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Samurai War lives again @Tomioka Hachimangu shrine 3 killed! Banzai!

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http://www.bbc.com/news/world-asia-42275875
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'Samurai sword' attack leaves three dead at Tokyo shrine
  • 8 December 2017
Image copyright Kyodo/Reuters
An attack believed to have been sparked by a succession feud has left three people dead at a well-known Shinto shrine in Tokyo.

The chief priestess was stabbed to death, reportedly by her brother. A bloodied Samurai sword was found at the scene, along with other knives.

The attacker's wife also took part in the ambush on Thursday evening, police say, injuring the priestess's driver.

The male attacker then stabbed his wife to death before killing himself.

A longstanding feud
The attack began when the 58-year-old priestess, Nagako Tomioka, got out of her car at the shrine and was confronted by her brother, Shigenaga Tomioka, 56, and his wife, said to be in her 30s.

The wife reportedly attacked the priestess's driver, stabbing him with a sword. The driver fled the scene, pursued by the woman. Police said there was a trail of blood down the road but the driver's wounds were not life-threatening.

The priestess suffered a deep stab wound to her chest, along with a laceration on the back of her neck, and was later pronounced dead.

The suspects then moved to another part of the shrine's grounds.

"We believe the male suspect stabbed the woman before stabbing himself," a police spokesman said.

Shinto in Japan
Shintoism is Japan's indigenous religion. The essence of Shinto is its spirits, or kami, to which its followers are devoted. The kami are said to intervene in human lives if treated well by followers.

The shrine is an essential part of Shinto. Along with rituals, the shrines are used to communicate with the kami. Devotees have a close relationship with their local shrine and often have a small shrine-altar at home.

Shinto is regarded as less of a religion, more as a way of life.

The name Shinto comes from Chinese characters for Shen (divine being), and Tao (way) and means Way of the Spirits.

There are some 80,000 shrines, and about as many Shinto priests, in Japan but female priests make up only a tiny fraction of the number.

About 80% of Japan's population practise some form of Shinto.

According to local media, the murders were sparked by a longstanding succession feud between the priestess and her brother.

Mr Tomioka had himself been chief priest of the shrine, having taken over from his father in the 1990s, according to the Asahi Shimbun.

However, he was sacked in 2001 and their father returned to the position as main priest, installing his daughter Nagako Tomioka as the second-ranked in the shrine. It was not clear why he was removed.

During those years, the suspect is said to have sent threatening letters to his sister and was arrested in 2006 after sending her a note saying he would "send her to hell".

After their father retired in 2010, Ms Tomioka became the chief priestess, breaking with a Shinto shrine umbrella organisation after it failed to rubberstamp the succession, according to the Asahi Shimbun.

The Tomioka Hachimangu shrine dates back to 1627 and is famous for the Fukagawa Hachiman summer festival in August.

According to its website, it was among those to start the tradition in Edo (now Tokyo) of holding sumo tournaments on its grounds to attract visitors and donations - a custom still common at many Shinto shrines.

Japan's emperor and empress visited the shrine in 2012.

 

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http://www.newsweek.com/samurai-swo...e-ancient-tokyo-shrine-apparent-family-741952


Samurai Sword Murder-Suicide Kills Three at Ancient Tokyo Shrine in Apparent Family Feud
By Sofia Lotto Persio On 12/8/17 at 5:28 AM
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World Japan Shintoism Tokyo
An ancient Shinto shrine in Tokyo became a crime scene on Thursday after an apparent family feud escalated into a tragic murder-suicide.

A 56-year-old man named Shigenaga Tomioka attacked his 58-year-old sister, Nagako Tomioka, who was the Tomioka Hachiman shrine’s chief priestess, Asahi Shimbun reported. Shigenaga, the former high priest of the shrine, apparently was embittered after being fired in 2001, and ambushed his sibling and successor with the help of his wife, Mariko.

All three were pronounced dead after the attack.

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According to the Tokyo Metropolitan Police, who reviewed the area’s security camera footage, the man and his wife lay in wait behind a nearby building for the priestess to arrive by car. After Nagako got out of the vehicle, Shigenaga sprinted toward her brandishing a sword with a 31-inch blade, stabbing her in the back of her head and in the chest.

At the same time, Mariko chased and attacked Nagako’s 33-year-old driver, whose name was not mentioned in the reports, as he fled the scene, slashing his right arm with a sword whose blade was roughly half the size of Shigenaga’s.

