The
Second Anniversary of the Universal Seonghwa of SunMyung Moon, the
True Parents of Heaven, Earth and Humankind
Opening
Plenary of the World Summit of the Universal Peace Federation Date
and Time : 7.14 by the Heavenly Calendar in the 2nd year of Cheon
Il Guk (9th August 2014/Korea Time) Place : Cheongpyeong
and Millennium Seoul Hilton
World Summit 2014 Addresses Peace, Security and Development
By Joy Pople, UPF International
Seoul, Korea - Convened at a time of
heightened global concerns about security, the UPF World Summit at
the Millennium Seoul Hilton Hotel August 9-13, 2014, addressed
issues of peace, security and development. More than 300 delegates
from 68 nations listened to distinguished leaders discuss the
theme from national, regional and global perspectives.
“Universal Peace Federation's World
Summit series provides a context,” said UPF President Dr.
Thomas Walsh, “in which the critical issues of peace,
security and human development can be addressed comprehensively by
high-level government officials -- including current heads of
state and government -- together with representatives of civil
society, the private sector, and the world's great faith
traditions.”
Global Assembly
King Letsie III, head of state of the southern African kingdom
of Lesotho, lamented the “dark clouds of tensions and lack
of trust,” calling for effective partnerships for
development and a reform of the United Nations so it can stand as
a “global governance system that ensures justice and
fairness.”
Atua Tupua Tamasese Ta’isi Efi, head of state of the
Pacific island nation of Samoa, described the central place the
ocean plays in the culture of his nation and the traditional
practices of his people to ensure sustainability: “The
taking of natural resources was never to go beyond what nature
herself could sustain in terms of natural re-growth.”
Four speakers had also participated in the World Summit in
Korea in February 2013 and elaborated on themes from their
presentations then. Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina President
Zivko Budimir described the ongoing “stormy times of peace”
in his Balkan nation, including an attempted coup; he expressed
his commitment to continue to follow the “path of truth and
freedom.”
Sri Lanka Prime Minister D. M. Jayaratne talked about the
economic growth his South Asia island nation has been experiencing
as a fruit of the resettlement and reconciliation process after 16
years of civil war; as he did last year, he gave evidence of his
commitment to interreligious peacebuilding by showing photos of
Ambuluwawa, a religious complex housing places of worship of four
major religions.
Timor-Leste Prime Minister Kay Rala Zanana Gusmao gave an
update about the Commission of Truth and Friendship established to
heal relations between his people and the neighboring Indonesians
on the island of Timor after a bitter war, because “both
Timor-Leste and Indonesia wanted to clear the way for true and
genuine reconciliation and tolerance among communities and
people.”
The wife of the Prime Minister of Tanzania, Tunu Pinda,
reviewed the ongoing conflicts throughout Africa and the
challenges to development posed by the resulting refugees and
internally displaced persons. She reported that with the end of
some conflicts, “the continent has started to enjoy peace
dividends” and six of the ten fastest-growing economies in
the world are in Africa.
Two first ladies eloquently represented the peoples of the
Pacific islands. First Lady of Fiji Adi Koila Mara Nailatikau
endorsed UPF’s commitment to peaceful resolution of
conflicts through dialogue and consensus and called for greater
roles for women in promoting peace, development and security.
First Lady of Marshall Islands Lieom Anono Loeak spoke of the
unique contribution the Pacific island nations can make to
peacebuilding because of their cultures, value system and
diversity. “Peace must stem from our inner and better state
of mind. And so it is to the minds and hearts of people that we
must first begin our work.”
Amb. Anwarul K. Chowdhury, former Under Secretary General of
the United Nations and High Representative for the Least Developed
Countries, has devoted decades to the promotion of a culture of
peace. “It is my faith,” he said, “that the
values of non-violence, tolerance and democracy which augment the
flourishing of the culture of peace will generate the mindset that
is a prerequisite for the transition from force to reason, from
conflict and violence to dialogue and peace.”
Giving voice to the young generation, Maori Prince Whatumoana
Paki from Kiingitanga, New Zealand, spoke on behalf of his father
and reviewed the efforts of his people to retain the lands,
customs and culture over the centuries and recent progress in
mending relationships with the British crown. He spoke of their
traditional values of advocacy, patience, courage, forgiveness and
faith.
The Global Assembly sessions were moderated by Dr. Thomas Walsh
and Dr. Tageldin Hamad, secretary general of UPF. They expressed
special appreciation to the president of the UN General Assembly
for sending his representative, Amb. Noel Sinclair, deputy chef de
cabinet. “The president of the General Assembly, H.E. Dr.
