Comments

You must log in or register to comment.

Ant OP wrote

Anybody heard more about who did it?

A right wing thing?

I wonder how much we should give a shit about what it means whether it was one of them or not.

7

veuzi wrote (edited )

From the looks of it, he wanted to get back at one of the religious cults Abe was connected to. He explained that his mother had gotten suckered into making a large donation for an unspecified "religious group", and that he had initially planned to assassinate the head of that group but changed his target to Abe when he was campaigning in his town.

Some people on Twitter who are familiar with religious cults in Japan and their political connections have suggested that the "religious group" he was targetting could have been Soka Gakkai International or Unification Church, both of which have connections to Abe's party and are known for using manipulative tactics to solicit donations.

EDIT: Looks like it turned out to be the Unification Church according to Japanese media

9

ikk wrote

EDIT: Looks like it turned out to be the Unification Church according to Japanese media

Behind the Bastards did a decent podcast on the Moonies recently, for those who don't know what that church is about.

6

temporary_ wrote

Can you tell me more about Soka Gakkai International?

4

veuzi wrote (edited )

SGI for short. Nichiren Buddhist umbrella organization, and one of the largest and wealthiest of the Japanese "new religions". Like a lot of the Buddhist-derived "new religions", it will teach you to worship a central object (in the case of SGI, a piece of paper or scroll with calligraphy on it called a Gohonzon, which SGI mass-produces and you must of course have to buy as a member) and peform repetitive chants (for SGI and Nichiren Buddhists in general: "Namu Myōhō Renge Kyō") that they say can give you anything you want.

Various former members have reported that as a member you will be aggressively manipulated to donate and buy the books and periodicals of their leader, Daisaku Ikeda. Leaving the organization has been reported to be a hard endeavor. You are expected to give back your Gohonzon even though you paid for it, and some former members have reported being visited at their homes over it.

As far as their political connections go, they have their own political party called Komeito which is in a coalition with LDP, Abe's party. Their party platform is conservative and the party itself is said to more or less function as a lobbying group to ensure that SGI stays tax-exempt, to exert influence over major public figures and to provide an easy voter base for LDP and its affiliated conservative parties.

5

temporary_ wrote (edited )

Thank you. I know a couple of people who are into this school of buddhism. I assumed it had a longer history, but from what I'm reading it's a rather recent movement, even if based on the beliefs of an ancient priest, so now I'm not sure if there is a clear distinction between the institution (SGI) and the school of thought known simply as SG.

4

veuzi wrote

SG is the Japanese arm, SGI is the umbrella for all SG chapters including the ones in the US and the UK. But SGI is still headquartered in Japan.

There are other Nichiren sects in Japan such as the Nichiren-Shoshu, Kenshokai and Shoshinkai. And they all kind of hate eachother but especially SG.

5

zephyr wrote

honestly, assassination (of anyone) doesn't put me in a party mood.

3