Sun Myung Moon was born on
January 6, 1920 (according to the lunar calendar), at 2221
Sangsa-ri, Deogunmyun, Jeongju-gun, North Pyongan Province
in northern Korea, to Mr. Kyung-yoo Moon and Mrs. Kyung-gye
Kim Moon, their second son among eight children. The
villagers of Sangsa-ri, a small rural village eight
kilometers from the sea, enjoyed a high quality of life and
congenial relationships. Since almost all were of the Moon
clan, the village was often called "Moon village." Sun Myung
Moon's family was quite well-to-do during his grandparents'
generation. His great uncle, Yoon-kook Moon - the younger
brother of his grandfather - was a Christian minister who
had dedicated himself to the movement for Korean
independence. In cooperation with his older brother, he
secretly donated a large proportion of the family wealth for
the financial support of that cause.
What
money remained was just enough to maintain the livelihood of
the family during Reverend Moon's childhood. Despite that,
travelers continued to visit the family home, as the Moon
clan was renowned for its hospitality and generosity.
During his early childhood,
Sun Myung Moon's family converted to Presbyterianism at a
time when the Christian faith was expanding rapidly in
Korea. Though young, Sun Myung Moon was attracted by a life
of prayer and religious devotion. Observing the anguish of
his countrymen under forced colonial domination, he agonized
and prayed at length over the reasons for human suffering.
Through his relationship with God he sought to understand
the tragedy of human history and how, if at all, change
could come. Seriously contemplating the future of his people
and all humankind, he entreated God as to how he could
devote his life to alleviating human suffering. He
eventually received answers to his questions.
On
Easter day, 1935 (April 17), when Sun Myung Moon was just
fifteen years old, Jesus Christ suddenly appeared to him as
he prayed on Mt. Myodu near his village. Jesus solemnly
entreated him to accept a mission to work for the salvation
of humanity. Reverend Moon thus committed himself to walking
the path of God's providence and the realization of God's
will.
It
was not until the age of eighteen that Reverend Moon, having
attended a traditional Confucian school as well as receiving
a general education, left his hometown to enroll in the
electrical studies department of Kyungsung commercial school
in Seoul. While earning a living and cooking for himself, he
kept a faithful religious life as a Sunday school teacher at
the Myung Su Dae Church of Jesus. In 1941, at the age of
twenty-one, he graduated from Kyungsung commercial school
and went to Japan to further his studies. On leaving for
Japan he prayed to God with determination that although he
would now go to Tokyo to study, on his return he would
reclaim and re-establish his nation.
Sun
Myung Moon enrolled in the department of electrical
engineering at the industrial college affiliated with Waseda
University. While continuing his studies he participated in
the movement opposing the Japanese annexation of Korea, in
communication with those working for the provisional Korean
government in Shanghai. He further set up a secret society
with his friends to foster solidarity among his compatriots.
His whereabouts and activities
were continually monitored and he had to be constantly
alert. Sometimes he would be arrested and taken to the
police station. Reverend Moon was among those who instigated
a Korean students' demonstration against the Japanese policy
of conscripting them into their army.
II. Detailed Account
By Michael Breen
Sun Myung
Moon was born in the winter of 1920 in the straw thatched
home of a farming family in north-west Korea. The house was
one of a line of fifteen which made up a tiny village or ri
known as both Sangsa-ri and Dok heung-ri. No one knew which
was the official name, although 'Sangsa-ri' was more
commonly used. Unofficially, however, the locals called it
'Moon Village' because ten of the households were of the
Moon clan, seven of them close relatives.
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Remains of the Moon home in Sangsa-ri in present
day north Korea (HSA-UWC, Seoul)
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A few miles
to the west was Jeongju, a town of just under ten thousand
inhabitants, and a stop on the country's main railway, which
carried travelers and freight north to the Manchurian border
and south to the capital, Seoul, and on, down the length of
the peninsula, to the southern port city, Pusan. Jeongju
county sloped gently down from the mountains and spread over
five hundred and fifty square miles of fertile coastal land.
It was the leading rice producing county of North Pyong-an
Province and also had a thriving fishing industry. The
plains were rich in peat, and in the mountains there was
gold.
