
Beginning in 1956
In
1956, just after being released from Seodae Mun Prison, I went to stay at the
Gabsa Buddhist temple,1 where I did research. I thought to myself, from
now, Japan will become important. She is currently weak and insignificant, but
the time will come when Japan will become important. We must stop regarding her
as our enemy. With that in mind, for the purpose of saving Korea, I prepared to
make a connection with Japan and to secretly send someone there.
That
the Soviet Union and Communist China were supporting North Korea under Kim
Il-sung's rule was certain. In order to break through in the work to save South
Korea, I felt we had to make inroads into Japan. Although Japan had been our
enemy, I decided to love Japan more than anyone else did and that my love would
induce Japan to establish a condition on which God's will could flourish in
Asia. Otherwise, we would not be able to find an object nation for the subject
nation.
If
our objectives are on a global level, we are responsible for our neighbor Japan
and for other countries as well. That is why we must send missionaries to the
world even if it means we are sending them down a path of suffering. If we have
abundant food and live comfortably, we cannot fulfill our responsibility. We
must take responsibility in difficulties.
Secretly sending a missionary overseas
During
a visit to the same temple in 1958, I called a young man, Bong-choon Choi2, and
told him, "You must smuggle yourself into Japan for the sake of that
nation. A man must be prepared to die in order to accomplish his mission."
I met him on the mountain behind the temple and instructed him to go to Japan
as a missionary 3, I strengthened his resolve by saying, "You should not
return before you die. The way of God's will is that strict."
He
stowed away on a trader's boat bound for Japan. I told him, "I will pray
for you. I'll devote my heart to you without sleeping until you arrive safely
in Japan." I added that I didn't want to see him again until he had
accomplished his mission.
I
thought to myself, "Wait for ten years." I knew entering Japan was
illegal4, but I was certain that the time would come when we could freely
travel to other Asian countries.... I was sure the day would come when history
would justify what we were doing, and I went ahead with firm resolve.
Unification Church members were going hungry then. In those days, when church
members sold pictures and barely made enough to live on from day to day, I
borrowed 1.5 million won to send Bong-Choon Choi to Japan.
Pioneer missionary work in Japan
I
told Bong-Choon Choi, "If you are put in prison, you must escape for three
days or a week and bring three people to join us!" The Unification Church
of Japan began from those words. I can't forget the time I called Choi to the
mountain behind a Buddhist temple in South Chung Cheong Province and gave him
those instructions in the shade of a pine tree.
Yet
as soon as he went to Japan5, he was arrested.... On the way to Shimonoseki, he
tried to jump off the train, but because the train was going too fast and there
were many tunnels, he could not. At Shimonoseki, he was put into a repatriation
center. He was waiting to be deported. If he had been sent back, all that we
had planned would have collapsed.
A
week from being deported, he thought of a way out. He began to fast. He fasted
for a week, ten days, and continued further, eating only salt. As a result, he
became sick with a fever, and he was taken to a hospital. While in the
hospital, where security was lighter, he escaped.
Thus,
in 1958, we began pioneer missionary work, in Japan. In those days, Korea was
governed by the Liberal Party, which strongly opposed normalizing diplomatic
relations with Japan. Nevertheless, under those circumstances, we educated the
Unification Church members for the long term.
In
Japan, how could we take the subject position and educate the Japanese people,
rather than being criticized? I thought that sending a missionary was the only
way to open the road to Korea being able to survive in the future. The young
man who went as a missionary to Japan became a fugitive there, but he pioneered
Japan for the Unification Church.
Passing beyond national limits
Even
amid the most serious persecution6, my prayers and concern were not directed
toward Korea. I did my very best to send missionaries to Japan and to the U.S.,
where no one in those days even thought of sending missionaries. Under those
circumstances, I was determined to send someone to plant the seed of the Divine
Principle there. Day and night, I spared no effort to accomplish that goal.
They
tried to finish me off during the Liberal Party administration7, under which I
was incarcerated in Seodae Mun Prison. Yet I could avail myself of their help
when I sent missionaries to America. After I was released from prison, I
persuaded the cabinet members who had opposed me to issue passports for our
missionaries. If I had not done so, we would most assuredly not have been able to
prepare the foundation for victory that we have today.
