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Whacky Japanese "white" cult leader says nebulas will zap archipelago
Maianichi News ^ | May 8, 2003 | Ryann Connell

Posted on 05/08/2003 1:25:12 AM PDT by risk

Countdown to doomsday: What makes a cult leader tick?

By Ryann Connell Staff Writer

May 8, 2003

The 69-year-old leader lies in one of the whitened vans dying of cancer.

About the only constant in Yuko Chino's apparently soon to be over life is that other people have nearly always regarded her as something of a kook. Those who knew her as a child almost universally describe the ailing 69-year-old cult leader as a weirdo. Much of Japan remains befuddled as her white-clad followers from Panawave Laboratory drape unblemished cloth along the roads as they traverse the countryside in preparation for what they believe will be the end of the world later this month.

Chino, Shukan Bunshun (5/15) says, grew up in a slum area of Osaka. She left a lasting impression on many.

"She was like her mother, tall and pretty. She was pretty smart. But she was a real weirdo," a greengrocer tells Shukan Bunshun. "She'd walk along the road and then suddenly stop as though she was thinking of something."

A local tobacconist adds, "She was peering into the store one day and I asked her what she wanted. She just ran away without saying a word. She was pretty scary as a kid. She had about 20 or 30 cats she'd let run around everywhere. It was a real pain, so I asked her to do something about them, but she just turned to me and said, 'Haven't you ever heard of animal welfare?' and then did nothing about the cats."

A neighborhood association boss also remembers the young Chino.

"She hated people. I used to call her father, who was an accountant. If she answered the phone, she'd tell me not to call anymore. She bought some tape with sounds like a fax and used to play that whenever anybody telephoned their house," he tells Shukan Bunshun. "I can remember her walking her dog once. She was wearing these really skimpy hot pants. They were so short, you could see everything."

Chino seemed to have no problem with baring it all, as the boss' wife explains.

"I suppose she must have been in her late 30s at the time, but she was really into streaking, which was a huge trend in the United States back then. I remember her running naked through the town and her mother chasing after her. She screamed in pain when her mom finally caught up," the wife tells Shukan Bunshun.

Chino's mother was a Christian and Chino herself was baptized as a teen. She studied English before finding a job at a major company. In one of her books, she describes the unrequited love for a man she'd fallen head over heels for and how it drove her to attempt suicide when she could not get him.

In the wake of her suicide attempt, she jumped from job to job, settling on work at an American pharmaceuticals firm for a few weeks before giving up after developing a fierce hatred of others, especially men. She began teaching English in a room at her family home. Within months, a group of schoolgirls she had been teaching became her first followers. Marriage also followed, but it was less than conventional.

"It was a pure sham. I've never even met Chino. In the '80s, there was a rumor the Soviets were about to attack Japan, so Chino's followers wanted to move her to the United States for safety. I was working in the cult's Tochigi Prefecture branch at the time and was put in charge of arranging the emigration proceedings. One of the cult leaders at the time told me it would be easier to get people to obey my orders if I was married to Chino, so we filled out the papers and that was it. It was only ever a paper marriage," Chino's ex-husband tells Shukan Bunshun. "I was going to go to the States, and we dismantled all the cult's Japanese branches, but the emigration plan didn't work out and we came back and started all over again."

It was about this time that a group of young scholars inside the cult began to refer to themselves as the scientific faction. They began warning of the threat of harmful electromagnetic waves that communist guerillas were releasing into the atmosphere.

"Panawave Laboratory in Fukui Prefecture was built as a result of a search to find a place where there were few electromagnetic waves and Chino could be safe," a woman who belonged to the cult for 15 years tells Shukan Bunshun, adding that she was one of the few in Chino's inner circle who were ever allowed to see her face. "She hated being worshipped and was an intelligent and elegant woman. (Panawave Laboratory's) scientific faction had begun setting up "shields" of white cloth on walls by the late '80s, but the white garments that have become their trademark were not yet the norm. All the white covering was done on the orders of the scientific faction, not Chino."

By the mid-'90s, however, cultists were starting to dress only in white.

"Chino wore a tracksuit everywhere, but it had to be made of entirely natural materials. She never bathed and would go off by herself to a car and change her clothes," the woman says.

As the millennium drew closer, the white shields began to go up everywhere around the cult's complex.

"Eventually, members started taking Chino out to try and find a place with fewer electromagnetic waves. They'd take her out for one day and come back. Then they'd go out for three days and come back. That's how the caravan that's causing all the fuss now started out," she says.

Always hermetic at best, Chino has become almost a total recluse in recent years. Her followers also withdrew into themselves, becoming more insular and frequently clashing with outsiders.

"Whenever the electromagnetic waves started, Chino would get sicker," a long-term Panawave member tells Shukan Bunshun. "It's become more difficult for us to spread Chino's word, so most of our studies now are done amongst ourselves."

In Oizumi, Yamanashi Prefecture, Panawave members have built a series of domes they say are capable of withstanding any major disaster. Local officials inspected the site last weekend, finding dozens of dogs, cats, pigs, crows and even an iguana. It appears the group is preparing for the calamity it says will kill us all on May 15. So, how are we going to go? Chino, in what she called her final statement issued on May 5, lets us in on her secret.

"It will be caused when electromagnetic waves strike the Japanese archipelago and the delicate gravitational balance between the Andromeda nebula and other nebulas is altered."


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Foreign Affairs; Japan; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: cult; japan; shiro

Nevermind the North Korean bomb!

