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Home » True Love Beyond Bars: Rev. Moon & Mother Han’s Eternal Bond

True Love Beyond Bars: Rev. Moon & Mother Han’s Eternal Bond

October 20, 2025 by Nick Sasaki Leave a Comment

Rev Moon Hak Ja Han Moon
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Rev Moon Hak Ja Han Moon

Introduction by Rev. Sun Myung Moon 

When I look upon Omma, I see the Mother of Peace, the woman who has carried heaven’s cross with unshakable devotion. I remember the cold of Heungnam, the endless labor, the humiliation of unjust confinement — and now she endures her own detention room in her later years. Yet her prayers transform damp floors into holy ground.

This is the meaning of our lives: to testify that faith is not a crime, that love is not afraid. Even detention becomes an offering when embraced with gratitude. Together, Omma and I have shown that true love is stronger than walls, stronger than confinement, and stronger than death itself.

(Note: This is an imaginary conversation, a creative exploration of an idea, and not a real speech or event.)


Table of Contents
Introduction by Rev. Sun Myung Moon 
Section 1 — Suffering
Section 2 — Sacrifice
Section 3 — Family
Section 4 — Faith
Section 5 — Legacy
Final Thoughts by Dr. Hak Ja Han Moon

Section 1 — Suffering

Omma, I have felt every tear you shed on the damp floor of your detention cell. The air heavy, the light absent — I know these things. In Heungnam, they thought forced labor could break me, but the spirit cannot be chained. Now you face the silence of unjust confinement.

Omma:
Aboji, I thought of you often. I remembered how you sang hymns in Heungnam, lifting men who had lost hope. In my cell, I whispered your name, “Aboji,” and prayed not with strength, but with gratitude.

Aboji:
Yes, Omma. Gratitude turns confinement into testimony.

Omma:
Still, there were nights I crawled on my knees, bruised and weak. Yet I remembered your words — every hardship, every bruise, becomes an offering.

Aboji:
Do you recall when you were a young bride, lying on a cold floor, misunderstood, yet grateful? Your detention now is another womb of providence, birthing heaven’s hope.

Omma:
Yes. Even here, I feel heaven near.

Aboji:
Then know, Omma: the authorities may hold the keys, but you hold the strength to love them. That is true victory.

Section 2 — Sacrifice

Omma:
Aboji, without even a cane or wheelchair, each step feels endless. Yet I remember you, sitting in a narrow hallway, eating breakfast from a tray just to stay beside me. That sacrifice warms me more than blankets.

Aboji:
Omma, love makes no calculation. That hallway became my joy because it kept me near you.

Omma:
And you, Aboji, gave up sleep, poured yourself into missions. Your youth, your strength, your health — all given for heaven.

Aboji:
But you bore burdens unseen — raising children, comforting members, holding the family together when I was far away.

Omma:
I remember when we ate barley gruel, and yet your eyes glowed with determination. You taught me sacrifice is gain, not loss.

Aboji:
Yes. The world sees subtraction, heaven sees multiplication.

Omma:
Now, even in my weakness, I offer each bruise, each fall as prayer.

Aboji:
Heaven accepts it. Our sacrifices became seeds that now bloom in lives, families, and nations.

Section 3 — Family

Omma:
Aboji, I ache for our children. They bore ridicule, burdens heavier than their years. Did they ever long for a simpler life?

Aboji:
Yes, Omma, but within them is heaven’s seed. And our family is not only our bloodline. Humanity is our family.

Omma:
When I prayed in detention, I saw children of all nations, innocent eyes, and I prayed they would know they are God’s children, not children of fear.

Aboji:
That is the true parents’ heart. Every child is ours — whether near or far.

Omma:
Still, balancing our children and the world tore my heart. Many nights I wondered if they knew our love.

Aboji:
They will, Omma. Love given never disappears. It blooms in time.