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Market day in Jeongju, the town near Moon's
village. |
The county
town and its small, surrounding villages had their share of
prominent sons. During the Yi dynasty, before the Japanese
annexed the country in 1910, more students from Jeongju
county passed the prestigious higher civil service exam than
from any other area of Korea, including Seoul. Two prominent
literary figures of this century, the poet Kim So wol and
the writer Lee Kwang su, were locals.
The
families in 'Moon Village' and neighboring Morum Village
farmed the land, growing rice, millet, corn, beans, cabbages
and radishes. At least half rented their fields,
surrendering half their produce as payment to the
landowners. The best quality rice was not for the eating, at
least not at local tables. After the Japanese took over, it
was taken to Jeongju, where there was a market every five
days, processed into brown rice and sent to Japan. The
villagers mostly ate millet in place of rice, with corn,
beans and pickled cabbage and radish. They kept chickens for
their eggs, and ate beef, pork or chicken on special
occasions usually birthdays. It was a difficult life, but
nobody starved.
Other
villages nearby also consisted almost entirely of clans. One
cluster of two hundred households was known as the Lower
Chun Village. Another settlement consisted of fifteen Chun
families. Further down the road were two Cho villages.
Sangsa-ri was a nondescript village with no particular
meaning, l in contrast to other more
distinguished sounding places nearby like
'Knowing-the-Tao-Village' and 'Giving-Pure-Water-Village.'
One of the
Cho villages was a yangban, or upper class,
settlement. A yangban person, whose claim to
superiority rested with his forbears' success in having once
passed the civil service examination in the days before
Japanese rule, rarely worked with his hands. To do so was
beneath his dignity. He often preferred to live in abject
poverty and appear, at least, to concern himself with moral
self cultivation. Commoners were supposed to stoop in a
gesture of respect when they walked by yangban
individuals, or even their villages.
The Moons
of Sangsa-ri were commoners, descended from a clan which
traces its origins to the fifth century and one Moon Da-song,
who lived in Nampyong near the south Korean city of Kwangju.
2 The best known ancestor is Moon Ik-jum who,
according to the standard school history texts in south
Korea, was the person who introduced cotton to Korea. He was
the secretary to a Koryo dynasty diplomat, and in 1363
smuggled the first cotton seeds across the Chinese border
inside his writing brushes. His father in law planted the
seeds and built a gin and spinning wheel to make the cotton,
which became the standard material for clothing, replacing
the rough hemp which Koreans had used until then. Sun Myung
Moon's family is descended from Ik-jum's third son, who
moved to the north west to take up a government post in the
late fourteenth century.
Aside from
the record of the names of the male ancestors in the clan
book, little else is known about Sun Myung's forbears until
the mid 1880s when they settled in Sangsa-ri. Sun Myung and
his cousins were told that their great grandfather, Jong-ul,
was noted for his kindness. He was known as 'Sun ok', which
means 'virtuous jewel' 3 It was said that, in
Jong-ul's time, the Moons did not have to take their rice to
market as other farmers did. Apparently they gave such
generous measures that customers would come to them. They
made less money but they earned a good reputation, so much
so that their children were high on the matchmakers' lists
of marriage candidates. Beggars were also well treated at
Moon Jong-ul's house. One poor woman used to go round the
county selling dried fish which she carried in a basket on
her head. Jong-ul used to give her rice for nothing.
Villagers remember hearing a story that Jong-ul once bought
a duck and set it free on the way home from market.
"If I
hadn't bought it and set it free, someone would have eaten
it," he is said to have remarked. 4 It was common
in old Korea for people to buy birds, fish, and even
turtles, and set them free in the hope that the kindness
would be repaid. The point of this anecdote to Koreans is
not that Jong-ul was nice to animals, but that he sought
good fortune for his family.
An even
more significant act, at least as far as his descendants are
concerned, was the construction of an ancestral shrine and
burial ground. He sold a two acre plot, despite the family's
relative poverty, to buy the ground. From the viewpoint of
Confucian ethics, such an exemplary act of filial piety
ensured that his lineage would be blessed.
When
Jong-ul died in 1918, Chi kook, the eldest of his three
sons, took over as head of the family, assuming
responsibility for the Confucian ancestral observances. Chi
kook appears to have been, above all, a man of intuition He
was the first to recognize that his second grandson, Sun
Myung, was special, and instructed the family to support his
education, an important decision in a country where most
children did not receive even primary schooling. 5
Sun Myung's cousins still recall the judgments grandfather
passed about him. "He will either be very great or very
evil, " he said when word came in the 1940s that the
Communist authorities had thrown Sun Myung in prison.
