC building at the
University of the South in the spring of 1968, I was the first
student to speak publicly against the War at Sewanee. That summer
in New Jersey I worked for the Presidential campaign of Senator
Eugene J. McCarthy. In August I went to The National Democratic
convention in Chicago as a messenger for the New Jersey delegation.
The ferocity of the police riots during the convention destroyed
what lingering faith I had in the political process, and I returned
to college in the fall bewildered by our nati onal leaders' refusal
to respond to the people's wish to end the war in Vietnam.
Unable to concentrate on my studies, I began to explore Eastern
religions, specifically the religious synthesism of RamaKrishna.
In the spring of 1969 I dropped out of the University of the South
and hitchhiked to California, a stop on my way to India. In May
I arrived in Berkeley, with a suitcase and a navy duffel bag and
a copy of the Gospel According to Rama Krishna. I didn't know
it, but it was the end of the line.
Early one afternoon a few days later I met a young man on the
steps of the student union on the campus at the University of
California at Berkeley. I told him I had no place to stay and
no money. He said I could keep my bags at the "Unified Family"
a commune several blocks from the campus. He picked up my suitcase.
I grabbed my dufflebag, and off we went. At the commune Edwin
Ang an Indonesian man in his early forties greeted us at the door.
He was the center leader. We sat on cushions in the sparsely f
urnished living room while he asked me what I was doing. I replied:
"I am searching for God." He asked me to dinner and
to a lecture that dealt with the commune's philosophy. Within
a week I had heard five lectures on the "Divine Principle."
In the last lecture an impassioned young woman spoke to us revealing
that Moon was the "Messiah". I already knew this. Earlier
I had been looking for a sleeping bag in a closet and there, on
a shelf, was a photograph of Sun Myung Moon, a man of 40, kimono-clad.
He st ared impassively into my startled eyes. I knew then that
my new friends would soon tell me that this man was the Messiah.
I joined the Unified Family in Berkeley. It then had thirteen
members. In those days there was no Freedom Leadership Foundation,
no CAUSA, no political activity and no fundraising. Our communal
life consisted of meals, prayer services, singing, witnessing
and studying the Divine Principle. At twenty-two I was the fourth
oldest member of the group in Berkeley.
In the summer of 1969 the Unification Church in America had no
more than 6 or 7 centers with a total membership numbering around
150. During that summer Neil Winterbottom from national headquarters
in Washington D.C. visited the commune. He was English, a bout
my age, bright and well read. He seemed more dynamic than my compadres
in Berkeley.
He suggested that I should come to the headquarters in Washington.
I came back East to Princeton N.J., to visit my family, whose
skepticism about my new found religion only strengthened my commitment.
Their suggestion that this group might be a front for Korean neo-fascism
was preposterous. I did not tell them then that I knew Moon was
the Messiah. Time was short. The world had to be saved. I had
found my work at last.
Washington D.C.
Capitol of The ArchAngel Nation
I arrived in Washington D.C. for the second FLF conference. Neil
Salonen, who in 1975 was Moon's right hand man in the United States,
was ordered by Moon in the summer of 1969 to found the Church's
anti-Communist movement in this country and to name the or ganization
the International Federation for The Extermination of Communism.
Salonen set the Freedom Leadership Foundation as the American
Branch of the IFEC. On paper the FLF exists as a nonprofit, non
partisan educational corporation whose stated objecti ve is to
educate American Youth about the dangers of Communism. From its
inception FLF was funded by the Unification Church. At this stage
in the movement's development, the general membership was politically
unsophisticated. The idea of a political arm was new and the purists
in the movement who believed that a Church should have nothing
to do with politics voiced strong opposition. It was pointed out
to them that the church in Japan and Korea carried out extensive
anti-Communist political programs and that it was the "master's"
express desire to begin political work in the U.S. Thereafter
opposition to political work was seen as infidelity to the Master.
