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HAIL TO THE MOON KING
By John Gorenfeld
Salon.Com
June 21, 2004
http://www.salon.com/news/feature/2004/06/21/moon/
[See the link above for photo. --DS]
The deeply weird coronation of Rev. Sun Myung Moon in a Senate office
building -- crown, robes, the works -- is no longer one of Washington's
best-kept secrets...
...........
You probably imagine your congressman hard at work in the Capitol debating
legislation, making laws -- you know, governing. But your newspaper probably
didn't tell you that one night in March, members of Congress hosted a
crowning ritual for an ex-convict and multibillionaire who dressed up in
maroon robes and declared himself the Second Coming.
On March 23, the Dirksen Senate Office Building was the scene of a
coronation ceremony for Rev. Sun Myung Moon, owner of the conservative
Washington Times newspaper and UPI wire service, who was given a bejeweled
crown by Rep. Danny K. Davis, D-Ill. Afterward, Moon told his bipartisan
audience of Washington power players he would save everyone on Earth as he
had saved the souls of Hitler and Stalin -- the murderous dictators had been
born again through him, he said. In a vision, Moon said the reformed Hitler
and Stalin vouched for him, calling him "none other than humanity's Savior,
Messiah, Returning Lord and True Parent."
To many observers, this bizarre scene would have looked like the apocalypse
as depicted in "Left Behind" novels. Moon, 84, the benefactor of
conservative foundations like the American Family Coalition -- who served
time in the 1980s for tax fraud and conspiracy to obstruct justice -- has
views somewhere to the right of the Taliban's Mullah Omar. Moon preaches
that gays are "dung-eating dogs," Jews brought on the Holocaust by betraying
Jesus, and the U.S. Constitution should be scrapped in favor of a system he
calls "Godism" -- with him in charge. The man crowned "King of Peace" by
congressmen once said, according to sermons reprinted in his church's
Unification News: "Suppose I were to hit you with the baseball bat to stop
you, bloodying your ear and breaking a bone or two, yet still you insisted
on doing more work for Father."
What, exactly, drew at least a dozen members of Congress
<http://www.politics1.com/blog-0604a.htm#crown2> to Moon's coronation? (By
the Unification Church's estimate, 81 congressmen attended, although that
number is probably high.) The event was the grand finale of Moon's
coast-to-coast "tear down the cross" Moonification tour, intended to remove
Christian crosses from almost 300 churches in poor neighborhoods -- the idea
being that the cross was an obstacle to uniting religions under Moon. Yet
the Dirksen ceremony was sold as a celebration of world peace. According to
a cheery promotional video
<http://www.gorenfeld.net/blog/2004/06/this-really-happened-at-senate-office
.html> released by Moon's International and Interreligious Federation for
World Peace <http://www.iifwp.org/about/founders.php>, the ceremony marked
the dawn of "the era of the Eternal Peace Kingdom, one global family under
God." Moon's coronation also cured God's pain, the announcer explains.
By all accounts, most of the congressmen in attendance didn't expect a
coronation. Instead, they thought they were heading to an awards dinner
honoring activists from their home states as "Ambassadors for Peace." A
flier for the event
<http://www.gorenfeld.net/blog/2004/05/back-from-memory-hole.html> claimed
an impressive who's-who of organizers, including Republicans Sen. Lindsey
Graham of South Carolina, Rep. Roscoe Bartlett of Maryland and Charlie
Black, a top Republican strategist. Democrats were named, too, like Rep.
Harold Ford of Tennessee, who, incidentally, claims to have not even heard
of the event.
And then there was Rep. Danny K. Davis, D-Ill., the only congressman who has
publicly expressed pride in the crowning ceremony, who praised Moon for
bringing religious leaders together in his Ambassadors for Peace tours to
Jerusalem and beyond. Davis, it was revealed this week in the Chicago
Reader, took money from Moon-organized fundraisers, who also gave to a
charity of his choice. Davis told an Anglican magazine that Moon's remarks
were "similar to a baseball team owner telling team members that 'we are the
greatest team on earth'" to get them fired up.
