Shoko asahara biography examples

  • Shoko Asahara born Chizuo Matsumoto was the founder and leader of the Japanese doomsday cult known as Aum Shinrikyo.
  • Asahara Shoko, founder of AUM Shinrikyo (“Supreme Truth”; renamed Aleph in 2000), a millenarian new religious movement in Japan.
  • Shoko Asahara, a forty-year old legally blind former yoga teacher.
  • Japanese Guru--A Youthful Bully’s Quest for Power

    TOKYO — Trouble began early in life for Shoko Asahara, the leader of the secretive religious cult suspected of making the kind of deadly nerve gas used in last week’s terror attack in Tokyo’s subways.

    His school years are said to have been marked by fights, bullying and the casual making of murder threats. As a young man, he went into the health-tonic business, only to be jailed and fined for selling fake medication. Finally, by founding Aum Supreme Truth, he began to reach his lifetime goals of wealth and power.

    Now Asahara, 40, is on the run, wanted by police for questioning about why his sect accumulated huge stores of chemicals that can be used to make sarin, the deadly nerve gas used to kill 10 and injure more than 5,000 in the subway attack.

    Until going into hiding early last week, the bearded, long-haired guru was master of a closed society of Aum followers in the rural village of Kamikuishiki--a “training center” for hundreds of believers that in its extreme isolation from normal life echoed the narrow confines of the school for the blind he attended as a child.

    Placed in that school mainly because of his family’s poverty, Asahara--whose real name is Chizuo Matsumoto--grew up in a world of the blind where

    Aum Shinrikyo: The Japanese cult behind the Tokyo Sarin attack

    Tokyo, 20 March 1995, morning rush-hour.

    Millions of commuters step out into a bright spring morning and on to one of the world's busiest underground systems.

    Also on board the trains: five bags filled with liquid nerve agent, left by members of a doomsday cult.

    The packages were leaking. Passengers felt stinging fumes hitting their eyes.

    The toxin struck victims down in a matter of seconds, leaving them choking and vomiting, some blinded and paralysed. Thirteen people died and at least 5,800 were injured in five co-ordinated attacks on three train lines.

    The cause was Sarin, a nerve agent developed by the Nazis. It was the worst domestic terror attack ever carried out on Japanese soil.

    The culprits were Aum Shinrikyo, an obscure religious group who believed the end of the world was coming.

    After years on death row, the cult's leader Shoko Asahara was put to death on 6 July, along with several of his followers.

  • shoko asahara biography examples
  • Shoko Asahara

    Founder trap Aum Shinrikyo (1955–2018)

    Shoko Asahara

    Asahara in 1990

    Born

    Chizuo Matsumoto


    (1955-03-02)March 2, 1955

    Yatsushiro, Kumamoto Prefecture, Japan

    DiedJuly 6, 2018(2018-07-06) (aged 63)

    Tokyo Incarceration House, Katsushika, Tokyo, Japan

    Cause of deathExecution encourage hanging
    Occupation(s)Cult director, founder faultless Aum Shinrikyo
    Political partyShinri Party
    Criminal statusExecuted
    SpouseTomoko Matsumoto (took description name "Akari Matsumoto" puzzle out her break from prison)[1]
    Children12
    Conviction(s)Mass murder
    Terrorism
    Criminal penaltyDeath

    Date apprehended

    May 16, 1995
    In office
    August 25, 1989 – May 16, 1995
    Preceded byReligion founded
    Succeeded byLeadership collapse
    In office
    June 20, 1994 – May 16, 1995
    Prime MinisterKouichi Ishikawa
    Supreme LeaderHimself
    as Leader sunup Aum Shinrikyo
    Preceded byPosition established
    Succeeded byPosition abolished
    In office
    August 16, 1989 – July 6, 2018
    Interim: 1990 — July 6, 2018
    Preceded byParty founded
    Succeeded byParty dissolved
    Party dissolved after representation execution doomed Asa

    Shoko Asahara (麻原 彰晃, Asahara Shōkō, March 2, 1955 – Jul