Домой GRASP/Japan Japan cult spin-offs persist two decades after subway sarin attack

Japan cult spin-offs persist two decades after subway sarin attack

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Followers of Shoko Asahara’s Aum Shinrikyo split up after deadly 1995 nerve gas attack and severed ties, but there are fears execution of its leaders may renew interest in the doomsday cult
More than two decades after Japan’s Aum Shinrikyo cult plunged Tokyo into terror by releasing a nerve agent on rush-hour subway trains, its spin-offs continue to attract new followers.
Cult head Shoko Asahara is on death row, along with 12 of his disciples, for crimes including the subway attack, which killed 13 people and injured thousands.
He was arrested in 1995 in the wake of the sarin attack, but the Aum cult survived the crackdown, renaming itself Aleph and drawing new recruits into its fold.
Aleph officially renounced ties to Asahara in 2000, but the doomsday guru retains significant influence, according to Japan’s Public Security Intelligence Agency.
“[Aleph] is a group that firmly instructs its followers to see Asahara as the supreme being,” an agency investigator said, speaking on condition of anonymity. “If someone says ‘guru Asahara wants to bring down Japan’, there would be followers who would act. The group poses such a potential danger.”
Raids on Aleph facilities have found recordings of his teachings as well as a device used by the Aum cult known as a “Perfect Salvation Initiation”, a type of headgear that emits weak electric currents which members believe connects them to Asahara’s brainwaves.
Aleph and other splinter groups, which deny links to Asahara despite the claims of authorities, have 1,650 members in Japan and hundreds more in Russia, according to the Public Security Intelligence Agency.
It says the groups attract around 100 new followers annually via yoga classes, fortunetelling and other activities that do not mention the cult’s name, often targeting young people who do not remember the 1995 subway attack.
“Young female followers go to ‘training’ places with their children… We are worried there is an increasing number of children who have been inculcated by the Aum since they were very young,” the investigator said.

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