At the time, the surreal event went uncovered by the Washington press corps,
save for Moon's own Washington Times, which ran a brief description of the
festivities. The story is getting some traction only now, after it was
recently reported in the online magazine The Gadflyer
<http://gadflyer.com/articles/?ArticleID=131>. But what transpired at
Dirksen two months ago remains a mystery to most Americans -- and those
constituents of congressmen who attended Moon's crowning.
The crowning ritual indeed began as a somewhat normal awards ceremony.
Ribbons that looked like Olympic gold medals were given to Rep. Bartlett and
others. But then it took an odd turn. Rep. Curt Weldon, R-Pa., whose office
maintained he did not attend the event until I provided photographs of him
there -- spoke beside a photograph of himself pinning an American flag on
Libyan leader Moammar Khadafy, back when President Bush was praising him for
abandoning WMD programs and before he was suspected of trying to kill the
leader of Saudi Arabia.
Then, after Rep. Elijah Cummings, D-Md., gave a speech praising one of
Moon's Ambassadors for Peace, the civil rights veteran Rev. Walter Fauntroy,
an unnamed Lubovitch rabbi took the stage declaring: "I have never seen this
miracle where Jews, Christians and Muslims come together for peace!" Then
Moon's cleric Chung Kwak took the mic. Before his days as the commander of
the UPI wire service, Kwak, Moon said in a 1997 speech, was authorized to
whomp on Unification Church members who slacked off. "Particularly those who
are sleeping and hiding, Reverend Kwak's baseball bat will fall upon you at
any time," Moon said. Now Kwak was standing in a Senate office building
declaring Moon the king of the "second and third Israel."
It might almost make sense for conservative congressmen to honor Moon in
this way. After all, a writer in Moon's magazine Insight wrote in February
that it's long past time for Republicans to thank the billionaire Korean
preacher for his gifts. "[T]he continued refusal of Beltway conservatives
publicly to acknowledge their steadfast patron is, of course, scandalous,"
wrote contributor Paul Gottfried. Moon has sunk an estimated $2-$4 billion
into the money-losing Times, and countless other causes -- like Jerry
Falwell's Liberty University.
Moon has also made inroads in the Bush administration, as Salon reported
last September <http://www.salon.com/news/feature/2003/09/24/moon/>, with
plum appointments for former or present Moon VIPs, and almost half a million
dollars in abstinence-only grants supporting Moon's anti-sex crusade. To
teach teens that "free sex" is revolting, they're asked by Moon's followers
to drink other people's spit out of a cup, and then consider how much more
vigilant you must be when sharing other body fluids.
While Moon once focused his energies on anti-Communism, making him popular
among Republicans in the Reagan era -- his organization gave the first
$100,000 to Oliver North's Nicaraguan Freedom Fund -- he has now shifted
gears, aiming left. He's planning a "Peace United Nations" entwining
religions instead of countries and is trying to make friends in the
Congressional Black Caucus, like Rep. Davis. No congressman, on the right or
left, has publicly denounced Moon for his momentous speeches describing his
"peace kingdom" as a place where "gays will be eliminated" in a "purge on
God's orders" he says will be like Stalin's. And many are surprisingly
comfortable around a guy known for over-the-top speeches about the holy
"love organ of life" and its various fluids. In a 1994 speech, he asked: "Do
you like the smell of your husband's semen? Answer to Father. Does it smell
good or bad? You may not like the smell of your wife's stool, but do you
smell your own? Why don't you smell your own but you smell your wife's?
Because you are not totally one."
But if Moon pulled off his greatest trick on Mar. 23, fooling some
unsuspecting congressmen into attending his coronation, it's not as if his
stunt was new -- for more than 25 years, Moon has sought to surround himself
with powerful people to gain credibility and legitimacy, including
presidents Richard Nixon, Gerald Ford and George H.W. Bush. If the
congressmen had simply run "Ambassadors for Peace" through the Google search
engine, they would have discovered the group was tied to Moon and his grand
plans for the future of Christianity -- plans to "reconcile" religions by
tearing the Christian cross off church walls and persuading Jews to sign
apologies for giving Jesus over to the Romans.
Weldon, for one, had a long time to do that Google search. As far back as
June 19, 2003, he's listed in a speech by Rep. Danny K. Davis on the floor
of the House of Representatives honoring Moon: "Many of my colleagues will
join me and the gentleman from Pennsylvania (Mr. Weldon), co-chair, in
giving tribute to some of the outstanding Americans from our districts,"
said Davis. "We are grateful to the founders of Ambassadors for Peace, the
Reverend and Mrs. Sun Myung [Moon], for promoting the vision of world peace,
and we commend them for their work."