In the fall of 1969 FLF launched a public relations campaign
against the October 15 and November 15 Vietnam Moratoriums. Unification
Church members went full steam into the political operation as
well as stepping up the usual witnessing and teaching of the Divine
Principle. From this perspective my paid job in the office of
Congressman Frank Thompson Jr., democrat from New Jersey, certainly
appears odd. "Thompy" was known as an opponent of the
war and supported Gene McCarthy for President in 1968. While my
"boss" on the Hill was making stronger statements than
ever against the War in Vietnam, after hours I was in the streets
leafleting for the Master in support of it. In the fall of 1969
and the winter of 1970 Salonen scouted the hard-line anti-Communist
groups in D.C. The fruits of his labor were winning the friendship
and support of several influential men, including David Martin,
the late Senator Dodd's foreign affairs assistant(later a member
on the staff of the Senate's Internal Security Committee), Dolph
Droge and Sven Kramer, Nixon's special assistants on Vietnam and
Charles Stephens, an independently wealthy man in his early thirties,
who devoted a good deal of his time to promoting aggressive war
policies through ad hoc groups of his own creation on campuses
throughout the country. In the fall of 1969 and the spring of
1970 I worked increasingly with FLF.
Partisan Political Activity
In March of 1970 Salonen stepped down from the Presidency of
FLF as a result of internecine conflict between himself and W.
Farley Jones(then President of the Unification Church in America).
Salonen was sent to Colorado to cool off and I was made President
of FLF. It was not until a year later that I discovered that my
sudden promotion over the heads of my superiors was a result of
the leadership's conviction that I could "easily be controlled,
and that my clean cut American good looks and the gift of gab
made me an ideal front man.
In May Charles Stephens and I with coaching from David Martin,
formed a political lobby group called "American Youth for
A Just Peace." I called Unification Church members from all
over the country to assist in a lobbying campaign in defense of
Nixon's invasion of Cambodia and against the McGovern-Hatfield
and Cooper-Church bills to limit American involvement. We ran
several full page advertisements in the Washington Star and Washington
Post, defending military aid to Cambodia, signed with my name
as chairman. As a result the South Vietnamese Embassy invited
AYJP members on a VIP tour of Vietnam. Eight Unification Church
members, Stephens and two of his associates and I flew to Vietnam
on August 22, 1970 for a ten day visit crowned by dinner with
South Vietnamese President Thieu in the Presidential Palace in
Saigon. While we were in Saigon, the Cambodian government invited
us to visit Cambodia. We spent five days there. General Lon Nol
gave us an audience.
We appeared on CBS national television evening news. Walter Cronkite
transported the audience at home in the U.S. to our group digging
a fortification ditch around the perimeter of Pnom Phen. Shovel
in hand, I begged for more military aid for Cambodia in its struggle
against communist aggression. The CBS correspondent described
me, I remember, as a spokesman for a group of young Americans
who had come to Southeast Asia to "find the facts."
The South Vietnamese government paid for our round trip air fare
with the explicit understanding that we would use the information
we gathered to fight the Peace Movement on U.S. campuses and to
generate support for the war. We were given royal treatment. At
each stop the red carpet was rolled out. In Cambodia when we disembarked
from the plane there were several thousand people waiting at the
airport to greet us. A double row of 100 school girls was holding
red roses. I felt like Lord Jim.
We left Cambodia and flew to Japan to visit the Japanese Unification
Church and to participate in the World Anti-Communist League's
fourth annual conference held in Kyoto. That was followed by a
mass rally of 25,000 people in Tokyo at the Budokan Sports Palace.
The WACL conference was sponsored by the International Federation
for Victory Over Communism, the political arm of the Japanese
Unification Church. Delegates from 53 nations attended. The American
delegate was Senator Strom Thurmond and the honorary chairman
of the conference was a prominent Japanese industrialist, Ryoichi
Sasakawa.
Meeting the Shogun
Sasakawa was a fascist youth leader in the 30's. The Japanese
Unification Church proudly told us that Sasakawa had helped create
the Japanese Kamikaze program and that he had been instrumental
in the Hitler Tojo pact. Sasakawa was convicted as a class A war
criminal at the end of World War II and spent several years in
jail. In 1975 he was the president of 13 major Japanese corporations,
including the largest ship building company in Japan. He is also
head of all Japanese karate schools. Sasakawa, on a visit to the
Korean Unification Church, told church members that he was "Mr.
