Mobilizing the modest savings and the shared concern
of many is the secret to generating capital for all types of progress. The key questions,
however, are who will manage and who will use this capital. Small funds well used often
can accomplish more than large loans encumbered by bureaucratic restraints. Group savings
also induce people to think ahead for their own and a national future, rather than spend
immediately all they earn.
Organizations to accumulate savings by members were informally operating centuries ago in
several of Asia's ancient civilizations. It was the Germans in the mid-19th century,
however, who first institutionalized credit unions. From Scandinavia and the Rochdale
community in England, the cooperative idea spread to Canada and America and both American
and European missionaries organized credit unions in Asia. By 1970 national and regional
associations joined to form the World Council of Credit Unions, headquartered in Madison,
Wisconsin, U.S.A.
Sung-Ga, South Korea's first credit union, was inaugurated in May 1960. It was inspired by
the ideas and efforts of Maryknoll Sister Mary Gabriella Mulherin, who had been influenced
by the Antigonish Movement in Canada. AUGUSTINE JOUNG RYUL KANG, who became the first
president of Sung-Ga, and his associates were concerned with shifting the emphasis in
postwar Korea from relief to self-help. Through seminars they determined that a
cooperative offered the greatest promise of developing common bonds based on close human
relationships.
From a start of 28 members in this first credit union, the movement in Korea has grown
steadily. The Korean Credit Union League by 1980 had a membership of over 800,000 persons
in 1,467 credit unions with savings in Korean currency equivalent to some US$200 million.
Five basic principles were taught to credit union leaders and members: 1) each person is
important; 2) every man has the potential to become master of his own destiny; 3)
education which calls forth action is the most important; 4) self-help and a cooperative
spirit are basic to social development, and 5) working thus it is possible to narrow the
gap between the rich and the poor and to help people achieve both spiritual and material
happiness.
When the Asian Confederation of Credit Unions was founded in April 1971and
affiliated a month later with the World CouncilKANG was elected general manager. He
became, as he had in Korea, the moving spirit, enlisting devoted organizers of credit
unions. He worked in Japan, Taiwan, Hong Kong, Thailand, Burma, Malaysia, Pakistan,
Bangladesh, Indonesia, India, Nepal, the Philippines, Papua New Guinea, Sri Lanka,
Singapore and, until 1975, in South Vietnam, Laos and Cambodia. His unerring judgment of
people and his skills in patiently establishing amicable feelings among collaborators, in
providing creative ideas and in inspiring members, proved as effective elsewhere in Asia
as they had earlier in Korea.
KANG was born in 1923 and educated at Chinnampo, in what became North Korea, and fled
south during the Korean War in 1951. His deep commitment to applying Christianity to daily
life is at the core of his sustained efforts to make credit unions effective cooperatives
for better living.
In electing AUGUSTINE JOUNG RYUL KANG to receive the 1981 Ramon Magsaysay Award for
International Understanding, the Board of Trustees recognizes his practical democracy and
use of regional cooperation to foster economically and humanly sound credit unions.