Grandfather
Chi kook said that the family should not join the exodus
northward to Manchuria to escape Japanese oppression during
the twenties and thirties. "In the future, America and Japan
will fight," he predicted, citing the ancient Korean book of
prophecy, the Chung-gam-nok, 6 he said the
family should move south, either to the mountains of Kang
won Province, or to Mount Gye Ryong in South Chungchong
Province, which is still considered by some religious sects
to be the spiritual capital of Korea. His youngest brother
and the younger men of the family took his advice, as we
shall see, but Chi kook stayed put. He was still alive, in
his eighties, when the Communists took over north Korea and
the border was sealed.
In their
old age, Chi kook and his wife lived with their eldest son,
Kyung Yoo. The house was built in four sections around a
court yard. 7 There were rooms for grandparents,
parents, the eldest son and his family, and two for the
children. In addition, of course, there was a kitchen,
toilet, store rooms and a small barn for the farm animals.
Kyung yoo was responsible for the sa-dang, the
special room where the names of the ancestors were written
and where the Confucian ceremonies were performed. Kyung
Yoo's brother, Kyung Bok, and his cousin, Kyung Chun, were
his next door neighbors. 8
Kyung yoo,
who was Sun Myung's father, was a gentle, round faced man.
Although a farmer, he had received some schooling and was
well versed in the Confucian classics. He was fond of the
sayings of sages. The Moon cousins say they never heard him
say a cross word to anyone in his life, not even to his own
children Korean fathers in Kyung Yoo's day usually left
child rearing and family matters to their wives, and became
involved only in major decisions about marriage, education
and employment, particularly if they concerned the eldest
son. Fathers tended to live on the periphery of family life,
drinking with friends and worrying alone about the farm and
the future. But Kyung yoo was more devoted to his family
than most. He did not smoke or drink. He was kind to the
beggars who came round and even invited them to rest in his
home. 9 Rev. Sun Myung Moon referred to this
himself in an address to Unificationists:
"My own
family had this kind of tradition They never let anybody
leave our home with an empty stomach. Our home used to be
like a beggars' gathering place: all the poorest people of
the vicinity knew they would be well treated, so they came
to our home. Not one was mistreated. My mother served our
grandparents and she also served the passing beggars. She
would feed them whenever they came by. This was a heavy
physical ordeal for my mother on one occasion, she did not
feed a beggar, so my father took his own meal and gave it to
him. So my mother had to feed the beggars, otherwise my
father would be hungry. 10 While Sun Myung's
father was somewhat scholarly and measured in his actions,
his mother acted with spontaneity. "My mother intuitively
decided what was good, while my father waited and reasoned
everything out slowly before making decisions," he once
said. So they were always in some conflict over decisions.
11
In both
character and appearance, Sun Myung took more after his
mother than his father. A tall, handsome woman, Kim Kyung
Gye was born in a nearby village in 1888, 12 one
of twelve children. 13 She joined the Moon
household in a marriage arranged between the two families
around 1905, when the Russians and Japanese were at war over
Korea and Manchuria. That she was sixteen and her husband
only twelve when they married was not unusual. In fact, it
was typical. In those days it was not uncommon to see wives
waiting outside school to take their young husbands home
after class.
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Kim Kyung-gye, Moon's mother (HSA-UWC, Seoul)
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Of her
twelve children, eight survived. Two daughters died of
illness before Sun Myung Moon was born. In the absence of
modern medicine there was always worry about disease. During
her sixth pregnancy, the influenza epidemic of 1918, which
took some twenty million lives around the world, struck
eighty per cent of the population of north-west Korea,
killing many. When she was carrying Sun Myung, there was an
outbreak of cholera, and a poor harvest due to drought, to
add to her fears
Several
months before Sun Myung's birth, the fortune teller, 'Pak
the Blindman', who lived in the next village, had predicted
that 'a great man' would be born in the Moon clan. The local
shaman, who went by the unusual and resounding name of Dong
bang Chang bong, concurred.' 14 The seven Moon
households, which were in a permanent baby boom, did not
know which pregnant mother was being referred to and did not
argue the point. Hope was scarce and the soothsayers, who
tapped a mysterious and feared world, were appreciated for
the encouragement they provided. For his mother, a prophecy
that a baby would survive would have been comfort enough.