Moon's dog."
After the WACL Conference we visited Unification Church centers
in Japan. They were awe-inspiring to all of us. Then there were
approximately 3,000 dedicated young followers who lived in Church
centers for 20 to 100 members all over Japan. Seventy percent
of them were involved in full time fundraising by selling flowers
on street corners 14 hours a day. The rank and file members lived
on a diet of rice and bread crusts. Church centers usually consisted
of two large rooms with several smaller rooms adjacent. The large
rooms served as separate men's and women's sleeping quarters.
Anywhere from 10 to 50 people would sleep on tatami mats on the
floor in one of the larger rooms. The center leader had a room
to himself. The atmosphere in these centers was one of rigid military
discipline and self-denial. All the Japanese martial virtues were
harnassed and focussed on the molding of a group psyche whose
sole object was to exalt Moon.
At The Feet of "The Master"
After 17 days in Japan, 7 of us flew to Korea to meet Moon and
to visit the Korean Unification Church. We were housed in the
dormitory of one of Moon's Anti-communist training centers, inside
the walls of the Unification Church's air rifle factory, about
an hour and a half drive from Seoul. Now after praying in his
name for 16 months I was finally to meet the "Master.".
From our window in the Anti-Communist training dormitory we saw
Moon and his wife approaching across the dry mud field separating
the dormitory and the air rifle factory. I, with the others, ran
out of the building and raced across the muddy yard to greet them.
I saw a dark haired, heavy set man whose receding hairline accentuated
an already ample brow. He was wearing a white peasant tunic and
dark trousers. He looked as he did in his photographs but older
and heavier. His disciplined movements and compact body conveyed
a sense of coiled power. Moon shook hands with each of us, smiling
broadly. I saw, as he turned sideways in front of me, a large
piece of red wax in his right ear. I treasured this excrescence
as a sign of his humanity.
My Mission
During my visit to Korea in October I was given a private audience
with Moon. I was ushered into a lounge adjacent to his private
quarters above the main church building in Seoul. We sat opposite
each other on a plain rug separated by a black lacquer table inlaid
with two finely worked mother of pearl dragons. For an hour he
instructed me on various matters. The only interruption was the
arrival of a messenger, a Korean man in his forties who prostrated
himself at Moon's feet before addressing the "Master."
Moon said to me," You have a great responsibility. It is
your job to initiate the work of winning the academic community
in America to my side." Further he said, " The allegiance
of the scholarly community is a vital key in my plan to restore
the world. Since universities hold the reigns of certification
for all the major professions and since universities are the crucible
in which young Americans form their basic attitudes and life directions,
we must forge a path toward influencing and ultimately controlling
American campuses."
Moon held the Japanese Church up to us as an example of the true
pattern of serving the Messiah. It was his intention to shame
us into greater fervor and zeal, and his tactic was largely successful.
The relative impotence of the American church in comparison with
the militancy, power and organization of the Japanese Unification
Church was a source of humiliation to us all. Moon told us that
he could not come to America until we had significantly increased
our numbers, demonstrated a higher level of persona l sacrifice,
and achieved greater organizational unity. On our return to the
U.S. we brought intimations of the future directions of the movement
in America.
I returned to the U.S. on October 6, 1970, in time for an early
morning press conference with AYJP co-chairman Charles Stephens.
Between October and December Stephens and I spoke to civic groups
in Washington , issued a bi-monthly tabloid to congressmen and
senators, and did all we could to beat the war drum in the nation's
capitol. AYJP was staffed entirely by Unification Church members.
In November of 1970 W. Farley Jones and Neil Salonen returned
from Korea. There they had been "blessed" in a mass
marriage ceremony by Moon. Unification Church doctrine states
that marriage is available only to individuals who have attained
perfection and that marriage by Moon is the instrument through
which fallen man is grafted back onto the tree of life(Moon's
revelation omits no detail and leaves nothing to the imagination.