When
I fight in the free world, the democratic world, or with the U.S., I do not
fight unfairly or deceitfully. I fight openly and squarely. I fight openly. If
you want to move forward in that fight you must teach what is necessary for
that nation. If you make your move without doing so, you will perish. For that
reason, we need a foundation. Since 1950, we had prepared a foundation on which
we later rose to go out to the world. We prepared everything in advance.
In
doing my global work, I do not do it based on my own thinking as I go along. I
prepare for several years in advance, according to plan. It is not easy to do
something in a world where people cannot understand me and do not cooperate
with me.
The early mission to pioneer America
Where
was Korea to go if we did not establish a foundation in the United States,
quickly forming that protective wall?
Nevertheless,
everyone opposed the idea. So, I gave strategic instructions, saying,
"Korea will perish if we do not quickly save the huge nation of
America." I then sent three missionaries to the east and west coasts of
that country.
When
Miss Young-Oon Kim went to the United States8, she did not just simply start
witnessing. She sought out those who could communicate with the spirit world
and witnessed to them by saying, "Please pray to find out what this book
is about." Don't you think that's a high-level witnessing method? She told
the spiritualists, "Pray to find out who I am." When the
spiritualists prayed, a swift order came down to them. They were taught through
revelation: "When that person opens the door and comes in, stand up
straight and greet her with a deep bow. She has no money, so give her
money." This is how our Unification Church began in the United States.
Preparing a financial base
We
are participating across the nation in the collection of stamps9. The selling
price of a stamp that you peel off will be only a few cents. It requires
dedicated effort to pay attention to that one stamp and peel it off. We can say
it is a noble undertaking. Those who receive awards for collecting stamps are
usually young people. I have heard that many junior high school students and
high school students collect stamps.
One
day I told the members that they must all write letters three times a month. If
you use forty stamps worth one won instead of one forty-won stamp on those
letters, I said, you will be able to support the business department many times
more. If you write three letters a month, you will spend a hundred and twenty
won. Thus, even by using stamps that had little value, it had a good effect.
As
such, our seemingly insignificant activities produced a significant profit for
us throughout the nation. Paying attention to detail is an important principle
that all Unification Church members should practice, so I hope all of you will
do that. Until now, collecting stamps has contributed a great deal to our
witnessing activities.
The membership structure
If
three teams get together and form a group, one group of thirty-six people will
represent the number thirty-six. This symbolizes the twelve children of Jacob,
the twelve tribes of Moses and the twelve apostles of Jesus. Thirty-six
symbolizes all the historic representatives for the past six thousand years.
Thirty-six
men and women united is seventy-two people. That is why Jesus had seventy
disciples, seventy elders centered on Moses, and Jacob had seventy family
members. If Jesus, Jesus' bride-to-be and those seventy disciples had united,
the number involved would have become seventy-two. Today, we have the mission
to match those numbers in heaven and on earth. We must also go over that ridge.
God
has directed that our members be trained very strictly this year [1958]. This
year has to be a year of training, a year of hardships. It must be the year
that we spiritually overcome any suffering. We have to also quickly witness to
at least twelve people whose hearts match our own. Today is January 3. You must
make a strong resolution. I will change your trinities every three months. No
matter whom you may be with, you must be able to make unity with them.
When
you see your trinity partners, you ought to think, "Given that humanity
has passed through six thousand years of providential history, why have this
person and I met and what kind of relationship are we in?" You must feel
that it is a historic, predetermined union. In that way, three people will
unite and then ten people will unite and then thirty-six and seventy must all
unite.
Prayers in significant places
(1958-1959)
I
went to many scenic places in Korea to pray. I often prayed, "I didn't
come here to trouble you. I came to bless you. I came here because I discovered
that you have been longing for a true master. I will give you my love." I
am an unusual person, aren't I?
I
did not visit such beautiful places for sightseeing. I prayed, shedding tears.
I prayed a lot. I prayed even when I went to Mt. Sorak and Mt. Sokri10. Many
people were there, but had anyone come with God's true heart, the heart that
those places were waiting for? I prayed, "I will be the first person to
represent history."
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