The
villagers were accustomed to signs and prophecies. Early one
morning in the Moon Village, one of the women noticed a gold
colored crane in the trees near her house. The next day it
appeared again. No one saw where it nested. In fact, it may
not have been a real bird at all. Moon's cousin, Yong gi,
describes it as a real bird, while his brother, Yong sun,
says it was "a phenomenon" which their mother "saw". They
remember being told that every day for three years, it flew
off eastward and appeared the next morning. In early 1919 it
stopped coming. Villagers took it as a sign, stirring within
them a sense that they were not forgotten by God.
Whether it
was real or imagined, the unusual bird may have especially
inspired Grandfather Chi kook's youngest brother, Yoon kook,
who was the local Presbyterian minister, and one of his
elders, Lee Myong Nyong. Both men were fervently opposed to
Japan's colonial subjugation of Korea and longed for their
country's freedom. They were typical of the religious
activists who were to assume the mantle of moral leadership,
lost by the emperor and the nobility after they signed away
the country, without a struggle, to Japan.
Moon Yoon
kook, the minister, had been a school teacher when he
converted to Christianity in 1910, the year Korea became a
Japanese colony and was renamed Chosen. In 1918, at the age
of forty, he graduated from the Union Theological Seminary
in the city of Pyongyang, and became the pastor of three
churches, the Dok heung Presbyterian Church in Morum village
and the nearby Dosung and Yunbong churches. Elder Lee Myong
Nyong was the wealthiest man in Morum village, and was to
become one of the country's best known nationalist figures.
For the
Japanese authorities, the Christian churches presented a
looming threat. The churches were the only independent
organizations left in the country after the Japanese
takeover, and believers became imbued with the foreign ideas
of liberty and personal freedoms introduced by western
missionaries. The inevitable clash came in l911, when a
hundred and five people were tried on a trumped up charge of
plotting to assassinate the Japanese Governor general.
Ninety eight of the defendants were Christian, half of them
from the town of Jeongju. The incident became known as the
Conspiracy Case, and it singled out the north west as a
strong center of Christian resistance.
On March
first, 1919, Christian, Buddhist and Chondo-kyo 15
leaders took the authorities by complete surprise by
declaring Korea's independence. The thirty three signatories
of the Independence Declaration, who included Elder Lee
Myong Nyong, were immediately arrested, but in the weeks
that followed, over two million Koreans from all social
strata backed their call in hundreds of demonstrations
throughout the country. It was the greatest mass movement in
Korean history.
The
Japanese responded to it with savagery. According to
nationalist figures, seven thousand, five hundred Koreans
were killed, and fifty thousand arrested. "In Tyungju (Jeongju)
people were shot down and run through with bayonets like
pigs," the Korean Independent newspaper reported. The pastor
of the Presbyterian church in the town was "beaten almost to
a jelly and his church burned, according to a missionary
report. Rev Moon Yoon kook led a rally of ten thousand at
the Osan Academy, according to a handwritten life story
discovered years after his death. The school was ransacked
by police and set on fire.
The
national uprising was crushed. It had neither sapped
Japanese morale nor won anything more than sympathy from the
Christian nations. But despite this political failure,
something had changed. Seventeen million oppressed Koreans,
dulled by a strict, centuries old caste system, bullied
throughout their history by stronger powers, and now
deprived of their nation, had struck out with a single
voice. Korea had rediscovered its soul. 16
Rev. Moon
Yoon kook was arrested, tortured and sentenced to two years
in prison. on his release, he returned to the village and
resumed preaching. His passion for Korea's independence
burned more strongly than before, and would continue to get
him into trouble with the Japanese authorities. In the
aftermath of the uprising, independence activists had split,
some turning to guerrilla activity and some to the new ideas
of the Russian, Chinese, and Japanese Communist parties.
Yoon kook threw his lot in with the provisional government
set up in April, 1919, by nationalist exiles in Shanghai,
China.