Its rigorous orthodoxy even prescribes the exact positions for
consummation of the marriage.) On his return to the U.S. W. Farley
Jones was informed that I had exhibited a romantic interest in
a Unification Church woman. Any attachment of this sort not directly
sanctioned by Moon is considered to be a sign of weakness and
a manifestation of "satanic possession."
Guilt by Accusation
Without the benefit of facing my accuser or of defending my actions,
my guilt was established and tacit sentence was passed. For the
time being this condemnation destroyed whatever prestige I had
as an up and coming Church l eader, and it made it difficult for
me to continue as President of FLF. The Unification Church, lacking
a philosophical or sacramental grasp of forgiveness, employs character
assassination and guilt through innuendo as powerful tools in
enforcing obedience. This incident was not a special case. It
is an example of Church policy. Salonen, resurrected from Colorado
and "blessed" by Moon, was now fit to reassume the Presidency
of FLF.
In January of 1971, W. Farley Jones sent me to the Level Two
Training Program as an anti-Communist lecturer. This was the first
in a series of national church training programs conducted in
Washington D.C.
In December of 1971, Moon came to the U.S. to take direct control
of the American Unification Church. All income was collectivized
immediately. Outside jobs were dropped. Membership in he Church
became a full time occupation whose sole material reward was room
and board. At this point Moon established the International One
World Crusade, billed as a Christian revival youth movement. It
was,in fact, a clever maneuver to recruit more troops for the
Unification Church.
Moon assigned Travis Jones to start forming a center at the University
of Maryland campus at College Park. In January of 1972 a number
of us joined Travis in College Park. There we were left to our
own devices. By June we had gained 12 new members, making a total
of 21. Elated by this success and driven by the labor of 15 full
time fund-raisers, we purchased an estate in Upper Marlboro, Maryland.
The previous January we had started a candle factory to raise
money to support ourselves and to further the w ork of the Unification
Church. From early March of 1972 we delivered candles to church
centers up and down the Eastern Seaboard. The churches sold the
candles for a 400% profit.
In August the entire Unification Church began to raise 294,000.00
for the down payment on "Belvedere," an $800,000.00
estate in Tarrytown, N.Y. This money was raised by young people
selling candles and flowers 16 hours a day on a diet of peanut
butter and jelly sandwiches and chicken soup~self-denial for the
Master~. We, in Uppermarlboro working three shifts, 24 hours a
day for 40 days, produced 200,000 candles for the effort. The
down payment was made. Moon stated,"Heaven gave me this house."
Belvedere served as Moon's private residence until the purchase
of a neighboring estate within the year costing $600,000.00
A year later, by March of 1973, we in Upper Marlboro began to
have serious doubts about Moon's claim to be the "Messiah"
and about his autocratic methods. That month, Travis Jones, who
had pioneered the work in Maryland, was arbitrarily relieved of
his responsibilities and sent to Belvedere to be reprogrammed.
I was made One World Crusade Commander of Maryland, i.e., head
of the Church in the state. Travis' reports from New York State
were grim.
Brainwashing: A glimpse into The Promised Land
100 Days Training Program at Tarrytown
The training program at Belvedere was aimed at breaking down
the individual's identity by subjecting him or her to an emotionally
and physically exhausting schedule of repetitive lectures, exercise
and door to door soliciting. Trainees were quartered in large
rooms in army bunks with little or no privacy. Men were strongly
advised to cut their hair short. Mustaches and beards were unthinkable.
The entire scenario was an echo of Marine boot camp. The restructuring
of the trainee's ego was based on Moon's theology that projects
absolute faith in Moon as the essential building block of a "restored"
personality. It attacks the validity of the individual conscience.
It explicitly denies the individual's capacity to make morally
responsible existential decisions. Somewhere along the line in
the theology, love of God is translated into blind obedience to
Moon and his representatives in the hierarchical chain. One is
finally left with submission to Moon as the only answer to fallen
man's condition of moral paralysis.
Kneeling Before the Master
During Travis tour at Belvedere and during my visits there throughout
the spring and summer our doubts about Moon and the Unification
Church were crystallized by a series of macabre demonstrations
of Moon's essentially psychopathic relationship with his followers.