As for Moon's vision of world peace, there are widespread reports, even
acknowledged within Moon's church, of allegations that in 1989 he allowed
brutal inquisitions to take place. The inquisitor, a man Moon apparently
believed was the reincarnation of his son, was allegedly encouraged to tie
people to radiators and beat them. As a result, Moon's trusted lieutenant,
Bo Hi Pak, was said to have suffered minor brain damage. Wrote his
daughter-in-law, Nansook Hong, in her tell-all book: "Sun Myung Moon seemed
to take pleasure in the reports that filtered back to East Garden of the
beatings being administered by the Black Heung Jin. He would laugh raucously
if someone out of favor had been dealt an especially hard blow." Members of
Congress may want to do their homework before they crown their next King of
Peace.
------------
A CROWNING AT THE CAPITAL CREATES A STIR
By Sheryl Gay Stolberg
New York Times
June 24, 2004
http://www.nytimes.com/2004/06/24/politics/24moon.html
[See the link above for photo. --DS]
WASHINGTON - As a shining symbol of democracy, the United States capital is
not ordinarily a place where coronations occur. So news that the Rev. Sun
Myung Moon, the eccentric and exceedingly wealthy Korean-born businessman,
donned a crown in a Senate office building and declared himself the Messiah
while members of Congress watched is causing a bit of a stir.
One congressman, Representative Danny K. Davis, Democrat of Illinois, wore
white gloves and carried a pillow holding one of two ornate gold crowns that
were placed on the heads of Mr. Moon and his wife, Dr. Hak Ja Han Moon, at
the ceremony, which took place March 23 and capped a reception billed as a
peace awards banquet.
Mr. Davis says he held the wife's crown and was "a bit surprised'' by Mr.
Moon's Messiah remarks, which were delivered in Korean but accompanied by a
written translation. In them, he said emperors, kings and presidents had
"declared to all heaven and earth that Reverend Sun Myung Moon is none other
than humanity's Savior, Messiah, Returning Lord and True Parent.''
By Wednesday, after news of the event had been reported in the online
magazine Salon and various newspapers, Capitol Hill was in full-blown
backpedaling mode, as lawmakers who attended but missed the coronation -- or
saw it and did not think much of it -- struggled to explain themselves.
"I remember the king and queen thing,'' said Representative Roscoe G.
Bartlett, Republican of Maryland, "But we have the king and queen of the
prom, the king and queen of 4-H, the Mardi Gras and all sorts of other
things. I had no idea what he was king of.''
Others, like Senator Mark Dayton, Democrat of Minnesota, insisted they were
duped and had no idea that the organization holding the reception was
connected to Mr. Moon. Mr. Dayton said he attended because a constituent was
being honored. He left before the crowning.
"I never saw Reverend Moon present during the time I was there,'' Mr. Dayton
said. "I did not stay for any formal program.''
At 84, Mr. Moon cuts a curious figure in Washington, where he mingles with
the city's power elite by dint of his dual roles as religious leader and
media mogul. He owns The Washington Times, which bills itself as a
conservative alternative to The Washington Post, as well as United Press
International, the wire service. He calls himself "Father'' and has drawn
notoriety for officiating at mass weddings. Mr. Moon's Unification Church
has many tentacles, including the Interreligious and International
Federation for World Peace, which held what it called an Ambassadors for
Peace awards banquet in the Dirksen Office Building on March 23. An initial
invitation, sent to all members of Congress, stated that Mr. Moon and his
wife would also be present and honored for their work. But follow-up
letters, including one provided by Mr. Dayton, mentioned only the peace
foundation and simply told lawmakers who from their states was being
honored.
Barry Lynn, executive director of Americans United, an organization devoted
to preserving the separation of church and state, said Mr. Moon often drew
lawmakers into his fold in this way. Mr. Lynn said it seemed Mr. Moon was
courting black lawmakers, including Mr. Davis of Illinois and Representative
Elijah E. Cummings of Maryland, who attended but said he did not stay for
the crowning ceremony.