The exiled
politicians badly needed funds. Yoon kook felt the family
should give everything it had to support the independence
cause, but knew he would not be able to convince them. He
decided to trick them into making a donation. He persuaded
his eldest brother, Grandfather Chi kook, to sell the family
land, saying they should invest the money in a coal mine in
Kang won Province. Chi kook agreed, much to the disgust of
his daughter in law, Sun Myung's mother. She secretly put
some of her own money down on some land near her family's
village a few miles away. Sure enough, Yoon kook's alleged
mine never came through and the family fortune, seventy
thousand Won, a considerable sum, was lost. 17
Sun Myung Moon's mother sold her new land and the family was
able to buy three plots, about six acres, near the house.
She had saved them from destitution. As a result of this
incident, she would always look back on the strange golden
crane as a harbinger of misfortune. Yoon kook, once the
respected Presbyterian pastor, was now no longer trusted by
the family. "He was always looked upon as a fool," one of
his relatives remembered. Under constant police
surveillance, he resigned from his three churches and, in
1928, left the village to hide from the authorities,
returning occasionally to see his wife and three children.
It was not
until 1965 that the truth of Yoon kook's story came out and
he was vindicated. The Moon cousins in south Korea
discovered that their great uncle Yoon kook had in fact
escaped to the south before the outbreak of the Korean War
in 1950, and died in a remote village, a penniless
calligraphy teacher, in 1959. He left behind a handwritten
account of his life from which these incidents are taken.
18 In his testimony, the old Christian
independence fighter describes how he found himself up
against a new enemy:
"I was
separated from my wife, my children and my relatives. With
tears in my eyes, I walked toward the South and pledged to
God: 'I am separated from my elderly wife and my young son.
I pray to you, and will follow the clouds to the South. I
will endure and will work for democracy in this country.
Even if they kill me, I will never follow the Communists in
north Korea.' After a long journey across mountains and
rivers, I finally arrived at my cousin's house."
The family
fool became the family hero. The Moons petitioned the Seoul
government to have Yoon kook recognized for his contribution
to the independence movement. Government investigators were
able to substantiate all the main elements of Yoon kook's
story, except for the donation to the provisional
government, which did not record and issue receipts for such
gifts. Yoon kook was designated a Special Patriot, and is
now buried in the Unification Church Cemetery in Paju, near
the border with north Korea.
Sun Myung
Moon was born, halfway through his great uncle Yoon kook's
prison term, on February 25, 1920, which in that year was
January 6 according to the lunar calendar by which Koreans
record their birthday 19 He was named Yong Myung.
He was to change his name to Sun Myung in the 1950s after
his escape to the south during the Korean War. 20
That first summer, his mother nursed him and laid him on the
floor, fanning him and watching his growth as the weeks went
by. In the winter, he sat strapped to her back, wrapped in
quilted cotton, quietly taking in the wider world. By the
time he was taking his first steps, his mother was already
pregnant again, and he was given over more and more to the
care of his elder sisters. "Yong Meng!" they called him in
the local accent. "Yong Meng a! " and he would come running,
his face beaming, burned brown by the summer sun.
As a child,
he was strong and wild, just like the stereotypical Pyongan
Province character, who is said to be like 'a tiger coming
out of the bushes.' This tiger proved difficult to control.
In fact, his parents felt that he controlled them. His
mother told one of his followers, years later, that she had
never been able to discipline him. A cousin remembered that
she did smack him once when he was about six years old. She
hit him so hard, he fell down and lost consciousness for a
while. It shocked her so much she never did it again.
Villagers
said they recognized that from the age of five he had an
unusual character. 21 When he had tantrums, he
would thrash around so much on the rough floor that he would
scrape the skin off the back of his hands or the back of his
head. When he cried, he would continue for hours or even
days. Once, his uncle Kyung Chun, who was considered the
village elder, came into the house after watching Sun Myung
playing and said, "That boy will either become a king or a
terrible traitor." The family understood his meaning, that
under colonial rule it was impossible for a Korean to become
king, so Sun Myung would probably end up becoming an
underground leader and cause a lot of trouble for the Moon
clan.
Rev. Moon
himself has not talked a great deal about his early
memories. But he recalled in one talk that as a young child
he was intuitive about people and could see them as they
were spiritually. 22 He has also said that he
felt an acute rage at injustice from an early age. 23
He developed a love of nature. He has told followers that
once, as a young boy, after praying outdoors, he felt as if
the grass and trees were appealing to him, telling him they
were abandoned by mankind. 24 His life was that
of the typical poor, farming family. With most villagers
being part of the extended family, relationships were close.