The camera footage then showed the couple moving to an area near the residential part of the shrine, where Shigenaga stabbed his wife before turning the blade on himself. Authorities reported that both of their bodies suffered injuries to the chest and abdomen.

In total, four blades were found at the scene: Shigenaga’s samurai sword, a shorter sword and two survival knives, Japanese news agency Kyodo News reported.

128tokyoshrine.jpg
A policeman stands guard in front of Tokyo's Tomioka Hachiman shrine after three people died in an apparent murder-suicide on December 8. Kyodo/via Reuters

The police are trying to establish the exact motive for the attack, but the family feud, spurred by issues related to the priesthood at the shrine, is well documented. Shigenaga initially succeeded his father as the shrine’s chief priest but was suddenly fired in 2001. His father returned to the role before passing on the duties to Nagako.

According to sources quoted in local media, Nagako first approached the police over family- succession issues in 2002. In 2006 Shigenaga was arrested on a blackmailing charge after sending his sister a note that read: “I will send you to hell.”

The Tomioka Hachiman Shrine, which is popular with tourists, is the largest in Japan’s capital dedicated to the Shinto deity Hachiman, protector of warriors and also referred to as the god of war. The shrine started hosting sumo tournaments in 1684, contributing to the establishment of the ancient sport in its present-day form, and now hosts a popular annual summer festival.

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https://www.npr.org/sections/thetwo...ai-sword-attack-at-tokyo-shrine-leaves-3-dead

'Samurai Sword' Attack At Tokyo Shrine Leaves 3 Dead
December 8, 20173:05 AM ET
Scott Neuman

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ap_17342114471169-36fb164ca1cc38f7db193f24932774e662cc61c6-s1100-c15.jpg


People visit Tomioka Hachimangu shrine in Tokyo on Friday, the day after police say three people were killed in a stabbing attack.

Eugene Hoshiko/AP
An apparent murder-suicide involving a samurai sword at a Tokyo religious shrine has left the head priestess dead, along with her assailant brother and his girlfriend.

Thursday night's attack at the Tomioka Hachimangu shrine, established in 1627, was captured by nearby security cameras.

Tokyo's Metropolitan Police believe that Shigenaga Tomioka, 56, and his girlfriend, thought to be in her 30s, ambushed his 58-year-old sister, Nagako Tomioka, who was the shrine's chief priestess. The sister's chauffeur was also attacked.

The Japan Times reports that police suspect that Shigenaga Tomioka killed his sister, stabbing her in the chest and stomach with a knife as his companion chased down the driver with a traditional Japanese sword, slashing him in the arm and chest. His injuries were nonetheless not life-threatening, the newspaper said.

According to the Times, "The two attackers then moved to the shrine premises, where Shigenaga Tomioka stabbed his accomplice in the chest and stomach and then stabbed himself in the left side of the chest multiple times."

The Kyodo news agency reports that a single samurai sword was found at the scene, but the newspaper says two were found.

The Times says authorities suspect a dispute between the brother and sister over the Shinto shrine's chief priest position.

The newspaper reports: "Shigenaga Tomioka was arrested some 10 years ago for blackmailing his sister. After he left the post of chief priest in 2001, he sent a threatening postcard to his sister in January 2006 in which he wrote, among other things, that he would send her to hell."

The BBC, quoting the newspaper Asahi Shimbun, adds that Shigenaga Tomioka, who had assumed the head priest's position from his father in the 1990s, was in fact fired from the post. His father was reinstalled and subsequently appointed his daughter, Nagako, to the position of chief priestess, or negi — No. 2 in the shrine's hierarchy.

 

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https://www.japantimes.co.jp/news/2...bs-two-women-tokyo-shrine-kills/#.WivMxCclGKk

Female chief priest and her two attackers dead in Tokyo Shinto shrine stabbings
JIJI

A violent attack with Japanese swords and survival knives at Tokyo’s famed Tomioka Hachimangu shrine has left three dead — including the chief priestess and her brother — in an apparent family feud that turned deadly.

Head priestess Nagako Tomioka, 58, and the two suspected attackers, her brother Shigenaga, 56, and a woman in her 30s, died Thursday evening, Metropolitan Police Department sources said.




After attacking his sister, Shigenaga Tomioka apparently killed the female suspect and then himself, police sources added.

