Bitter Winter: Japan Masumi Fukuda's "Sacrificed to the Nation - Book 5 - Why Dissolving the Unification Church Is Wrong
2026-01-24 · Source: tparents.org
BITTER — HOME ABOUT CHINA v FROM THE WORLD v INTERVIEWS DOCUMENTS AND TRANSLATIONS v ABOUT EDITORIAL BOARD TOPICS p WINTER
You are here: Home » From the World » Testimonies Global Search
Japan: “Sacrifice to the Nation,” an N EWSLETTER Extraordinary Book. 5. Why Dissolving the Unification Church Is Wrong Email address: Your email address by Bitter Winter I Jan 24, 2026 I Testimonies Global
Fukuda proves that the first-degree dissolution decision was based on faulty and sometimes Mil fraudulent “evidence.” a review by Bitter Winter SU PPORT BITTER WINTER Article 4 of 5. Read article 1, article 2, article 3, and article 4.
( Donate ) = - c:a~ .i:l~ ~
MOST READ When Torquemada Speaks Korean: President Lee’s New Inquisition Against “Heretics”
Japan: “Sacrifice to the Nation,” an Extraord inary Book. 1. A Country Where Terrorists’ Wishes Come True Masumi Fukuda speaking at a symposium in Tokyo. Japan: “Sacrifice to the Nation,” an Extraord inary Book. 2. The Continuing the review of Masumi Fukuda’s “Sacrifice to the Nation,” we now reach Shadow of Deprogramming the final part of her argument, in which local hostility, activist networks, bureaucratic misconduct, and historical memory converge in a disturbing picture Ph ilippines: “China’s Troll Army’’ of how a modern democracy can slide into punitive exceptionalism. These last and the New Face of Influence chapters are the peak of her case. Fukuda writes with urgent clarity, aware that Operations the events she describes are signs of a more profound present crisis. Her Silencing the Churches: Why narrative becomes broader, more historical, and increasingly accusatory as she Korea’s New Rhetoric Threatens explores how fear can be created in neighborhoods, recorded in government Democratic Freedom documents, and eventually endorsed by the courts. Mamdani’s Dangerous Liaisons Ir,.!t::1 n~,rKPd ,bcd’i’ issUE:-”°d W:il/l,OllS !;r.:ioi5”h 1a,;,\’,g1/ nc,”ii (l’u ,~ ‘i’Er,1uem,., ,•J ,~a-: Yet, it quickly shows how deliberate fear can turn regular citizens into a hostile mob. When the Unification Church moved its local congregation to Seijo, the response was immediate and intense. Residents filed complaints and eventually LEGAL organized into a form of vigilante group. Fukuda paints vivid scenes: forty to fifty Privacy Policy residents gathering at every service, forming a human barrier at the church entrance, blocking members from entering, pushing them as they tried to get through, following them to the station, and shouting insults with a fervor that hints at something deeper than simple neighborhood anxiety.
Fukuda points to the influence of one resident-a lawyer connected to Masaki Kite and t he National Network of Lawyers Against Spiritual Sales-as a key factor. This person appears to have filled the community with rumors and worst-case scenarios. What began as unease quickly turned into a certainty: the church was dangerous, manipulative, and predatory. Once this narrative took root, it became self-reinforcing. Activists like Hiroshi Yamaguchi, Yoshifu Arita, and Takashi Miyamura soon arrived to hold a public “information meeting,” which Fukuda describes as more of a rally to incite anger than a genuine information session. Former members who had been abducted and confined by deprogrammers were presented as living proof, adding emotional weight to a narrative that had already been set.
The legal outcome-a settlement in favor of the church-might appear to provide vindication, but Fukuda highlights how empty that victory was. The landlord, whether under pressure or simply fearful, refused to renew the lease. The church ultimately withdrew from Seijo regardless. The message was disturbing: even if the law recognizes your rights, social pressure can still force you out. Fukuda concludes that the real instigators of the incident w ere not the believers but the lawyers and deprogrammers who incited the residents into conflict. She argues th at the Seijo incident is a small-scale version of a larger trend, where fear is not natural- it is manufactured.
In chapter 14, she shifts from the streets to the bureaucracy, focusing on the Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology (MEXT) and the
victim statements that underpin the dissolution request. If the Seijo chapter shows how fear can be socially constructed, this chapter reveals how it can be created administratively. Fukuda shares a series of discoveries that together amount to a quiet scandal. An investigation by the church-connected daily newspaper “Sekai Nippo” found several cases in which individuals listed as “victims” denied writing the statements attributed t o them or challenged their truthfulness. Some claimed that lawyers had drafted the documents and presented them as done deals. Others said the stories had been exaggerated or completely fabricated. Still others learned that grievances from different religious contexts had been mixed into the Unification Church case file, as if “religious harm” were the same across traditions.
MEXT headquarters in Tokyo. Credits.