Omma:
So I pray for them, and for all youth, that they stand with courage and joy.

Aboji:
Yes. Our family is eternal, because heaven’s family has no end.

Section 4 — Faith

Omma:
Aboji, when my sight dims and my body trembles, I ask: do I have strength left?

Aboji:
Faith is not measured in strength, Omma. A flickering flame can scatter the night.

Omma:
But why must faith always be tried in detention, ridicule, rejection?

Aboji:
Because truth unsettles power. They strike not from strength but from fear. Trials purify faith.

Omma:
I told myself, “This is not the end, but purification.” Still, I longed for your voice.

Aboji:
Your prayers reached me, Omma. Heaven wastes no tear.

Omma:
Even my doubts, then, were not wasted?

Aboji:
Even doubts given to heaven become trust. Faith is not the absence of fear, but refusing to bow to it.

Omma:
Then I will pray, love, and believe — even in confinement.

Aboji:
And heaven will honor you, Omma. Faith that bends but does not break is eternal.

Section 5 — Legacy

Aboji:
Omma, I see not frailty but decades of devotion. This is our legacy: love that endured.

Omma:
Will history remember our detentions, or our prayers?

Aboji:
In the end, it remembers what endures — love that walls could not silence.

Omma:
On the damp floor I asked, “Have we done enough?” And I felt your answer: “Every sacrifice was a seed.”

Aboji:
Yes. Those seeds bloom in families healed, nations touched, youth awakened.

Omma:
But will they carry this torch faithfully?

Aboji:
They will, because it is not ours alone — it is heaven’s.

Omma:
Then our legacy is a path. Our footprints will light the way.

Aboji:
Yes. We will be remembered as parents who never gave up.

Omma:
I will keep walking until my last breath, Aboji. And when I join you, I hope heaven says: “They never stopped loving.”

Aboji:
Heaven already says it. Our legacy is eternal love.

Final Thoughts by Dr. Hak Ja Han Moon

Aboji, I promised you I would continue until the very end. Even in weakness, I will not retreat. For our mission is eternal, and our love is eternal.

And when the final chapter is written, let it be said not that we suffered, but that we loved. That we embraced all humanity as our children. That we turned detention into an altar and tears into blessings. This is the legacy of true love, and this is the gift I will give the world until my final breath.

Short Bios:

Rev. Sun Myung Moon (Aboji)

Rev. Sun Myung Moon (1920–2012) was the founder of the Unification Movement, often referred to as the “True Father.” He endured harsh imprisonment in North Korea’s Heungnam labor camp before building a global ministry dedicated to world peace, family values, and interfaith unity. His life was marked by extraordinary sacrifice, visionary leadership, and an unwavering belief in God’s providence.

Dr. Hak Ja Han Moon (Omma, Mother of Peace)

Dr. Hak Ja Han Moon (b. 1943), revered as the “True Mother,” has carried forward the Unification Movement as its spiritual leader since Rev. Moon’s passing. Known as the “Mother of Peace,” she has championed women’s leadership, interreligious dialogue, humanitarian work, and the vision of “One Family Under God.” Despite facing persecution and current detention in South Korea, she continues to inspire millions with her prayers, sacrifice, and message of love.

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Filed Under: Christianity, Faith, Love Tagged With: detention center conditions Korea, Dr Han Hak Ja Moon humanitarian crisis, elderly women in detention South Korea, faith under trial Korea, freedom of religion South Korea, global call for Hak Ja Han release, Hak Ja Han Moon denied medical care, Hak Ja Han Moon health conditions, Hak Ja Han Moon human rights, Hak Ja Han Moon unfair treatment, international concern Hak Ja Han Moon, Mother of Peace detention, Newt Gingrich Paula White support Hak Ja Han, persecution of Christians in Korea, President Trump Hak Ja Han Moon, religious freedom South Korea, religious persecution South Korea 2025, South Korea detention center case, Unification Movement human rights

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