For years, they have traveled the back roads of Japan in an
all-white caravan, swathing their camps in white fabric. They say they are
protecting a sick prophet from an invisible enemy and the world from
Armageddon.
Most Japanese had never heard of the Pana Wave Laboratory cult until it rolled
into this rural community in western Japan recently, transforming a secluded
mountain road into a clinical white cocoon.
But as a police standoff began and pictures of the strange camp began
dominating the television news, something seemed eerily familiar to many
Japanese.
"The first thing I thought was, it's another Aum Shinrikyo," farmer
Kanichi Sakai, standing at a police barricade near the group's camp. "It
was so unreal I had to come see for myself."
A riveting event
The weeklong standoff was resolved with little more than a
show of force and the issuing of parking tickets. But it riveted Japan and
served as a reminder that cults such as Aum, which set up strongholds in the
countryside and carried out a deadly nerve gas attack on Tokyo's subways in
1995, continue to thrive.
The timing of the standoff was almost as spooky as the white-draped landscapes.
Just days before, prosecutors closed their case against Aum's guru, Shoko
Asahara, who reportedly ordered the subway gassing to provoke an apocalypse he
predicted only his followers would survive. He faces the death penalty for the
attack, which killed 12 and left thousands sick.
No link between Aum and Pana Wave is suspected, and the standoff was
non-violent.
The caravan, believed to carry the group's ailing guru, has moved around
western Japan since 1994. Before arriving here, about 160 miles west of Tokyo,
it spent almost eight months on a desolate stretch of road in a neighboring
state.
Seeking refuge
The cult says it seeks refuge from deadly electromagnetic
waves generated by power lines and controlled by "left-wing
elements." It believes white fabric helps neutralize the waves.
According to cult watchers and media reports quoting police sources, Pana Wave
was founded under a different name around 1977 by Yuko Chino, a self-proclaimed
prophet who preaches a blend of Christianity, Buddhism and New Age doctrines.
The group reportedly owns property in several rural areas and once claimed
several thousand members. Estimates of its membership range from several
hundred to 1,200.
Pana Wave says attacks by electromagnetic waves have left Chino, who is
believed to be in the most heavily guarded van in the caravan, with terminal
cancer.
Her death, according to cult literature, would deprive humanity of its only
hope for salvation.
Chino has prophesied that a 10th planet approaching Earth will bring massive
earthquakes, giant tidal waves and other cataclysmic changes as early as this
summer.
"This is a cult in its terminal phase," said Taro Takimoto, an
attorney who is part of a national network advising cult victims.
"Its delusions are getting deeper, and it appears less concerned about
run-ins with the outside world."