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Tokyo, 25th April 2025 – Published as an article in the Japanese newspaper Sekai Nippo. Republished with permission. Translated from Japanese. Original article.

by the Religious Freedom Investigative Team of the editorial department of Sekai Nippo

prepared by Knut Holdhus

It’s based on “mind control.”

“Parents are told that their children are under mind control, and that it’s difficult for them to escape solo.” said Toru Goto (後藤徹), representative of the “National Association of Victims of Abduction, Confinement, and Forced De-Conversion”, during a commemorative lecture on 10th February 2025, for the release of his autobiography Shitō (Deadly Struggle), published by Sogei-sha. Goto himself was confined in an apartment for 12 years and 5 months by his family members who opposed his faith in the Family Federation for World Peace and Unification (formerly the Unification Church).

Christian pastors and activists known as “deprogrammers” (faith-breakers) are often involved in the confinement of Family Federation believers, acting on requests from families to forcibly make the believers renounce their faith. Parents are told that only specialists can help and, under the guise of “protection”, end up resorting to abduction and confinement. Goto explained this, describing such actions as “faith-breaking” [See editor’s note below] and “psychological lynching”.

One of the reasons why parents commit these acts, Goto says, is the belief in the “mind control theory”. This theory not only justifies abductions but is also used as a defense in court by those who carried out such acts.

In July 2014, a couple in Hiroshima Prefecture who were members of the Family Federation were abducted on the same day and separated from their children. The husband was tied up with ropes and had a black cloth bag placed over his head when he was forced into a vehicle. The wife, while visiting her parents, was tied by her wrists and ankles, shoved head-first into a sleeping bag, and transported by car to an apartment used for confinement.

The couple was released within a few days after managing to report the incident to the police. In May 2016, they filed a civil lawsuit in Hiroshima District Court seeking damages from the relatives and Christian associates involved in their confinement.

The defendants, represented by attorney Masaki Goro (郷路征記) from the National Network of Lawyers Against Spiritual Sales, argued based on mind control theory. They claimed the couple had been through a “transformation of personality” due to their faith in the Family Federation and always ran away from discussions. There, a minimal physical force was used to “give them a chance to think for themselves.” Goro (Gouro) argued that without isolating them from the religious organization, escaping mind control was impossible.

The lawyer also claimed the religious organization violated the couple’s rights to freedom of thought, religion, property, and the pursuit of happiness, asserting these conditions would persist for life unless the couple left the organization. Thus, Goro (Gouro) justified the abduction and confinement as lawful.

However, none of these claims were accepted by the court. In 2020, the Hiroshima High Court ruled that the confinement was a “malicious criminal act that posed a serious threat to life and physical safety.” It concluded that the act could by no means be called “minimal physical force” and was not justifiable. The court ordered the defendants to pay approximately 1.7 million yen in damages. The mind control theory was completely disregarded in court.

Though relatives claimed the couple was “constantly running away”, the wife, Yukie Kanamori (pseudonym, in her 50s), said they had been in frequent contact before the abduction. She said, “The discussion just went nowhere because our parents wanted us to leave the church, and we didn’t.”

She also recalled feeling a deep fear from her parents during confinement – as if they believed they had to make her leave the religious organization before they themselves became “criminals”.

If the prejudiced view that “the Family Federation is evil” is being stoked by mind control theory and used to justify deprogramming (faith-breaking) [See editor’s note below], then one might ask, “Who is really being ‘controlled’?”

Featured image above: A reenactment of Yukie Kanamori (pseudonym) having been forced into a sleeping bag and abducted into a van by several men. Image provided by the person involved, partially edited.

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