"Reverend Moon has been very intentional about promoting his activities
within the African-American church community,'' Mr. Lynn said. But he said
he was disturbed by lawmakers' "flimsy excuses,'' adding, "You had what
effectively amounted to a religious coronation in a government building of a
man who claims literally to be the savior.''
Mr. Cummings, however, said the invitation was similar to countless requests
he receives to honor local constituents, in this case a black bishop in his
district. Mr. Bartlett said he attended to support The Washington Times.
"I'm a conservative," he said. "I'm delighted that we have a
middle-of-the-road paper in Washington."
The event itself attracted little notice, though Mr. Lynn's organization
wrote about it in a newsletter in May. The uproar did not occur until this
week, when John Gorenfeld, a freelance writer, published an account of the
event in Salon. Mr. Gorenfeld, who wrote that at least a dozen members of
Congress attended, said he had been scouting the Internet, researching Mr.
Moon, when he stumbled on a video of the ceremony.
"Nobody sent it to me,'' he said. "I discovered it and I thought, 'Oh, my
God.' ''
But Archbishop George A. Stallings, pastor of the Imani Temple, an
independent African-American Catholic church in Washington, who helped
coordinate the reception, does not see what all the fuss is about. "From his
spiritual perspective,'' he said, referring to Mr. Moon, "that is how he
sees his role, as ordained by God.''
He added: "This is not the first time the man has been on Capitol Hill.''
As to whether it will be the last, that is an open question. To hold the
event in the Dirksen building, the organization was required to find a
senator to act as a sponsor. But the identity of the sponsor remained a
secret on Wednesday; the Senate Rules and Administration Committee, which
approved the request, would not release the name.
Susan Irby, a spokeswoman for Senator Trent Lott of Mississippi, the
committee chairman, said staff members were examining the application, filed
in the name of The Washington Times Foundation, to see if there were any
violations of Senate rules.
Mr. Davis said he had attended meetings of the peace foundation, knowing of
Mr. Moon's involvement.
Of the crowning ceremony, Mr. Davis said: "It's my understanding that what
they were doing was recognizing Mr. and Mrs. Moon as parents. They call it
true parents, as parents who provide parental guidance or parental
direction. That's what it meant to me. It meant nothing more and nothing
less.''
-------------
LAWMAKERS ATTENDED REV. MOON'S CORONATION
LAWMAKERS SAY THEY WERE MISLED
By Charles Babington and Alan Cooperman
Washington Post
Wednesday, June 23, 2004; Page A01
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A61932-2004Jun22.html
More than a dozen lawmakers attended a congressional reception this year
honoring the Rev. Sun Myung Moon in which Moon declared himself the Messiah
and said his teachings have helped Hitler and Stalin be "reborn as new
persons."
At the March 23 ceremony in the Dirksen Senate Office Building, Rep. Danny
K. Davis (D-Ill.) wore white gloves and carried a pillow holding an ornate
crown that was placed on Moon's head. The Korean-born businessman and
religious leader then delivered a long speech saying he was "sent to Earth .
. . to save the world's six billion people. . . . Emperors, kings and
presidents . . . have declared to all Heaven and Earth that Reverend Sun
Myung Moon is none other than humanity's Savior, Messiah, Returning Lord and
True Parent."
Details of the ceremony -- first reported by Salon.com writer John Gorenfeld
-- have prompted several lawmakers to say they were misled or duped by
organizers. Their complaints prompted a Moon-affiliated Web site to remove a
video of the "Crown of Peace" ceremony two days ago, but other Web sites
have preserved details and photos.
Moon, 85, has been controversial for years. Renowned for officiating at mass
weddings, he received an 18-month prison sentence in 1982 for tax fraud and
conspiracy to obstruct justice. In a 1997 sermon, he likened homosexuals to
"dirty dung-eating dogs."
Among the more than 300 people who attended all or part of the March
ceremony was Sen. Mark Dayton (D-Minn.), who now says he simply was honoring
a constituent receiving a peace award and did not know Moon would be there.
"We fell victim to it; we were duped," Dayton spokeswoman Chris Lisi said
yesterday.
Other lawmakers who attended or were listed as hosts felt the same, she
said. "Everyone I talked to was furious," she said. With Minnesotans
demanding to know whether Dayton is a follower of Moon, Lisi said, the
senator persuaded the St. Paul Pioneer Press to write an article allowing
him to reply.
