Samurai sword’ homicide leaves three dead at Tokyo shrine

According to local media, the murders were sparked by a longstanding succession feud between the priestess and her brother, named as Shigenaga Tomioka. Mr Tomioka had himself been chief priest of the shrine having taken over from his father in the 1990s, Jiji news agency reported. 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. During those years, the suspect is said to have sent threatening letters to his sister and was arrested in 2006. 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. Shintoism is Japan’s indigenous religion. 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. Read more… http://ift.tt/2nGIOEW


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