Nagako Tomioka’s driver, 33, was also seriously injured in the attack.

Authorities suspect a row between the brother and sister over the shine’s chief priest position had prompted the apparent murder-suicide.

After receiving emergency reports of a rampage with a blade, police rushed to the site and found four bleeding people near the shrine in the Tomioka district of Tokyo’s Koto Ward.

The four were sent to a hospital, where the three were confirmed dead.

The attack began around 8:25 p.m., when Shigenaga Tomioka attacked his sister with a Japanese sword as she exited her car on the shrine grounds.

The female suspect, meanwhile, chased down Tomioka’s driver, who had tried to escape on foot, and attacked him about 100 meters away. The driver suffered injuries to his right arm and chest, though they were not life-threatening.

The two attackers then moved to the shrine premises, where Shigenaga Tomioka stabbed the woman in the chest and stomach and then stabbed himself in the left side of the chest multiple times.

Police said the attacks were captured by security cameras and that two survival knives and two Japanese swords were left at the scene.

Shigenaga Tomioka was arrested some 10 years ago for blackmailing his sister. After he left the post of chief priest in 2001, he sent a threatening postcard to his sister in January 2006 in which he wrote, among other things, that he would send her to hell.

At the time, his sister had held a post known as negi, the second-highest rank at a Shinto shrine after the chief priest.

The shrine, established in 1627, is known for its annual Fukagawa Hachiman festival, one of Tokyo’s three major festivals from the Edo period. The shrine, located roughly 100 meters east of Monzen-Nakacho Station, also has close links with the sumo world.

Tomioka Hachimangu found itself in hot water with the Jinja Honcho (Association of Shinto Shrines) in 2010 over the appointment of the shrine’s chief priest. The shrine left the association on Sept. 28 this year and Nagako Tomioka became the chief priest shortly after.

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Keywords
Tokyo, mass murder, Koto Ward, Tomioka Hachimangu Shrine, Nagako Tomioka

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https://hk.news.yahoo.com/繼承權紛爭-東京神社女宮司被斬死-221126800.html

繼承權紛爭 東京神社女宮司被斬死

星島日報

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2017年12月9日 上午6:11
【星島日報報道】(星島日報報道)東京周四晚上發生駭人命案。江東區神道教神社「富岡八幡宮」的五十八歲女宮司(相等於佛寺住持)富岡長子,被人用武士刀斬死,疑兇其後殺死女同黨後自殺。女宮司的三十三歲男司機則受傷。據日媒報道,疑犯與女宮司兩姊弟因繼承神社問題積怨多年。

事發於當地周四晚上約八時半,根據監控錄像,富岡長子乘車抵達現場,下車即遭躲在暗處的富岡茂永(五十六歲)及可能是其妻子的女同黨襲擊。警方接報到場,發現有四人倒地,鮮血淋漓,都是被利刀砍傷。警員在神社內檢獲一把折斷的染血武士長刀、一把短刀及一把求生刀。三人在案發後不久證實死亡,相信是疑兇殺死了姊姊後,再砍殺女同黨,然後自盡。

探員說,疑兇和他的同黨有預謀行事,躲在富岡長子的房子後面,待她出來便伏擊。疑兇負責追斬富岡長子,而女同黨則追斬司機。司機慌忙逃走,狂奔一百米走到神社外面的街上,在現場遺下一條血路。他手上有傷,倒在路上。

日本傳媒報道,死者及疑兇兩姊弟為了繼承神社、爭奪宮司職位長期不和。富岡茂永曾於一九九○年代繼承父親,成為神社宮司,但二○○一年被開除,由父親再度出任宮司。其後父親提拔女兒富岡長子任神社第二把手,富岡長子曾於二○○二年向警方尋求幫助,稱「在煩惱有親人對於自己宮司一職的地位有異議」。

二○○六年,富岡茂永曾寄寫有「今年就要做個了結,多年積恨,下地獄吧」的恐嚇明信片給姊姊,因而被捕及遭起訴。兩人的父親在二○一○年正式退休,之後由富岡長子擔任女宮司,但她未獲當地神社聯合組織的認可,因此脫離聯合組織。


睇更多" data-reactid="16">富岡八幡宮創建於江戶時代初期,可追溯至一六二七年,即有近四百年歷史,是知名的日本宮廟。
 
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