Religion:Shūkyō nisei

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Short description: Japanese children with extremely religious parents
Sun Myung Moon and Hak Ja Han, founders of the Unification Church
Sun Myung Moon and Hak Ja Han, founders of the Unification Church

Shūkyō nisei (宗教2世), literally "religion second generation", is a Japanese phrase, which refers to children being raised by their parents with strong religious beliefs. These children may be forced to practice the same religion against their will by their parents.[1][2] They are also called "karuto nisei" (カルト2世, cult second generation) or "nisei shinja" (2世信者, second generation follower).[3][4] These children are reportedly often challenged by hardships, such as child neglect, child abuse, psychology, finance, academy, and social independence because of their religious parents and the predatory practices of the religious organization. While the shūkyō nisei is a longstanding social issue in Japan, Japanese government has been accused of inaction.[5] Within the Unification Church, children born directly from the parents paired by the organization in the mass wedding are also called the "shukufuku nisei" (祝福2世, blessed second generations).[6]

In summer 2022 (During the Lost Decades and COVID-19 pandemic in Japan), former Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe was assassinated by Tetsuya Yamagami while he giving a speech at the upper election campaign in Nara, which has increased media scrutiny on the matter due to the ongoing murder and suicide warning signs in Japan.[7][8]

Overview

Testimonies from those who are concerned reveal that many of those children suffer from poverty caused by large donations that their parents make to their religious organizations. They also suffer from child neglect due to their parents disappearing for religious activities for several months at a time.[2][9] Many may be suffering from being forced to accept religious demands. Examples could include prohibitions on watching television, reading manga, attending a friend’s birthday party, physical contact with the opposite gender, visiting temples and shrines of other religions, and participating in other religions’ events, such as Christmas.[2][10][11][12]

There are cases where their human rights are violated by being prevented from enrolling in higher education[13][14][15] or finding employment. Moreover, some are forced to live with bizarre names selected by the founder[10] or forced to drink wine that is said to contain the guru’s blood.[16]

Some shūkyō nisei who want to abandon their faith hesitate in fear of losing their parents' love.[17] In addition, even if they are able to leave the religious organization, they must sever relations with their parents. Therefore, they often struggle when they need a guarantor for employment or relocation of residence, which is a common requirement in Japan.[2] Even if they consult a local government office or hotline regarding child abuse or livelihood support, freedom of religion may be entangled with receiving support, as many of these cases are handled differently from those involving livelihood protection or domestic violence. Some are told that the authorities cannot intervene in religious matters, and that family matters should be discussed within the family first and turned away. There have also been cases in which people requested restrictions on access to residential records of their new addresses in order to escape their parents, but they were denied on the grounds that the issue was one between parent and child.[2][11]

The vicinity of Kintetsu Yamato-Saidaiji station northern entrance, where the Shinzo Abe shooting-to-death incident took place on July 8, 2022.
The vicinity of Kintetsu Yamato-Saidaiji station northern entrance, where the assassination of Shinzo Abe took place on July 8, 2022.

On 8 July 2022, Japanese perpetrator Tetsuya Yamagami, who shot and killed former Prime Minister Shinzo Abe due to the ongoing murder and suicide warning signs in Japan while he giving a speech at the upper election campaign in Nara, which stated that he targeted Abe due to his ties to the Unification Church. Since his father's committed suicide by jump in 1984 (when he was four years old), Yamagami's mother joined the Unification Church when he was still a child. Later, his mother declared bankruptcy after donating most of the family assets to the church while leaving her children unattended and their illness untreated.[18] As a result, matters related to shūkyō nisei have been trending on social media,[5] and members of the Japanese government are urged to take drastic measures.[2][19][20] In October 2022 following Abe's assassination, an outspoken shūkyō nisei victim under the pseudonym "Sayuri Ogawa" called for the disbandment of the Unification Church at the press conference, but received messages from her parents via the church accusing her of being mentally unstable and demanding an end to the press conference.[21]

Government responses

In October 2022, Prime Minister Fumio Kishida had ordered his ministers to launch a probe against the UC to decide if the government would request the court to issue an order of removing the UC of its religious corporation status.[22] One focus of this probe was the allegedly illegal child adoption arrangement among the UC followers. The UC denied any organized arrangement.[23][24] In December 2022, when the Ministry of Health, Labour and Welfare submitted a second inquiry about the child adoption practice, the UC refused to answer more than half of the questions, and sent a letter of protest for the ministry.[25]

