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Thousands of 'Moonies' marry in first mass wedding after founder's death

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Some 3,500 couples took part in the Unification Church's mass wedding ceremony. Photo: AFP

Thousands of Unification Church members got married in a mass wedding in South Korea on Sunday – the first since the death of their “messiah” and controversial church founder Sun Myung-moon.

Some 3,500 identically-dressed couples – many of mixed nationality who had met just days before – took part in the ceremony at the church’s global headquarters in Gapyeong, east of the capital Seoul.

Mass weddings, some held in giant sports stadia with tens of thousands of couples, have long been a signature feature of the church and one that “Moonie” critics have pointed to as evidence of cult underpinnings.

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Sunday’s event carried a special resonance, with Moon’s 70-year-old widow Hak Ja-han presiding for the first time without her husband who died five months ago, aged 92, of complications from pneumonia.

The church’s mass weddings began in the early 1960s. At first, they involved just a few dozen couples but the numbers mushroomed over the years.

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In 1997, 30,000 couples tied the knot in Washington, and two years later about 21,000 filled the Olympic Stadium in Seoul.

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