Unification Church

Latest from Japan: when faith becomes a target

Japan’s treatment of the Unification Church signals and reinforces a broader erosion of religious freedom across the region. The concern is not confined to Japan alone: in South Korea, the arrest today of Chairman Lee, the 95-year-old leader of the Shincheonji Church of Jesus, on what appear to be unreasonable and politically charged accusations raises serious questions about the direction in which Seoul is heading. Likewise, in Argentina, Konstantin Rudnev remains in detention on allegations that are not merely weak but, critics argue, entirely void, a development that sits uneasily with a country founded on the rule of law and makes it look, at least in this case, uncomfortably similar to more authoritarian systems in the region.

Japanese justice persist on the path of religious intolerance towards the Unification Church

A year ago, we published an analysis by lawyer Patricia Duval, a member of the FOB Scientific Committee, on the situation that had arisen in Japan with respect to the Family Federation for World Peace and Unification, formerly known as the Unification Church, culminating in the request for the Church's dissolution.

The Proposed Freezing of Assets of Religious Corporations the Government Seeks to Dissolve: A Danger for All Faiths in Japan

by Bitter Winter — The proposed law immediately targets the Unification Church, based on controversial data about “victims” and “damages,” but establishes an unfair general principle with ominous implications for the future.