The MEXT refused to release the documents, citing the trial’s non-contentious nature, but did not deny the allegations. Fukuda reconstructs the process through testimony from two former members, A and B. They explained how their statements were first written by lawyers from the anti-Unification-Church network, then revised by ministry officials. Each revision became more dramatic and accusatory, aligning more closely with a predetermined narrative. By the time the statements were finalized, they were filled with standard phrases- “ancestral karma,” “hell,” “spiritual fear’’- showing signs of bureaucratic templates rather than personal testimony.
Fukuda’s critique insists that, if the state can fabricate or enhance evidence to dissolve a religious organization, the implications stretch far beyond the Unification Church. It threatens the integrity of the legal system itself. She warns that a dissolution order based on such flawed evidence would violate believers’ rights and undermine public trust in the judiciary. The real danger, she suggests, is not that one religious group might be targeted unfairly, but that the state may decide it can target any group without consequence.
In chapter 15, Fukuda broadens her perspective further, placing the dissolution request within a historical pattern of state intervention in religious life. She argues that the current case resembles a “trial based on national policy,” a term that carries significant historical weight in Japan. To illustrate this, she references the prewar persecution of Oomoto, a popular Shinto-based movement. In the first trial, Oomoto leaders were convicted under the Peace Preservation Law, and the co-founder Onisaburo Deguchi received a life sentence. However, during the appeals trial overseen by Judge Tsunao Takano, it became clear that official documents had been altered. The defendants were acquitted, making the case a symbol of how unchecked state power can distort justice and how judicial conscience can redress those wrongs.
Fukuda sees an alarming similarity between the Tokyo District Court’s March 25, 2025, decision ordering the dissolution of the Family Federation. She notes t hat the ruling barely mentioned the allegations of fabricated statements. It overlooked the voices of current members, who would suffer the consequences. Instead, it relied heavily on incidents from decades ago, treating them as t imeless proof of institutional guilt. Human rights implications-the disruption of families, the stigma on believers, the chil ling effect on religious freedom-received minimal attention.
Oomoto co-founder Onisabur6 Deguchi (1877- 1948). Credits.
Her closing appeal is both rhetorical and historical. She calls for a modern-day Judge Takano, someone in the judiciary rea dy to challenge the state’s narrative and restore integrity to t he process. “Come on, Judge Takano Tsunao of the Reiwa era,” she writes, a line that feels like both a challenge and a lament, suggesting that she fears such figures may no longer exist.
Taken as a whole, “Sacrifice to the Nation” is more than j ust a collection of separate incidents or a defense of one religious group. Fu kuda has crafted a book that questions the prevailing stories of our time. She refuses to accept the black- and-white representations that have influenced public discussions about the Unification Chu rch since 2022. What strengthens this work, in addition to the extent of her evidence, is the moral cla rity with which she examines the very systems of accusation. She looks at neighborhood gossip, activist networks, bureaucratic shortcuts, and judicial oversights. By doing this, she reveals a t roubling trend that goes beyond any part icular group: a readiness, in modern Japan, to disregard fair procedures when a minority community is regarded as politically troublesome. Her argument is uncomfortable, and she makes no pretense that it should be.
The strength of this book lies in its refusal to turn away. In post-Abe-assassination Japan, public sentiment has hardened, and political motives encourage harsh actions. Fukuda asks who gains f rom t he story of victim hood and who gets si lenced by it. She pushes readers to consider that the state, the media, and activist lawyers might have worked together- whether intentionally or not- to spark a moral panic that now risks altering the legal framework for religious freedom. By drawing parallels to past instances of government overreach, she reminds her audience that Japan has faced similar situations before and t hat the loss of rights rarely announces itself loudly. It starts with exceptions, the quiet acceptance of extraordinary actions, and the idea that some groups do not deserve the same protection as others.
In the current debate in Japan, where the dissolution of the Family Federation has become a symbolic fight over broader concerns about politics, money, and social unity, Fukuda’s book serves as a counterbalance. It is a carefully argued warning against the allure of agreement. She does not ask readers to praise the Unification Chu rch; instead, she urges them to uphold principles that prevent any government from dissolving a religious organization based on rumors, retroactive moral judgments, or false testi mony. For this reason, “Sacrifice to the Nation” is a timely and essential book. It adds complexity to a conversation oversimplified by outrage and challenges a society that values social harmony to examine the
illiberal tendencies hidden beneath its surface. Regardless of whether one agrees with her conclusions, Fukuda has compelled the debate to confront its own assumptions-and that, in today’s climate, shows civic courage.
Anti-Cult, Japan, Religious Liberty, Unification Church
Japan: “Sacrifice to the Japan: “Sacrifice to the Japan: “Sacrif ice to t he Nation,” an Extraordinary Nation,” an Extraordinary Nation,” an Extraordinary Book. 3. True and False Book. 2. The Shadow of Book. 1. A Country Where Witnesses Deprogramming Terrorists’ Wishes Come True Jan 22, 2026 Jan 21, 2026 Jan 20, 2026
Email address: Via Confienza 19 oxa
- 10121 - Torino Your email address ■ Italy info@bitterwinter.org Sign up - c:J ➔ fiiiii iii!!l ’ - m. lll.&.il
Notice at collection Your Privacy Choices ~