In December 2022, the Ministry of Health, Labour and Welfare considered drafting new guidelines which would define what kinds of actions constitute religious abuse against children to better help shūkyō nisei. These include intimidating an individual with language such as "[you will] be damned to hell" (地獄に落ちる) and coercing an individual into participating in any religious activity.[26][27]

In literature

  • Under the Stars (2020 film)|Under the Stars (ja) (星の子, lit. Child of the Stars) by Natsuko Imamura, a novel published in 2017 and adapted into a movie in 2020[1]
  • We Grew Up in a House Where 'God' Dwells (ja) (「神様」のいる家で育ちました), a manga by Mariko Kikuchi (ja) premiered in 2021[17]

In popular culture

The phrase "shūkyō nisei" has entered 2022 top 10 buzzword list in Japan, along with "kokusōgi" (国葬儀) which refers to Shinzo Abe's state funeral. The winning buzzword of 2022 goes to "Murakami-sama" (村神様), nickname of the famed baseball player Munetaka Murakami.[28]

See also

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 Tsukada, Hotaka (2022-03-31). "小説・映画「星の子」が描く宗教・家族・学校". Joetsu University of Education Research Bulletin 41 (2): 393–406. https://juen.repo.nii.ac.jp/?action=repository_action_common_download&item_id=8543&item_no=1&attribute_id=22&file_no=1. Retrieved October 8, 2022. 
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.3 2.4 2.5 Kiyonaga, Satoshi (2022-08-22). "旧統一教会と『宗教2世』問題". Japan Broadcasting Corporation. https://www.nhk.or.jp/kaisetsu-blog/100/472463.html. 
  3. Fujikura, Yoshiro (2021-06-22). "「カルト2世問題」の行方". Asahi Shimbun Company. https://webronza.asahi.com/national/articles/2021061500002.html. 
  4. "「教会のせいで人生をめちゃくちゃにされた」...『神の子』と言われて育った元2世信者が語る"苦悩とジレンマ" 自死を考えた際の"遺書"には「悔しい。悔しい。悔しい」". Mainichi Broadcasting System, Inc.. 2022-08-05. https://www.mbs.jp/news/feature/kansai/article/2022/08/090318.shtml. 
  5. 5.0 5.1 "Shinzo Abe killing: Why a religious group has been put in the spotlight", BBC News, 2022-07-23, https://www.bbc.com/news/world-asia-62173865, retrieved 2022-10-12 
  6. "『祝福2世』と呼ばれた女性「大人になっても苦労している2世信者は多い」 旧統一教会会長がほとんど言及しなかった"2世信者問題"" (in ja), Tokyo Broadcasting System, 2022-08-12, https://newsdig.tbs.co.jp/articles/-/123274?display=1, retrieved 2022-10-08 
  7. "安倍元首相銃撃の波紋 "宗教2世"の苦悩" (in ja), NHK, 2022-08-25, https://www.nhk.jp/p/ohayou/ts/QLP4RZ8ZY3/blog/bl/pzvl7wDPqn/bp/pBk6E6j184/, retrieved 2022-10-10 
  8. "Over 37,000 sign petition urging freedom of belief for Unification Church followers' kids", Mainichi Shimbun, 2022-07-30, https://mainichi.jp/english/articles/20220730/p2a/00m/0na/010000c, retrieved 2022-12-13 
  9. Nakai, Natsumi (2022-08-17). "「毒親」の背景にあるもの 宗教2世の生きづらさ、議論すべき点とは". https://www.asahi.com/articles/ASQ8J6WH0Q7XUTFL01R.html?iref=ogimage_rek. 
  10. 10.0 10.1 Shimada, Hiromi (2019-06-14). "親が創価学会の子の悲惨すぎる学校生活". https://president.jp/articles/-/28971. 
  11. 11.0 11.1 ABEMA Prime (2022-08-09). "電話相談もシャットダウン「宗教絡みはおうちでなんとか…」 自助グループを立ち上げた元2世信者の研究者". https://times.abema.tv/articles/-/10034611. 
