BFF-26, 27 Decades after sarin attack, cults lure Japan followers

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Decades after sarin attack, cults lure Japan followers

TOKYO, July 27, 2018 (BSS/AFP) – Japan’s execution of a doomsday cult
leader and his disciples over a 1995 sarin gas attack may draw a line under
the horrific saga, but hundreds of people are still signing up to Aum
Shinrikyo’s successor groups each year, authorities say.

The last six members of the cult on death row were hanged on Thursday for
crimes including the Tokyo subway attack that killed 13, just weeks after the
group’s near-blind “guru” Shoko Asahara was executed along with six other
followers.

While the high-profile case served as a warning over the dangers of cults,
the executions are unlikely to end the allure of such groups in Japan, said
Kimiaki Nishida, professor of social psychology at Tokyo’s Rissho University.

“We know that their followers didn’t have a happy end,” he told AFP.

“But I’m afraid cults will continue to exist, since society cannot solve
every problem, while cults offer the fantasy that they have the answers to
everything.”

Aum successor groups have around 1,650 members in Japan, and hundreds more
in Russia, according to Japan’s Public Security Intelligence Agency.

It says the groups attract around 100 new followers a year through
activities such as yoga and fortune-telling.

Japanese have also flocked to religious sects that are considered cults in
some parts of Europe but are tolerated in Japan, including the Soka Gakkai,
which is based on Buddhism and has millions of members worldwide.

Unlike some European countries, where groups ranging from the Church of
Scientology to the Unification Church are considered “cults”, Japan takes a
relatively open view towards what are often simply called “newly emerged
religions”.

“The biggest cult (in Japan) is the Unification Church,” said Yoshiro Ito,
an anti-cult lawyer.

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He estimates tens of thousands of Japanese may belong to the group founded
by the late South Korean Sun Myung Moon, who is revered as a messiah by his
followers.

– Successors operate openly –

Self-professed guru Asahara developed the Aum cult in the 1980s,
attracting over 10,000 followers, including the doctors and engineers who
manufactured the group’s toxins.

The chemical weapons were deployed to devastating effect twice — in the
Japanese city of Matsumoto in 1994, and then in the 1995 strike, targeting
Tokyo’s notoriously crowded subway system at rush hour. The attack, which
also left thousands injured, prompted a crackdown on the Aum’s headquarters,
where authorities discovered a plant capable of producing enough sarin to
kill millions.

Escaped members of the cult and anti-cult activists had long warned about
the Aum, but authorities had failed to act, and even after the sarin attack
the group was not officially banned.

Two successor cults, Aleph and Hikarinowa, continue to recruit members and
operate openly, which some experts say makes it easier to monitor them.

Aleph, which Asahara’s wife and several children belong to, formally
renounced the Aum guru in 2000. But he retained strong influence and some
experts believe his execution may even boost his status.

– Looking for meaning, warmth –

Ito said Japan’s complicated religious history had left many people
unmoored from their faith and looking for answers.

“State sponsorship of Shintoism, with the emperor serving as a living god,
was forced upon people during wartime. The US occupation forces broke it up,”
he said.

“Suddenly people didn’t know what to believe.”

Buddhism and Shintoism are the two major religions in Japan, but the
faiths are falling out of favour.

“You used to have altars and home shrines in households, where you could
feel you were connected to your ancestors,” said Kenji Kawashima, professor
of contemporary thought and philosophy at Tohoku Gakuin University.

“New religions have made inroads where traditions have been lost. Among
them are radical ones, which are cults.”

A focus in Japan on economic success, and immense pressure on young
people, also increases the allure of fringe religious groups, Ito said.

“These youngsters are looking for warm hearts somewhere.”

With little sign that cult membership is falling, experts warn careful
monitoring is needed.

“Cults have their exterior, and their hidden faces,” said Kawashima.

“We should listen closely to the voices of followers who have left cults.
If we had done that, we could have prevented the Aum’s crimes.”

BSS/AFP/MR/ 1100 hrs