John Ashe, was delighted to receive an invitation to be present at
this ceremony here today,” Amb. Sinclair reported. “I
am here in his place because he could not come. He recognizes, and
I recognize, that what you are doing today is the business of the
United Nations. The United Nations was formed in the shadow of a
war, with a determination that war should never be fought again.
You may be far from New York, but what you are doing is part of
the work of the United Nations, of the General Assembly, of this
year’s president, and he wanted you to know this.”
Founders’ vision
UPF Chair Dr. Charles S. Yang welcomed participants, saying
that the summit series was established to help bring the founders’
vision for peace to fruition. The World Summit 2014 benefited from
partner organizations that included the Family Federation for
World Peace and Unification, the Women's Federation for World
Peace, The Washington Times Foundation, and the Segye Times.
Prof. Yeon Ah Choi Moon, president of the Women’s
Federation for World Peace, described the vision of her
parents-in-law for women taking the lead in peacebuilding.
“We gather here united as ‘one family under God,’”
Mrs. Sun Jin Moon, director general of the Family Federation for
World Peace and Unification International, said, inviting people
to join her in carrying on her parents’ mission of building
a “world of harmony, kinship, service, and faith, and to
commit ourselves in service to all of God’s children around
the globe.”
On behalf of her mother, she read the founder’s address,
which emphasized the family, interreligious cooperation, good
governance, international cooperation, a responsible mass media,
the age of women, and practical ways to bring together people from
around the globe. “I invite you all to take up this
challenge of building a new world of universal peace,” the
address concluded. “Let us all stand together as one and
build one family under God.”
Focus on the Americas
The second day of deliberations opened with an overview of Rev.
and Mrs. Moon’s decades-long focus on the Americas. Two
participants described their legacy in the United States: Dr.
Michael Balcomb, president of the Family Federation for World
Peace and Unification, talked about a recent road trip retracing
Rev. Moon’s travels in 1965 throughout the United States
establishing “holy grounds” as places of prayer. Mrs.
Alexa Ward, international vice president of the Women’s
Federation for World Peace, showed a pictorial overview of Rev.
and Mrs. Moon dedicating places of prayer, blessing couples,
giving public speeches and founding institutions to carry on their
legacy. Mr. Larry Beasley, president of The Washington Times
newspaper, and Hon. Dan Burton, former member of the US Congress,
talked about the legacy of a voice in the nation’s capital
of faith, family, freedom and service.
Two former presidents of South American nations brought
perspectives from lands which Rev. and Mrs. Moon envision as
having key roles in promoting peace and development. Dr. Julio
Maria Sanguinetti of Uruguay referred to a common vision of a
better world, “a world of peace, a path where education and
work will lift our people.”
“Rev. Moon saw a great future for Paraguay and saw it as
an ideal region to invest in development projects to improve the
standard of living for the local citizens,” reported former
president Dr. Luis Federico Franco Gomez. He said he shares the
same vision and believes there is an enormous opportunity to
develop the Chaco region, the sparsely populated, semi-arid
western portion of his nation.
Focus on Europe and Eurasia
Global peace and security concern has recently focused on
Ukraine, and in a panel discussion focusing on Europe and Eurasia,
former cabinet minister Dr. Anatoly Tolstoukhov compared the
challenges of his country to those of Korea. Reporting that he
drew inspiration from the Rev. Moon’s autobiography, As a
Peace-loving Global Citizen, he said, “The civilizing
mission of Ukraine consists in synthesizing European and Eurasian
values for the benefit of humanity and the world.”
Prof. Stanislaw Shushkevich, former chairman of the Supreme
Council of Belarus, and Mr. Rahim Huseynov, former prime minister
of Azerbaijan, also spoke of their nations’ course of
charting a course of independence.
Other speakers offered insights from the experiences of small
European nations relating with larger neighbors: Ms. Erna
Hennicot-Schoepges, former president of the parliament of
Luxembourg, and Ms. Silja Dogg Gunnarsdottir, deputy speaker of
the Icelandic parliament.
Focus on Africa and the Middle East
A panel discussion focusing on Africa and the Middle East
opened with a presentation by the Permanent Observer of the
African Union to the United Nations Amb. Antonio Tete. “The
quest for peace, development and prosperity on the continent has
clearly not been without challenges,” he said, “but we
are encouraged by the good investments made in these critical
areas through the established Africa-owned and led instruments and
initiatives which have yielded requisite dividends.”
Former President of Mali Prof. Dioncounda Traore reviewed the
conflicts in various parts of Africa and stated that without peace
and security there is no development and, conversely, without
development there is no peace and security. Former Kenyan
Ambassador to UNESCO Dr. Mary Mbiro Khimulu, talked about the
killings in Kenya and Nigeria in the name of religion and stated
“Becoming violent is not a religious tradition” and
that nobody should be allowed to misuse religion to harm others.
