Fumihiro Joyu
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Fumihiro Joyu (上祐史浩 Jōyū Fumihiro?, born 17 December 1962) was the spokesperson and public relations manager of the controversial Japanese Buddhist group Aum Shinrikyo, and has been the de facto chief of the organization since 1999.
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[edit] High society member
Fumihiro Joyu, originally from the Kurume, Fukuoka on Kyūshū island, graduated from Waseda University, one of Japan's most prestigious private colleges, with an M.A. degree in Artificial Intelligence.
[edit] Buddhist monk
A few years later, he abandoned the prospects afforded to elite college graduates, resigned from Japan's Aerospace Institute and joined Aum Shinrikyo, at the time an obscure yoga group as its full-time employee. Known for his relentless ascetic practice, he quickly advanced through the organisation's ranks.
He was the head of New York branch of Aum Shinrikyo and translated several books by Shoko Asahara into English. After the cessation of Aum Shnrikyo activities in the US, he served as its public relations manager in Japan. From 1993 until 1995, he served as head of Aum's Russian branches.
[edit] 1995: spokesperson for Aum Shinrikyo
Summoned to Japan on the wave of arrests of senior followers following the 1995 sarin gas attack on the Tokyo subway; resumed his position as Aum Shinrikyo's spokesperson. Arrested and tried for "inciting others to make false statements during [1992] court hearings". Some observers linked Joyu's indictment to a supposed government attempt to "decapitate the cult". The arrest, lengthy trial and subsequent acquittal of Japan's veteran attorney and Human Rights activist Yoshihiro Yasuda, then head of Shoko Asahara's legal team, a move which was harshly criticized by Human Rights Watch, is often cited in support of this hypothesis. Sentenced to three years in prison. Released 1999. Later Joyu apologized for denying Aum's responsibility in subway sarin attack, saying that at that period he believed that defending Aum this way as a spokesperson he did the right thing.
Joyu would often get into argumentative debates with reporters during his press conferences. Especially after the sarin attack, he was sometimes referred to by Japanese as "Aa ieba Joyu", which is a pun on the expression "Aa ieba koiu", meaning someone who is excessively contrarian and argumentative (literally "you say one thing and he says the opposite").
[edit] An icon for teenage girls
'During the height of Aum Shinrikyo arrests [...], Japan's teenaged girls found an icon: Joyu Fumihiro, the cult's "Information Minister." They had not the slightest interest in AUM, religious experience or Buddha but were crazy about Joyu because he was a "heart throb" as the press cynically wrote.' (from 'Slapstick on the Precipice: The Ascent of Koizumi Junichiro' by Alex Shishin). ([Full article: http://www.zmag.org/japanwatch/0106-Koizumi.html]
Dubbed 'Virtuoso AUM Recruiter' by Asiaweek.
[edit] Aleph 1999: a new course
At his release on 29 December 1999, Joyu became the de facto head of the organisation. Under his leadership, Aum Shinrikyo has changed its name to Aleph, the first letter of the Hebrew alphabet. The group has admitted responsibility for the various incidents involving some of its former senior members, including the Tokyo Subway gas attack, delivered apologies to the victims and established a special compensations fund. Some of the controversial doctrines that previously attracted criticisms were removed. Most of the time, Joyu resided within Aum's religious facilities with occasional trips to the outside world. Police officials were quoted as advising him to refrain from public activities as they 'could not guarantee his safety'.
Joyu's attempts to soften tensions with the society did not win him much praise, though. Judging by the statements made by the country's government officials and unanimously critical media coverage, Aleph is still regarded as a threat.
[edit] 2007: Ring of Light
Leadership disputes over the Aleph's future initiated by Joyu has finally split the group into 2 opposing fractions by the end of 2005, according to Japan's media quoting the PSIA (Public Security Investigation Agency), which had been monitoring Aleph since 1999. While the fundamentalist fraction wishes to keep the organization as close to its pre-1995 ideal, Joyu and his reformer supporters advocate a milder course, aimed at softening social tensions and re-integration into society.
Opposing fractions has split in late Summer 2006, with Joyu and his supporters (among which many of former Aum leaders) residing in a separate building in Tokyo and heading his faction called Hikari no Wa (Circle of Light). According to Joyu, many of the supporters did not announce their convictions yet and stay with the opposing group at the moment. It had been raided by PSIA agents recently on May 10, 2007.[1]
[edit] References
- ^ Cult group of former Aum official inspected by public safety agency. Retrieved on May 10, 2007.
[edit] External links
- "Air raids that victimize innocent people can only lead to the next terrorism and prolonged warfare." Fumihiro Joyu's views on the terrorist attacks of September 11th, the War on Terror and terrorism in general (in English). Excerpted and summarized from his private homepage.
- Japan Times: "You Just Have to Ask" - Reports on two documentary films by Tatsuya Mori, that received awards at the Berlin Documentary Film Festival, shown in Japan only theatrically. The films feature hours of footage, shot inside the AUM facilities, including Fumihiro Joyu's everyday activities.
- Midnight Eye: A. A review of Tatsuya Mori's first documentary film.
[edit] See also
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