1 posted on 05/08/2003 1:25:12 AM PDT by risk
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To: risk
What you say!

(No, seriously -- I can't make heads or tails of this guy's rant.) <|:)~

2 posted on 05/08/2003 1:49:06 AM PDT by martin_fierro (A v v n c v l v s M a x i m v s)
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To: risk
White brigade Members of a Japanese cult drive their vans decorated with spiral patterned stickers to decamp from a mountain road at Kiyomi village in Gifu prefecture, central Japan, on Monday. The cult, whose members wear surgical-style white robes, flowing headgear and face masks, believe white cloth helps to avoid exposure to harmful electromagnetic waves sent out by communists. -- AF

3 posted on 05/08/2003 1:56:47 AM PDT by csvset
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To: martin_fierro
>>>> what you say

The "rant" is a cross between a city paper's cop beat style and sensational journalism. He redeems himself by making it clear this woman is a pure nutcase, and exposing just what her people believe (about the aligning nebulae). He lets the sensationalism carry our attention through to the very end, though. THEN he tells us the silly detail about cosmic rays.

But it's fun! I think people will do anything to distract themselves from the real fears lurking behind daily headlines that are far less attention-grabbing than this one :)
4 posted on 05/08/2003 2:33:16 AM PDT by risk
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To: risk
"Eventually, members started taking Chino out to try and find a place with fewer electromagnetic waves."

A: "Let's try that new place on the Westside. Great food and I hear it's got the fewest electromagnetic waves in town."
B: "Yeah, but no vibes. No vibes at all."
5 posted on 05/08/2003 3:46:00 AM PDT by ricpic
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To: risk
Always hermetic at best, Chino has become almost a total recluse in recent years.

Should be "hermitic" not "hermetic".

6 posted on 05/08/2003 4:01:07 AM PDT by wotan
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To: wotan
Main Entry: her·met·ic Pronunciation: (")h&r-'me-tik Variant(s): also her·met·i·cal /-ti-k&l/ Function: adjective Etymology: Medieval Latin hermeticus, from Hermet-, Hermes Trismegistus Date: 1605 1 often capitalized a : of or relating to the Gnostic writings or teachings arising in the first three centuries A.D. and attributed to Hermes Trismegistus b : relating to or characterized by occultism or abstruseness : RECONDITE 2 [from the belief that Hermes Trismegistus invented a magic seal to keep vessels airtight] a : AIRTIGHT b : impervious to external influence c : RECLUSE, SOLITARY - her·met·i·cal·ly /-ti-k(&-)lE/ adverb
7 posted on 05/08/2003 4:50:04 AM PDT by csvset
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To: martin_fierro

8 posted on 05/08/2003 4:57:37 AM PDT by Jaxter (Proud Republican voter since 1972.)
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To: csvset
Not very good driving visiblity from those vans. Definitely a road hazard. Haha!
9 posted on 05/08/2003 5:08:11 AM PDT by wolficatZ
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To: wolficatZ
Definitely a road hazard.

The cultists get a police escort out of town.

10 posted on 05/08/2003 5:13:43 AM PDT by csvset
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To: csvset
Interesting, but compare Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary:

Hermetic \Her*met"ic\, Hermetical \Her*met"ic*al\, a. [F.
herm['e]tique. See Note under {Hermes}, 1.]

1. Of, pertaining to, or taught by, Hermes Trismegistus; as,
hermetic philosophy. Hence: Alchemical; chemic.
``Delusions of the hermetic art.'' --Burke.

The alchemists, as the people were called who tried to make gold, considered themselves followers of Hermes, and often called themselves Hermetic
philosophers. --A. B.
Buckley.

2. Of or pertaining to the system which explains the causes
of diseases and the operations of medicine on the
principles of the hermetic philosophy, and which made much
use, as a remedy, of an alkali and an acid; as, hermetic
medicine.

3. Made perfectly close or air-tight by fusion, so that no
gas or spirit can enter or escape; as, an hermetic seal.
See Note under {Hermetically}.

{Hermetic art}, alchemy.

{Hermetic books}.
(a) Books of the Egyptians, which treat of astrology.
(b) Books which treat of universal principles, of the
nature and orders of celestial beings, of medicine,
and other topics.

11 posted on 05/08/2003 5:34:58 AM PDT by wotan
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To: csvset
nice of them to add bulls-eyes... ;^)
12 posted on 05/08/2003 5:58:56 AM PDT by Teacher317
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To: risk
Her photo, presumably when she was young.


13 posted on 05/09/2003 2:20:05 AM PDT by TigerLikesRooster
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To: risk

CATCHING THE WAVE Japanese police, fearing that the Pana Wave Laboratory cult is similar to the Aum Supreme Truth sect -- responsible for deadly nerve gas attacks on Tokyo subways in March 1995 -- raided 12 of its premises on Wednesday. Officers are seen here inspecting confiscated vehicles at a closed school where the cult members were staying near its headquarters in Fukui, central Japan. -- AFP

14 posted on 05/14/2003 7:30:37 PM PDT by csvset
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To: risk
Yep, pretty bizarre.
15 posted on 05/18/2003 12:05:07 PM PDT by occam's chainsaw
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To: risk
Photo essay: Doomsday Cult
16 posted on 05/24/2003 6:05:59 PM PDT by csvset
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To: martin_fierro
May 15th?
17 posted on 05/24/2003 6:12:03 PM PDT by Twinkie
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