Hyun Jin Moon
CARP Meeting
March 31, 2000
Columbia Road Church, Washington, D.C.
Unofficial Notes by Claude Aubert
At 1:15
pm the meeting with Hyun Jin Moon (Hyun Jin Moon)
started in the main hall of the Columbia church. Hyun
Jin Moon had a microphone attached to his tie, and he
was seated on a chair on the floor level of the church,
facing a group of about 70-90 CARP leaders and CARP
alumni (AKA CARP ghosts). Next to HJN, behind another
microphone, stood Howard Self, the moderator of the
discussion. Two more microphones were set up in the
aisles of the church to amplify the comments of the
participants.
Howard
Self opened the session and explained that Hyun Jin Moon
would like to first listen to comments from CARP members
about their experiences from the past. Howard asked the
participants to "please share what you felt worked, and
what you think will work in the area of witnessing" and
he explained that those who had a comment should form a
line behind the two microphones located in the aisles.
Before
the first speaker could make his comment, Hyun Jin Moon
got up and explained that he wanted CARP to return to a
more evangelical focus. He asked people to not just give
personal testimonies from the past, but structure their
comments in a way that they could be applied to the
organization of World CARP. The purpose of this meeting
was to find out what kind of witnessing strategies
worked in the past, and what could work in the future.
The
first person to offer a comment was David Harvey, who
talked about the importance of energizing campus
activities with the help of a traveling troupe, inviting
guest speakers for campus events, having a campus
newspaper and serving the campus community. Hyun Jin
Moon interrupted him several times to ask questions and
make comments, something that he kept doing throughout
the rest of the meeting.
Dan
Fefferman, national CARP president under Tiger Park from
1980-82, talked about the World Student Times newspaper,
which at one point had a weekly print run of 50,000
copies and was distributed on 50 campuses. He reminded
us that universities, as other institutions, have a long
memory and remember mistakes we made in the past. If as
a result of our witnessing efforts on campus students
drop their studies, universities will hold that against
us for a long time. A short term witnessing success
comes at the price of having greater difficulties to
create a successful student movement in the long term.
Dan described the ideal situation of a center where most
of the members were students enrolled in their studies,
which naturally attracted other students to come over to
the center. He expressed his hope that CARP can be a
real student movement that serves the community and
encourages students to finish their studies.
George
Kazakis emphasized the importance of consistency in
campus witnessing. He pointed out that campaign style
witnessing brings short-term results while service
projects bring long term results. He regretted that many
times we returned to street witnessing when results did
not come right away instead of persevering on campus. He
compared the differences between the two strategies to
the differences between hunting and farming.
The
description of the commentaries of these first three
speakers will give you an idea of the type of comments
that were made at this meeting. About 20 speakers got a
chance to make their points, and it would be too much to
list all of them. (I couldn't do it even if I wanted to,
since I missed some when I had to leave the meeting
twice to move my car to avoid getting a ticket in the
2-hours parking zone.) Instead I want to focus now more
on Hyun Jin Moon's comments.
Over
the period of the 4-hour meeting HJN reminded us at
least half a dozen times that the purpose of this
meeting was to focus on witnessing strategies. He
explained that CARP had a public mission, that we can
never forget. "CARP will return to its evangelical roots
and bring new members. CARP should be the evangelical
component of the Unification movement." Hyun Jin Moon
made it clear that he didn't think that CARP was
responsible for the education of the 2nd generation. He
said, this should happen in local congregations. "CARP
cannot have too many different goals to focus on, and it
cannot do everything."
When
Kitty Wojcik suggested that we hire a marketing firm to
do the witnessing for us, and instead use our manpower
to staff workshops for the new recruits, Hyun Jin Moon
seemed to get excited. He got on his feet and walked
over to the microphone where Kitty was standing and
asked her: "Do you want to initiate this program?" He
went on to explain that he didn't have the resources to
finance such strategies, and that the CARP alumni should
take ownership of such programs. "Put your money where
your mouth is" Hyun Jin Moon said, and he used this
phrase many times more throughout the meeting.
The
first comment that seemed to meet Hyun Jin Moon's
expectations was Tony's description of the street
witnessing campaign that took place in San Francisco in
the 80ies. Tony provided lots of factual details, down
to the number of witnessers involved and witnessing
tools used. Hyun Jin Moon liked the this style of
reporting, but he seemed somewhat disappointed when he
heard that the number of people that joined through this
campaign was about 200-300 over a period of about 5
years.
At the
end of the sharing HJN again explained that the purpose
of this meeting was to discuss witnessing models and
learn about the pros and cons of different strategies.
He told the alumni to take ownership for social
programs. "Do it yourself and then offer it." He said
that "my efforts will not be spent in America, but Korea
and Japan where there is a strong CARP foundation. The
sad reality is that CARP in America needs to be
supported by other countries."
"Our
biggest problem is our small size and our
welfare-mentality. We don't have ownership anymore. You
might believe in TP, but not in what they created. (...)
If anything is going to happen, it's going to happen in
CARP. I need committed people to make it happen. If
American members don't want to take responsibility, we
will find somebody else. (...) If you are willing to
make that kind of commitment today, I have hope for the
future."