As an indication of the earthy intimacy of the atmosphere in
which he was raised, he once talked in a sermon to Korean
followers how, as a very young child, he would identify the
feces of his parents and siblings in the outhouse. 25
Villagers
wore traditional, home made white clothes. The men had a
waistcoat, jacket, and baggy trousers, while the women wore
long dresses. In winter a cotton lining was sown in. The
nature of rice farming, and the irrigation and transplanting
involved, meant that they had to work together. Some of the
best times would be when there was joint project like
building or thatching someone's house. All the relatives
would join in. There would be much horseplay, and many
contradictory orders barked, more out of self assertion than
strategy. In the kitchen, women would joke and curse and
keep the food and drink flowing. The children scampered
around, stopped at times to help or get in the way and then
break for wrestling.
The
children played tamachigi, a game with beads, and
batchi, in which you stack up bits of cardboard and try
to win your opponent's stack by throwing a coin on them. If
you miss, he gets the money.
Until he
was around ten years old, Sun Myung was mischievous and
wrestled a lot with other boys. They didn't pick fights with
him because he was strong and they were afraid he would beat
them. Once when he was around nine years old, he got into a
serious scrap with a village boy called Lee, who was three
or four years older. 26 It began as horseplay and
developed into a brawl, with Lee getting the upper hand. The
villagers gathered round to watch, knowing Sun Myung's
character, and curious as to how he would handle a beating.
Although he was underneath, Sun Myung refused to concede and
he kept on wriggling and kicking. Lee couldn't let go and he
couldn't stay where he was. He looked at the adults, hoping
one would step in and stop it, but no one moved. Lee began
to cry and let his opponent go. Unleashed, Sun Myung jumped
astride the older boy, grabbed his ears and began banging
his head on the ground. At that point the adults stepped in
to stop the fight.
Shortly
after this incident, Sun Myung stopped fighting. He became
more thoughtful and laconic. "He seemed to weigh his words
and be thinking deeply about things," his cousin Seung Gyun
remembered.
Sun Myung
was close to his elder brother, Yong Soo. "I have a
wonderful brother who really loves me," he told American
followers in 1965. "He has had some spiritual experiences.
In fact, he is the (only) one in my family who even dimly
understood my mission " 27 Yong soo began to feel
that his younger brother was very special and later was to
share his religious fervor. Once, Yong Soo remonstrated with
Sun Myung's first wife for complaining about his devotion to
his religious work. "You don't know about him. You don't
understand him," he told her. "He will be a great man."
28 As the elder brother, Yong Soo was destined to
inherit the farm and did not receive the education which Sun
Myung had. He stayed with his parents when the Communists
took over in 1945. When Moon returned to north Korea in 1991
for the first time since the Korean War, Yong Soo's widow
told him he had been killed during the Korean War when an
American plane bombed the village and partially destroyed
the house 29
Sun Myung's
early schooling was the traditional instruction in Chinese
characters, which had been taught in Korea for centuries.
The classroom, or so dang, had no desks or chairs. Students
sat on the wooden floor and were instructed in the Confucian
texts. Cousin Yong sun, who was six months younger than Sun
Myung, was a classmate. "There were about forty children in
our so dang," he recalled. "We started around eight or nine
o'clock in the morning, and went till around five p.m., with
a break for lunch. We brought our lunch in a box." If the
weather was too hot or too cold, they would get the day off
and go fishing, or, in the winter, skating. Otherwise it was
school seven days a week.
The so dang
education lasted seven years. 30 For the first
year, they were taught by Moon Hyong Chong in the so dang,
attached to the church in Morum village, where great uncle
Yoon kook was still the minister There Sun Myung started to
learn the basic one thousand Chinese characters, 31
studying for four years under Pak Chang Je and Chong Shin
Taek at the so dang next to Pak-the-Blind-Man's house. He
then studied for two years in Sangsa ri under Pak Ki ho.