  12. Nippon Television Network (2022-08-17). "統一教会"2世「自由恋愛は最大の禁忌」「3日断食」――"宗教虐待"周知へ署名活動「宗教2世を助けてください」". https://news.ntv.co.jp/category/society/5b725b8c33d2477db77f9f84814e5a47. 
  13. Hisanaga, Ryuichi (2022-08-19). "宗教2世の子どもは置き去り? 政府会合に厚労省不参加で疑問の声". https://www.asahi.com/articles/ASQ8M52S6Q8MUTFL00G.html?iref=ogimage_rek. 
  14. Japan Broadcasting Corporation (2022-09-05). "旧統一教会の他にも…"宗教2世"たちの知られざる苦悩". https://www.nhk.jp/p/gendai/ts/R7Y6NGLJ6G/blog/bl/pkEldmVQ6R/bp/pMoZaW8J9r/. 
  15. Japan Broadcasting Corporation (2022-09-05). ""宗教2世"旧統一教会・信者の子どもたち 知られざる現実". https://www.nhk.or.jp/gendai/articles/4698/. 
  16. Nippon Television Network (2022-07-19). "統一教会「2世信者」の苦悩 子供のころ"文鮮明氏の血が入っているとされるワイン"飲まされ…". https://news.ntv.co.jp/category/society/031a8c1ef6394cdd9b61c3131cca25ee. 
  17. 17.0 17.1 Ishida, Kanta (2022-12-16), "Balanced portrayal of religion unexpectedly well-timed", Yomiuri Shimbun, https://japannews.yomiuri.co.jp/culture/manga-anime/20221216-77471/, retrieved 2022-12-28 
  18. "容疑者母が旧統一教会に「献金1億円超」 親族が証言、夫の保険金も". 2022-07-13. https://www.asahi.com/articles/ASQ7F7428Q7FPTIL00Z.html. 
  19. Amamiya, Karin (2022-07-20). "「人生をめちゃくちゃにされた」安倍元首相銃撃事件、そして宗教二世問題". https://www.huffingtonpost.jp/entry/story_jp_62d78c10e4b06e213fb84cbd. 
  20. Oi, Mariko (2022-07-23). "安倍氏殺害事件で注目を集める「宗教2世」". https://www.bbc.com/japanese/features-and-analysis-62263700. 
  21. "元2世信者が会見も…途中で旧統一協会が"中止要求"「私が正しいと思って下さるなら、どうか団体解散させて」 一方、細田衆院議長は"伝言ゲーム"で追加説明" (in ja), Tokyo Broadcasting System, 2022-10-08, https://newsdig.tbs.co.jp/articles/-/173687?display=1, retrieved 2022-10-12 
  22. "Japan PM eyes launching probe into controversial Unification Church", Kyodo News, 2022-10-16, https://english.kyodonews.net/news/2022/10/dcac697578dc-urgent-japan-pm-eyes-launching-probe-into-controversial-unification-church.html, retrieved 2022-12-27 
  23. "旧統一教会の養子縁組、2018年度以降31件 調査に回答" (in ja), The Nikkei, 2022-12-06, https://www.nikkei.com/article/DGXZQOUF068QO0W2A201C2000000/, retrieved 2022-12-27 
  24. "Japan to probe Unification Church's adoption system", The Japan Times, 2022-11-18, https://www.japantimes.co.jp/news/2022/11/18/national/unification-church-adoption-probe/, retrieved 2022-12-28 
  25. "半分以上が「回答拒否」…"統一教会"養子縁組の追加質問 厚労省に抗議文送付" (in ja), Nippon TV, 2022-12-20, https://news.yahoo.co.jp/articles/883e573c7ad588f2aff079ba2868e0e5f2c59b95, retrieved 2022-12-27 
  26. "「信仰の強制は虐待」厚労省が宗教2世虐待めぐりガイドライン作成を検討" (in ja), Tokyo Broadcasting System, 2022-12-26, https://newsdig.tbs.co.jp/articles/-/252540?display=1, retrieved 2022-12-27 
  27. "Forced participation in religious activities to be classified as child abuse", Yomiuri Shimbun, 2022-12-27, https://japannews.yomiuri.co.jp/politics/politics-government/20221227-79777/, retrieved 2022-12-28 
  28. "Yakult Swallows slugger 'Murakami-sama' tops Japan 2022 buzzword list", Kyodo News (The Japan Times), 2022-12-02, https://www.japantimes.co.jp/news/2022/12/02/national/japan-yakult-swallows-murakami-buzzword/, retrieved 2023-01-08