-Caveat Lector-

http://www.workingforchange.com/article.cfm?ItemID=14455

The GOP's man on the Moon
Unification Church leader and self-proclaimed Messiah builds legacy with
support from the Bush administration

For more than two decades he has been a powerful and influential political
figure, despite being more than a bit out of step with mainstream America.
Now, perhaps thinking of his own mortality, he has become more visible,
staging and sponsoring numerous events and conferences. A revivified Rev.
Sun Myung Moon is planting the seeds of his political legacy -- and he's
getting help from his friends in the Bush Administration.

On December 19, 2002, while many Americans were caught up in Trent Lott's
troubles or trying to figure out what to get their mother-in-law for
Christmas, the Corporation for National and Community Service announced the
appointment of three managers to oversee AmeriCorps.

David Caprara was appointed director of AmeriCorps*VISTA (Volunteers in
Service to America). Caprara comes to government service having served as
president of the American Family Coalition, an organization many observers
say is a "front" organization for the Rev. Sun Myung Moon.

Caprara's appointment is the latest in a series of events signifying a close
relationship between the Bush Administration and the Rev. Moon's Unification
Church.

On January 19, 2001, one day before George W. Bush was sworn in as
President, the Rev. Moon sponsored a prayer luncheon that brought together
some 1,700 religious, civic, and political leaders. In the crowd was a bevy
of Christian Right luminaries including the Rev. Jerry Falwell; former
National Evangelical Association President Don Argue; Trinity Broadcasting
Network's Paul Crouch; and the Southern Baptist Convention's (SBC)
president, executive committee president, and CEO, as well as Richard Land,
the president of SBC's Ethics & Religious Liberty Commission.

John Ashcroft, who had not yet been confirmed as Attorney General, dropped
by and "brought down the house... with a tale of amazing grace," reported a
front-page story in The Washington Times. The Rev. Moon addressed the crowd
and handed out free copies of one of his books and other Unification church
materials.

When SBC leaders discovered that the event had been sponsored by The
Times -- the Moon-owned conservative newspaper that has lost money every
year since its launch in 1982 -- they were surprised: "We knew that it was
going to be an interdenominational event, but we had no idea that the
luncheon was hosted by the Moonies," claimed one SBC spokesperson.

A few months later, the American Leadership Conference (ALC), a project of
the American Family Coalition and The Washington Times Foundation -- both
Moon-sponsored groups -- sent thousands of invitations to clergy and
community leaders inviting them to attend local events called "Faith-Based
Initiatives For Family and Community Renewal." According to Church & State's
Rob Boston, "The flyer promised that the 'cutting edge program' would
'provide the latest information on innovative policies and programs from the
Executive and Congressional leadership in Washington; and build alliances
for faith-based services at the state and community level.'"

Boston, assistant director of communications for Americans United for
Separation of Church and State, pointed out the "faith-based summit" was
actually held in Washington, D.C. and down-linked by satellite to more than
forty participating sites. The summit was organized by a number of leading
GOP congressional figures including Bush's faith-based point-men, now former
Rep. J.C. Watts (R-OK) and Sen. Rick Santorum (R-PA). And, "efforts to
promote it at the grassroots level were turned over to a Moon organization,"
which Boston writes, gave them "an official relationship with the Republican
leadership" and this "enhanced status enabled him to do grassroots political
organizing -- and religious recruitment -- with the apparent blessing of
Bush and his GOP allies in Congress."

On May 21, 2002, the Rev. Moon hosted a gala 20th anniversary celebration
for The Washington Times at the Washington Hilton Hotel. The Times reported
the following day that "more than 3,000 congressmen, state legislators and
business and religious leaders from across the country" attended and heard
country music singer Randy Travis and radio talk show host Laura
Schlessinger, who delivered the keynote address. One of the highlights of
the evening was the reading of a congratulatory message from President Bush,
who called The Times "a distinguished source of information and opinion" and
"a forum for the debate of timely issues."

The SBC's antipathy over the Rev. Moon's sponsorship of the prayer event and
the Republican Party's dependence on its organizing skills are indicative of
the longtime love/hate relationship Christian evangelicals and GOP
operatives have had with the Unification Church. (Boston recently told me
that the "baggage associated with the Unification Church has created
problems for the church over time, so they formed the more
family-friendly-sounding Family Federation for World Peace and
Unification.")

'Money makes the world go round'

"What I find interesting about the whole Moon phenomena is what money can do
for you," says Rob Boston. For more than two decades, Moon's Christian Right
partners have accepted his bountiful financial support: Not too long ago,
the Rev. Jerry Falwell's financially-distressed Liberty University received
a gift of $3.5 million. Christian Right leaders eagerly accept lucrative
speaking engagements and attractive travel packages to Moon-sponsored events
and conferences.

And the GOP adores that The Washington Times serves as a daily boom-box for
the right's political and social agenda.

There is however, the embarrassing side of the coin: The loopy mass wedding
ceremonies the Rev. Moon presides over; his financial sponsorship of the
Nation of Islam's Million Family March; the bad publicity garnered by the
Rev.'s dysfunctional family; and the reports of teenagers enticed into
joining the church and subsequently kept away from their families. And
Christian right leaders are more than uncomfortable when the Rev. claims to
consider himself the new Messiah, sent by God to complete the failed mission
of Jesus. Dr. Massimo Introvigne, the director of the Center for the Studies
of New Religions in Torino, Italy, who has tracked the Rev. Moon's
international activities, told Church & State that "There is no doubt that
Moon and his followers believe that he IS the Lord of the Second Advent,
i.e. a Messianic figure complementary to Jesus Christ."

According to Rob Boston, "Moon has made numerous statements over the years
implying that he is something more than a mere mortal. A passage on Moon's
official website http://www.unification.net/ states the matter plainly: 'The
Christian world must confront the fact that the Messiah's second advent took
place at the end of World War II, in an obscure setting,' it reads. 'As did
Jesus, he met with countless difficulties, including accusation and
rejection. Bearing every cross, he -- the Reverend Sun Myung Moon -- took
responsibility for the failure of this generation of Christians, and he
stands today as the historical victor with a worldwide following.'"

The Rev. Moon has been a consistent friend and supporter of the Bush family.
During his run for the presidency, George the elder enjoyed unequivocal
support from The Washington Times. And according to veteran reporter Robert
Parry, after he left office "Moon-affiliated organizations paid for speeches
by former President Bush in the United States, Asia and South America... The
price tag for the speeches has been estimated at from hundreds of thousands
of dollars to $10 million." During the 2000 presidential campaign the paper
threw its whole-hearted support behind George W. Bush, and over the course
of the past two years has consistently supported the president's agenda.

[Next: David Caprara, a seasoned conservative with a Unification Church
history, takes the helm at VISTA.]  For more please see the Bill Berkowitz
archive.

Bill Berkowitz is a longtime observer of the conservative movement. His
WorkingForChange column Conservative Watch documents the strategies,
players, institutions, victories and defeats of the American Right.

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