Shortly after Travis' relocation to Belvedere, Moon spoke at a
Sunday church service at National Headquarters at 1611 Upshur
St. in Washington D.C. The entire Maryland group was there. As
One World Crusade Commander of Maryland I was given a coveted
seat on the front row next to Unification Church President Neil
Salonen. During his harangues, Moon hit me several times on the
shoulder. When he finished his speech, he motioned me forward
and asked me to kneel in front of the congregation. I thought
he was going to ask me to confess my sins publicly. As I knelt,
he kicked me in the hind quarters and then demanded of the audience
whether they would follow him if he treated them like this. The
immediate response was a deafening "yes" with clenched
fists raised toward the ceiling.
Travis told me of a similar incident that took place while he
was at Belvedere. In front of the entire training group of 70
young converts Moon hit Young Whi Kim, president of the Korean
Unification Church, across the buttocks with a wooden cane with
such force that the cane snapped in half. At Belvedere Moon also
directly supervised the "War Games" in which One World
Crusade Commanders and State Representatives took part in a massive
variant of tug of war. Two groups of 50 would try to drag each
other bodily across a certain line and back 40 yards to "prison
camp.". Moon stood on the tip of a boulder in the path of
the line. On a signal from Moon the teams would charge across
the line and engage in a no holds barred battle to subdue and
capture their adversaries.
Travis saw one guy with a broken arm, somebody else with a separated
collarbone, and bloody noses were on all sides. Moon conducts
these games between different nationality groups to stimulate
competition and to reinforce a sense of pride in victory and shame
in defeat. I remember a day at Belvedere in May of 1973 during
a leadership conference. Moon had just finished a short speech
and he then asked for general questions. I rose to my feet to
address him. I said, " as a One World Crusade Commander,
I frequently encounter the problem of homosexuality among our
men." I asked him if there was anything we could do to help
these people. He replied, "Tell them that if it really becomes
a problem to cut it off, barbecue it, put it in a shoe box and
send it to me." The audience roared with laughter.
The summer of 1973 we had three centers in Maryland: one in UpperMarlboro,
one in College Park and One in Towson, a suburb of Baltimore.
We had approximately 35 members. In the late summer we began preparation
for Moon's Day of Hope speaking tour that opened in Baltimore
in the first week of October. We plastered the city with billboards.
We flew a plane over the Columbus day parade. We arranged a meeting
for Moon with Sol Orlinsky, president of Baltimore's city council.
We rented the Lyric theater for three days for his speeches. With
the help of two international bus teams composed of Unification
Church members from Japan, England, Germany, France and Holland,
we sold thousands of tickets to his speeches. The evening of October
6 we held a ceremonial dinner at the Baltimore Hilton. Political,
business and social leaders attended the dinner. Telegrams of
encouragement and support were received and read at the dinner
from Cardinal Shehan and from Theodore Roosevelt McKeldin, former
Mayor of Baltimore and former governor of the State of Maryland
respectively. All our fanfare was of little avail. Not more than
350 people attended Moon's lectures at the Lyric Theater.
Imperial Taster for The Royal Consort
At the dinner I and ranking members of the palace guard were
armed with concealed Billy Clubs to protect Mr. Moon. I was seated
at the head table to the left of Mrs. Moon. I was instructed to
switch all my servings of food with hers. In addition to my other
titles, I had at last been raised to the exalted position of imperial
taster for the royal consort.
Meanwhile Travis Jones had been sent to Louisiana to be the One
World Crusade Commander there and to prepare for the Dayof Hope
in New Orleans. A group of us from Uppermarlboro visited Travis
in New Orleans shortly after Moon's appearances. Jones was distraught
by the direction of events in the church. We concurred in his
disillusionment.
We returned to Upper Marlboro at the end of November to find
"Doctor," Joseph Sheftick, an unlicensed chiropractor,
whose academic title was awarded to him by Moon, had been sent
to Uppermarlboro to diagnose the situation and to see if an adjustment
was needed. Sheftick felt that the prognosis was good, provided
that the four leaders at Upper Marlboro were removed. He assured
Moon that the rank and file would remain faithful.
