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A believer in the Oomoto maxim that it was humanity's duty to move forward together, bringing about a new age of existence on Earth, Onisaburo went to great lengths to promote the syncretic faith preached by Nao
Deguchi. He wrote the
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in 1898 and in 1899 they established the
Kinmeikai, later called Kinmei Reigakkai. In 1900 Kisaburō married Nao's fifth daughter Sumi and adopted the name Deguchi Onisaburō. Oomoto teaches that the guardian spirit of Nao is
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Throughout his life, Onisaburo was often quite flamboyant, taking delight in wearing richly textured costumes of his own design and posing as a wide variety of deities, mostly
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and poetic works. He also dabbled in cinema, sculpture, and pottery, leaving behind thousands of items that are now considered by many enthusiasts to be of great value.
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had previously been sent to China by the Black Dragon
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founded the Dai Nihon Shūseikai which in 1913 became
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Onisaburo had studied Honda
Chikaatsu's "Spirit Studies" (Honda Reigaku), he also learned to mediate
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In Ōmoto
Incident, he had been detained for about six years and a half since his arrest in 1935.
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Prophet motive: Deguchi
Onisaburō, Oomoto, and the rise of new religions in Imperial Japan
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He is remembered as a jovial patriarch of that school and is best known to
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Onisaburo's legacy is largely concerned with art, including a wealth of
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Women and
Millenarian Protest in Meiji Japan: Deguchi Nao and Omotokyo
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Chinkon kishin mediated spirit possession in
Japanese new religions
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Like most Oomoto followers, Onisaburo believed that the original
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Reading "The Great
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347:Japanese Religion in the Modern Century.
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262:松本健一 『出口王仁三郎 屹立するカリスマ』 リブロポート、1986年12月。
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398:The Moon of Onisaburo Deguchi
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199:. He would also dress like a
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333:The Great Onisaburo Deguchi
294:University of Hawai'i Press
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418:Japanese religious leaders
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284:Stalker, Nancy K. (2008).
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110:. He met the founder of
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237:authorities at the time
368:. LIT Verlag Münster.
16:Japanese shinto leader
453:Japanese Esperantists
345:Murakami Shigeyoshi.
318:Emily Groszos Ooms,
136:Black Dragon Society
423:Japanese Shintoists
296:. pp. 1–280.
375:978-3-8258-6899-4
359:978-0-86008-260-6
328:978-0-939657-61-2
303:978-0-8248-3226-1
233:the imperial line
229:founders of Japan
182:Reikai Monogatari
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412:Categories
250:References
166:Westerners
384:391386033
270:。 114-116
152:Ikki Kita
132:Esperanto
117:Amaterasu
216:Maitreya
212:Sanskrit
193:Buddhist
146:founder
140:Mongolia
121:Susanowo
112:Omotokyo
108:Shizuoka
94:History
75:出口 王仁三郎
448:Oomoto
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219:Buddha
205:Miroku
201:shaman
197:Shinto
174:aikido
144:Aikido
29:出口王仁三郎
308:JSTOR
208:Butsu
88:Ōmoto
380:OCLC
370:ISBN
355:ISBN
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226:kami
59:Died
43:Born
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