The event's organizers flew in nearly 100 honorees from all 50 states to
receive state and national peace awards. The only "international crown of
peace awards" went to Moon and his wife.
Some Republicans who attended the event, including Rep. Roscoe G. Bartlett
(Md.), said they did so mainly to salute the Washington Times, a
conservative-leaning newspaper owned by Moon's organization. "I had no idea
what would happen" regarding Moon's coronation and speech, Bartlett said
yesterday.
But a key organizer -- Archbishop George A. Stallings Jr., pastor of the
Imani Temple, an independent African American Catholic congregation in
Northeast Washington -- said Moon's prominent role should have surprised no
one. He said a March 8 invitation faxed to all lawmakers stated that the
"primary program sponsor" would be the "Interreligious and International
Federation for World Peace (IIFWP), founded by Rev. Dr. and Mrs. Sun Myung
Moon, who will also be recognized that evening for their lifelong work to
promote interfaith cooperation and reconciliation." The invitation was
signed by Davis and the Rev. Michael Jenkins, as co-chairmen of the IIFWP
(USA).
The event's co-sponsors were the Washington Times Foundation, the United
Press International Foundation, the American Family Coalition, the American
Clergy Leadership Conference and the Women's Federation for World Peace,
according to the invitation. Stallings, a former Roman Catholic priest who
was married in Moon's church, said Moon's association with those
organizations is well known.
"You'd have to be deaf, dumb and blind to not know that any event that is
sponsored by the Washington Times . . . could involve the influence, or the
potential presence, of the Reverend Moon," he said.
Use of the Dirksen building requires a senator's approval. Dayton said he
gave no such permission, and Stallings said the question of who did so is
"shrouded in mystery."
Moon has claimed to have spoken in "the spirit world" with all deceased U.S.
presidents, Jesus, Moses, Mohammed and others. At the March 23 event, he
said: "The founders of five great religions and many other leaders in the
spirit world, including even Communist leaders such as Marx and Lenin . . .
and dictators such as Hitler and Stalin, have found strength in my
teachings, mended their ways and been reborn as new persons."
Several Web sites quoted Rep. Elijah E. Cummings (D-Md.) as praising Moon at
the event for "always standing up for what is right." In an interview
yesterday, Cummings said, "I don't recall saying that. That may have been
confused with what I was saying" about Bishop Joseph Showell, a constituent
being honored.
The Rev. Walter Fauntroy, a Democrat who was the District's congressional
delegate for 10 years, was the event's master of ceremonies and recipient of
a "National Crown of Peace" award. Also speaking at the event was Rep. Curt
Weldon (R-Pa.).
Davis said in an interview that he is a lifelong Methodist who does not
agree with many of Moon's religious teachings. But he praised Moon's efforts
to promote world peace. Davis said that some Moon associates have donated
money to his congressional campaigns, but that that has nothing to do with
his support for Moon's organization.
The prominent role played by Davis, Fauntroy and Stallings, among others,
reflects Moon's efforts to reach out to the black community. Jenkins said
many African American clergy members "have become strong allies" of Moon
because they sympathize with the "mistreatment and labeling" he has faced.
------------
UTAHNS DENY THEY 'HOSTED' MOON EVENT
By Lee Davidson
Deseret Morning News
June 25, 2004
http://deseretnews.com/dn/view/1%2C1249%2C595072917%2C00.html
WASHINGTON - Although their names were listed with event organizers and
hosts, three Utahns say they had nothing to do with planning a controversial
Capitol Hill dinner where the Rev. Sun Myung Moon proclaimed himself the
Messiah and had a crown and royal robes placed on him and his wife.
Rep. Chris Cannon, R-Utah; State Sen. Howard Stephenson, R-Draper; and
Franklin-Covey founder Stephen Covey were listed by Moon's Interreligious
and International Federation for World Peace as members of the "host
committee" for the March 23 dinner it sponsored in the Dirksen Senate Office
Building.
Spokesmen for Cannon and Covey say they did not attend that event, nor did
they help plan it or give permission for their names to be used as hosts.
Stephenson did attend but said he did not help organize it. He said he also
walked out after Moon proclaimed himself the Messiah "because I didn't want
to imply my endorsement."