By the time
he was thirteen, he knew the essential Chinese characters by
heart and had studied the sayings of the sages. The study of
the philosophical sayings and of history and literature was,
in theory, intended to make the pupil an ethical young
citizen, and equip him for social advancement rather than a
job. He learned that, in the Confucian view, the family
rather than the individual is the smallest social unit, and
that the virtues that characterize the ideal man are loyalty
fidelity, and other virtues that manifest in relationships,
rather than individual qualities such as bravery or
humility. Confucian morality, he learned, focused upon
proper relationships. The core of the system was filial
piety. As the 19th century Korean scholar Chong Yak Yong put
it: "The studies of the Confucian gentleman begin with
attending parents and end with the attendance of Heaven."
Whether Sun
Myung Moon was a proper little Confucian gentleman as far as
his teachers were concerned is another matter. According to
cousin Seung Gyun, who studied with him, Sun Myung was the
star pupil in calligraphy, and was often asked to show the
class how to write a particular Chinese character properly.
He one upped his fellow scholars by mastering two original
techniques holding the brush in his mouth and between his
toes. "One day we were messing around and he wrote some
characters with the brush in his teeth and toes. The other
kids wrote by hand and then took the work to the teacher for
grading. 'Who's is this?' the teacher asked. This is so and
so's, they answered. And this one is Yong Myung writing with
his toes: The teacher got angry and scolded him."
He grew to
be a sturdy adolescent. "Like an alder tree," said one
villager. The picture that emerged in interviews was of a
child who was highly active, always running, never walking,
and into everything. He used to stick his hands into holes
in the thatched roofs, searching for birds' nests. In fact,
catching birds was a major pastime. At night, the Moon boys
would sneak up to firewood piles where sparrows nested One
would throw a net over one end of the stack while the others
banged the wood at the other end to frighten a bird, which
flew straight into the net. There was then a problem of how
to hold the bird while they looked for the next one. If they
put it in the pocket of their tunic it would fly out. The
solution was to put it inside their baggy trousers, which
were tied at the ankles. At the end of the evening they
would cook the sparrows for the younger children. 32
Once, Sun
Myung caught a pair of birds and put them in a cage to watch
them mate. "I wanted to watch them sing and express their
love for each other," he said. "Of course, later I came to
realize that genuine love can only be fulfilled in a natural
environment, not in a cage. This was one of the naughty
things I did in my childhood . . . The natural world taught
me a more fundamental kind of knowledge than school did."
33 He also invented his own gun for shooting
birds. It was a barrel made from an umbrella and had a long
wooden handle. He put match ends into the barrel and used
buckshot.
Another
prank was to sneak into his uncle's honey melon field.
Instead of just eating one melon, Sun Myung in his haste
would rip up the vine and hold it up so he could see the
melons. When his uncle came to the field in the morning, he
knew who was to blame. Sun Myung and his cousins were
scolded. 34
When they
went collecting chestnuts, he always tried to get the nuts
at the top of the tree, just for the challenge. He tied
sticks together to reach them. Then he gave the nuts to the
younger kids. One day when he was about ten or eleven years
old, he followed a weasel all night, tracking it through the
snow, and caught it. He returned home in the morning, his
parents' anger tempered by the fact that they could sell the
weasel for the equivalent in today's money of about $150.
In the
summer, the local children used to catch fish in a shallow
stream. They used a net, but the fish moved so fast it was
difficult to catch them. On one occasion, he asked his
cousin Seung Gyun to run through the water behind him with
the net. This way Sun Myung disturbed the fish, which
regrouped behind him just in time to be scooped up by Seung
Gyun. With this new technique, they outsmarted the fish and
caught two or three with every run.
However,
the best display of Sun Myung's youthful ingenuity was in
the way he caught eels. It was possible to net them, but
that was too simple. He liked to grab the small eels,
squeeze them till their mouths opened, stick his thumb in
their mouths, and then fling them out onto the bank. Another
method was to block all the holes they went into, except
one, and grab them as they came out. But by far the best
technique, for style, was catching them in his teeth. "He
would put his head underwater with his mouth near the eel
hole," Seung Gyun recalled. "The eel would come out tail
first and he grabbed it in his teeth. Then he held my head
under while I did it. I protested that it made my gums sore
and suggested we use a net, but he said it would be too
easy." A warning to Seung Gyun to be careful, in case the
eel darted down his throat, didn't encourage him much. In
this way they could catch twenty eels in a day. They would
string them on a wire, take them home and stink the village
out.
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Calling from
Jesus Christ