
OCCULT CRIME ATLAS VOL.2 - JAPAN (part 1)
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À propos de cet audio
Wooooooooooo! This one gets pretty fucked up! Lots of bad stuff in this one! Occult murders, far right ultra-nationalist mysticism, spirit possession cases, roving tumors (yeah I said it!), "schools" for "spiritually gifted"/"psychic" children, future America's roadmap to theocratic terror! It's all in here!
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The Japanese Imperial March on Nanking in 1937: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7cufG2Dlxvk
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SOURCES (part 1...I probably won't have enough room to post all the sources so I'm just gonna do the best I can):
- “Occultism and Empire” by Hideo Suzuki
- National Diet Library Reports on “New Religions” (1940, declassified 1978)
- *The Occult in Imperial Japan* by M. Sugimoto (Kyoto Press, 1991)
- Translated excerpts from *Asahi Shimbun* newspaper (1912–1941)
- Internal notes from Japanese Imperial Home Ministry on spiritualist surveillance (via National Diet Library)
Primary Legal and Police Documents (Japanese Archives)
These are often stored in regional police history volumes or court reports:
Kyoto District Court Records (1916) – Case No. 明治45年(刑)第211号
Sexual abuse trial of self-proclaimed “Buddhist healer” using "aetheric alignment."
Held in Prefectural Archive Annex – Kyoto.
Tokyo Prefectural Police Report (1912): Raid on “House of Light”
Metropolitan Police Bureau internal memo (警視庁内部報) dated June 1912.
Refers to "Hikari no Ie" (House of Light) fraud exposure and material seizures.
Nagoya Police Bureau Case File (1921) – Trance Murder Case (大正10年)
Cited in Nagoya Shinbun, March 3–7, 1921.
Interview excerpts with surviving cult members.
Osaka Juvenile Affairs Unit Memo (1933) – Missing Child Following Séance
Memo recovered in 1991 during restructuring of Osaka PD archives.
Associated Case Code: 昭和8年(少)第17号.
Newspaper and Periodical Sources
Accessible in national microfilm archives or Meiji/Taishō-era digital collections:
Asahi Shinbun (Tokyo), May–July 1922
Coverage of the “trance-induced investment scam” by a self-proclaimed magnetist.
Yomiuri Shinbun (Nagoya), March 1921
Séance killing involving attempted possession by Amaterasu.
Public trial of sect leader in April.
Mainichi Shinbun (Osaka), June–August 1933
Ongoing reports about the child disappearance tied to spiritist group.
Investigative journalism hints at a larger child relocation ring.
Academic and Ethnographic Works
Mostly Japanese-language, with some English-language citations:
Helen Hardacre – Shinto and the State, 1868–1988 (Princeton, 1989)
References suppression of folk shamanic groups and "special schools."
Itō Takeshi – Religious Deviance and the Japanese State (1981, in Japanese)
Discusses early state efforts to contain cult activity in Meiji and Taishō periods.
Murakami Shigeyoshi – The Spiritualist Schools and Militarism in Prewar Japan (1977)
Touches on psychic child “grooming” and Imperial Army cooperation.
Sakurai Tokutarō – Spiritual Healing and the Decline of Imperial Morality (1934)
A critical text written before WWII censored by the Home Ministry.
Modern Compilations and Retrospectives
These offer historical summaries based on recovered documents or oral histories:
Hayashi, Noriko – “Possession and Murder in the Countryside: Rural Spirit Cults in Taishō Japan” in Japanese Journal of Religious Studies, Vol. 31, No. 2 (2004).
Kobayashi Masaru – Hidden History of the Black Ocean Societies, 2003
Claims links between spiritist children’s schools and nationalist cults.
Okano Tomoko – Spiritist Crimes of the Empire: Child Mediums and State Secrets, 2010
Based on interviews with descendants and recovered police testimonies.
Yomiuri Shinbun, Sept 11–14, 1934: “Asakusa Lens Sect Under Fire”