Interfaith prayers are the best way to work for peace,
according to Rabbi Dr. Edgar Alan Pochne Nof, from Bridges for
Hope in Israel, and Dr. Michael Jenkins from the Steering
Committee of UPF’s Middle East Peace Initiative talked about
the decade of interfaith pilgrimages to Israel and surrounding
areas, initiated by Rev. Moon.
Focus on the Asia-Pacific region
“The geopolitics of Northeast Asia has undergone a
fundamental change in the 21st century,” said
Amb. Chung Tae Ik, chairman of the Korean Council on Foreign
Relations, at the opening banquet. He called it “as radical
as the one that took place in the late 19th century
when the traditional order that revolved around China for several
centuries was overturned by the arrival of Western imperialism and
the rise of Japan.” The Korean peninsula has been an axis of
that change.
Rev. Moon envisioned a tunnel linking Japan and Korea as part
of a global transportation network promoting development for the
sake of peace. In a panel discussion focusing on the Asia-Pacific
region, ideas for advancing this proposal were presented by Dr.
Byung Su Kim of Korea, chair of the World Peace Tunnel Foundation,
and Dr. Shinchiro Nagano of Japan, professor emeritus of Daito
Bunka University, who gave a historical analysis of conflict in
East Asia as well as Europe and outlined practical steps towards
resolution. “Peace will not visit if nothing is done,”
he stated.
Prof. Georgy Toloraya from the Russkiy Mir Foundation in Russia
talked about the new challenges in the region. He raised questions
about security architecture, confidence-building measures,
preventive diplomacy and dispute settlement mechanisms.
Dr. Balmiki Prasad Singh, former governor of Sikkim, India, and
Dr. B. K. Modi, founder and chairman of the Global Citizen Forum
in Singapore, offered South Asian perspectives on peace and
development.
The relevance of religion for peace and development
In keeping with the founders’ conviction that the
foundation for lasting peace is in the human heart and that God is
the ultimate source of peace, the summit opened with invocations
by faith leaders, and the closing panel discussion addressed the
relevance of religion for peace and development. After expositions
about Buddhism and Jainism by speakers from Sri Lanka and India,
faith leaders described initiatives in their nations: in Israel,
interfaith prayers for peace; in Colombia, steps toward resolving
the armed conflict; in Canada, community improvement projects
involving youth from various faith communities; and in
Switzerland, ongoing interfaith dialogue. A Jewish leader from
Argentina spoke about the need for mutual acceptance among people
of faith, and a Christian leader from the US talked about the
common aspiration in all religions to help people become better.
Several speakers expressed the need for insights and wisdom of
faith in global affairs, facilitated by an interreligious council
connected with the United Nations, as articulated in the founder’s
address at the UN in 2000. UN High Representative for the Alliance
of Civilizations Nassir Abdulaziz Al-Nasser sent a statement to
the conference supporting the need for interreligious and
intercultural dialogue, and a statement by former UN Secretary
General Boutros Boutros-Ghali expressed appreciation for civil
society initiatives supporting the ongoing work of the UN.
“People realize that current efforts to resolve crises in
such places as Gaza, Syria, Ukraine and East Asia are not proving
to be effective,” reported Dr. Thomas Walsh. “Many
people are becoming receptive to a new paradigm for conflict
prevention and peacebuilding. UPF and the World Summit are
increasingly recognized as initiatives that are providing credible
and innovative approaches to peace in the 21st century.”
Founder’s memorial program
The final day of the summit, participants attended the
founder’s memorial program at the Cheongshim Stadium in the
hills east of Seoul on the theme of “Forgive, Love, Unite.”
Mrs. Moon emphasized her husband’s lifelong dedication to
“liberate our Heavenly Parent, bring salvation to humankind
and realize a world of peace.”
Former US Congressman Dan Burton conveyed a message from US
Senator Orrin Hatch about the US government’s tax case
against Rev. Moon that resulted in his incarceration. “I
believe that injustice was done and the treatment of Rev. Moon was
because of his strong righteous stance against communism and
immorality.”
At a luncheon afterwards, Dr. Sanguinetti of Uruguay expressed
appreciation for Rev. Moon’s advocacy of dialogue, efforts
to strengthen the family, and personal example of reaching out to
those who opposed him. “I believe his legacy will continue
in South America and around the world,” he affirmed. “We
all long for peace, and we will all continue to work for that
goal.”
For proceedings, click here.
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