In the days that followed, 26 Church members of our group in
Maryland repudiated Moon and his teachings. In mid December, Moon's
full page newspaper advertisements appeared in the New York Times
and other major papers exhorting the American people to forgive
President Nixon before an indictment had been issued or guilt
established. That clinched our decision to leave the Church. Early
in the fall Moon had rejected the idea of publicly supporting
President Nixon; but, during a two week visit to Japan and Korea
he had second thoughts. On his return to the U.S. he publicly
announced that God had instructed him to forgive President Nixon.
Shades of The Grand Inquisitor
Forgiveness Through The Assumption of Power
We wrote Moon a letter explaining why we could no longer be a
part of his church. Moon responded to us through Colonel Bo Hi
Pak, President of the Korean Cultural and Freedom Foundation.
He invited me and other leaders in Maryland to come to Belvedere
for a vacation to be followed by retraining, after which we were
to be awarded "positions of greater power and authority."
We refused. It was an extremely difficult time for all of us.
Some returned to school, some to their families. Approximately
12 who left with us are today living and working with a pacifist
Christian Community.
It was the unanimous decision of all three centers to sell all
real estate and to liquidate all assets and to give the proceeds
to bona fide Christian Charities. Unfortunately we were unable
to do this, because the Unification Church brought suite against
us. They claimed that we had stolen the land and properties from
them. In a pre trial hearing the judge threw the case out of court.
He said that he seemed to remember something in the Bible prohibitting
Christians from suing one another or anyone else, for that matter.
Mr. Moon is apparently unswayed by this tradition for law suites
seem to figure prominently in his plan to restore the world.
It is now 27 years since I left the Unification Church. Time
and distance have allowed me the opportunity of scrutinizing and
reflecting on my time with Moon. Literature and mythology provide
the parameters within which I attempt to assimilate and resolve
the grotesque variables of this dark Odyssey. In literature and
myth I find the type of myself in the young innocent, who is proud,
blind, self-righteous and idealistic. I also find the type of
Moon, the zealous Promethean whose paranoid delusions of grandeur
become the altar upon which thousands of souls are sacrificially
slaughtered along the road to Xanadu.
20th Century Protestantism's Captain Ahab
Often I think of my years in service to Moon as an example, an
instance of Ishmael's journey with Captain Ahab on board the Pequod
in search of the White Whale. To me, Moon is twentieth century
Protestantism's Captain Ahab, a titan whose flailing hubris filled
fists would have us take vengeance in our own hands and send us
all off after the white whale. In mythology, this experience lends
itself to analogies with the Hero's journey into the Underworld,
where he must overcome or outwit the forces of darkness to earn
the right to reenter the world of light.
Unification Church doctrine states that those who follow Moon
are the chosen. In that light they see themselves not so much
as the servants of mankind, but rather as the architects of history.
Men who have been called out of the anonymous masses to assist
the messiah in laying the groundwork for the millennium. They
believe that as the chosen they are above the law. Like Raskolnikov
in Dostoievski's Crime and Punishment, they have arrived at the
humbling and exalting conclusion that they are more valuable to
God, to history and to the future than other people.
History is teeming with people whose desire for reform has led
them to accept the superman philosophy of men like Hitler and
Moon. The fruits of this variety of psychological and political
titanism are always catastrophic. Moon is an unfortunate and formidable
by product of the West's inability to live within its Judeo-Christian
traditions.
In the name of the Second Coming and using the authority of Christian
apocalyptic prophecy, Moon promises to restore the world to a
state of peace and harmony essentially through the use of power.
Jesus repudiated the use of force. Moon, who claims to fulfill
the promises of Christianity, is resurrecting divine kingship
on an Egyptian scale. He preaches genetic selection, and he practices
sympathetic magic.
Up From The Abyss
The daylight of this world to which I have returned after my
sojourn in the messianic abyss is not always clear or warm, but
I rejoice in it, because I know that whatever path I take, my
conscience will never be the prisoner or possession of another
man.
The End