Former Rep. Howard Nielson, R-Utah, also attended the dinner, where the
organization gave him an award as an "ambassador for peace" after he earlier
in the day gave a presentation for a seminar sponsored by such Moon
organizations as the Washington Times Foundation about prospects for Middle
East peace.
"What he (Moon) said was really over the top. And then they almost deified
him" by placing the crown and robes on him, Nielson said. "I didn't walk out
like Howard (Stephenson) did, but I did not endorse what they were doing."
Moon, head of the Unification Church and owner of the Washington Times, told
the dinner audience that in the spirit world, Marx, Lenin, Hitler and Stalin
found strength in his teachings and have been reborn. He said they and
saints proclaim that "Sun Myung Moon is none other than humanity's Savior,
Messiah, Returning Lord and True Parent."
As belated reports of the event wandered off Internet sites and into the
mainstream press this week, many members of Congress listed as attendees
have been busy saying they were misled about what the dinner would be ‹ and
say they do not believe Moon is the Messiah.
Meghan Riding, spokeswoman for Cannon, said he was invited to the event
because Nielson, a constituent, was to receive an award. She said he may
have once planned to attend but did not.
She said he did not give permission for his name to be listed as one of six
"congressional hosts." She said Cannon also did not endorse what occurred at
the event. She said Cannon did attend a February event where the same
organization had given an award to Stephenson.
Covey's office also said he did not attend the March 23 event or have
anything to do with its planning and did not know how or why he was listed
among the host committee.
Stephenson said he has attended several seminars sponsored by Moon
organizations ‹ including one the same day as the dinner.
"They tend to be quality programs on issues important to legislators," he
said. "They are not religious events, just seminars that tend to attract
some big names and experts."
He said he merely attended the banquet because it was in conjunction with
one of those seminars. But he figures prominently in videos of the event
because he presented one award and sat up front near Moon.
Stephenson said he was asked to be a last-minute replacement to present an
award about Native American peace and was moved from a back table to the
front to make that easier. He said he doesn't remember what he said,
although Internet reports said he apologized for U.S. misdeeds against
Native Americans that led to a trail of tears.
He said when Moon talked "and things took a turn into religion," he became
uncomfortable. He said he left after Moon's speech ‹ and missed his
"coronation" ‹ because he did not want to imply that he endorsed any of
that.
------------
OTHER NHNE SPECIAL REPORTS & ARTICLES ABOUT SUN MYUNG MOON:
NHNE PUBLICATIONS:
SUN MYUNG MOON ON THE MOVE AGAIN IN AMERICA (12/5/2001):
http://www.nhne.com/misc/sunmyungmoon.html
MORE ABOUT REVEREND MOON
Smorgasbord 4
Friday, December 5, 1997
http://www.nhne.com/smorgasbord/smorgasbord0004.html
MOONIES SEEK EDEN IN BRAZILIAN SWAMP
Smorgasbord 12
Tuesday, October 26, 1999
http://www.nhne.com/smorgasbord/smorgasbord0012.html
FALSE PROPHETS & "SCUM BAG GURUS"
By David Sunfellow
Tuesday, July 27, 1999
http://www.nhne.com/misc/food0002.html
NHNE NEWS LIST STORIES:
A REVIVIFIED SUN MYUNG MOON (3/11/2003):
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/nhnenews/message/4689
CONTROVERSIAL RELIGIOUS GROUPS TO TEST BUSH INITIATIVE (2/19/2001):
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/nhnenews/message/1173
MILLION MOON MARCH (10/8/2000)
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/nhnenews/message/713
MOON IN CHINA (9/13/2000)
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/nhnenews/message/674
FRANCE AIMS AT BANNING 'DANGEROUS' SECTS (6/23/2000)
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/nhnenews/message/422
MOON'S UNIFICATION CHURCH ACQUIRES UPI (5/17/2000)
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/nhnenews/message/288
MOON'S SON'S DEATH RULED A SUICIDE (2/17/2000)
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/nhnenews/message/124
RECRUITS SOUGHT FOR MOON'S NEXT MASS WEDDING (12/26/1999)
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/nhnenews/message/42
SUSPICION FOLLOWS REV. MOON TO SOUTH AMERICA (12/1/1999) :
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/nhnenews/message/4
------------
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