With less than a week’s notice, 67 alumni made the journey to Alaska in August to attend a 10-day workshop of lectures and fishing. The culmination of the experience was three days of fishing and picnic lunches with Reverend and Mrs. Moon. Barbecued halibut and sashimi on the beach, in the splendor of Alaska, together with the Founder.end Moon invited President Shimmyo, Reverend Sudo and all those graduates in the United States and Japan who do not currently hold “church missions.” The first seven days were filled with lectures, with the first beginning soon after the 5 a.m. pledge and prayer service, and the last ending at 11.30 p.m.. |
President Shimmyo gave the first presentation each morning, on the Divine
Principle and its application to life, and then surrendered the stage to
Reverend Sudo for the rest of the day. Reverend Sudo’s lectures were based
on a systematic organization of providential history since 1945 with other
insights into the Principle which Reverend Moon has revealed since Divine
Principle was written.
The purpose of the workshop, said Dr. Shimmyo in a recent report to the
UTS community, was “so that UTS graduates may have absolute unity with
True Parents.” He continued to explain that, “if we are engrafted, then
any fruit which we produce is connected to True Parents.” Dr. Shimmyo enjoyed
the many personal experiences which the graduates shared with the Founder,
including watching televised soccer matches late into the night in Reverend
Moon’s living room.
President Shimmyo related Reverend Moon’s expression of deep regret that
UTS was unable to fulfill his expectations. “Father hoped that UTS would
revitalize Christianity and he came here every day in the early years.
He said that if the UTS grads. had fully devoted themselves to the task
of reaching out to Christian ministers, then The Washington Times
would not have been necessary.”
Still, Dr. Shimmyo reported a sense that the Founder “loves UTS a lot and
continues to expect a lot.” This impression was strongly supported by Dr.
Dietrich Seidel (class of ‘77) who described the content of Reverend Moon’s
sermons for the UTS community. “Looking over us all, he said, ‘You graduates
are well-rounded people. You can successfully relate to the leaders of
society. There are so many beautiful faces here! Be confident! Be bold!
Our only limits are those we impose on ourselves.’” In particular, Reverend
Moon asked the graduates to reach out to Christian ministers, some of whom
are now attending the True Family Values seminars in Washington, D.C..
He reported that more than a thousand ministers have so far attended and
that 43% of these have decided to attend next year’s Blessing.
For Tom Bowers (class of ‘81), the workshop M.C., it was the spiritual
nourishment from the various lectures and sermons which held the greatest
meaning, “Whenever we had the opportunity to pray, there were deep expressions
of heartfelt gratitude, repentance and new determination. It was very spiritually
nourishing to me personally to participate in communal prayer that was
an expression of a need to pray in response to a meaningful encounter with
the truth,” he said.
Linda Howell also had a profound experience. “I feel my life has gone through
a dramatic change of heart through being in Kodiak. I finally found the
heart and love of True Parents again and my love for my brothers and sisters....Day
by day, through the lectures, brothers and sisters, and being with Father,
my heart began to heal and I could feel that Father loves me; I don’t have
to stay in this adopted daughter position of not taking responsibility
any more, I could begin to claim my position as a child of True Parents.”
At the conclusion of the workshop, Reverend Moon asked Dr. Shimmyo, Reverend
Sudo and Dr. Tyler Hendricks to be responsible for unifying and communicating
with all of the UTS alumni. These gatherings in Alaska will now be an annual
event for UTS graduates and so Dr. Shimmyo urged everyone to be ready for
the call next August.
Hiroshi Suzuki took his video camera to the Alaska workshop. He has edited the footage at Manhattan Center and has generously offered his 25-minute film as a fund-raising item for the Student Life Campaign. Donate $50 or more to the campaign and we’ll send you this beautiful video. See Reverend Sudo catch a 120 pound halibut! Enjoy the spectacular beauty of Alaska and the many precious moments shared by UTS alumni with True Parents.
To receive your video, just write “Alaska Video” on the remittance envelope when you send your donation of $50 or more to the Student Life Campaign. Please make checks payable to “UTS Alumni Fund.”