Mikao Usui
Mikao Usui | |
---|---|
臼井甕男 | |
Born |
Taniai (now called Miyama cho) (Gifu) | 15 August 1865
Died |
9 March 1926 60) Fukuyama (福山市) | (aged
Cause of death | Stroke |
Monuments | Saihō-ji temple (西芳寺), Suginami, Tokyo (杉並区) |
Nationality | Japanese |
Occupation | Reiki Master |
Known for | Reiki |
Religion | Buddhism |
Mikao Usui (臼井甕男, 15 August 1865 – 9 March 1926, commonly Usui Mikao in Japanese) was the founder of a form of spiritual practice known as Reiki,[1] used as a complementary therapy for the treatment of physical, emotional, and mental diseases. According to the inscription on his memorial stone, Usui taught Reiki to over 2000 people during his lifetime. Sixteen of these students continued their training to reach the Shinpiden level, a level equivalent to the Western third degree, or Master level.[2] Usui died on 9 March 1926 of a stroke.
Life
Usui was born on 15 August 1865 in the village of Taniai (now called Miyama cho) in the Yamagata district of the Gifu Prefecture, Japan, which is now located near present-day Nagoya.[3]
Although there are many stories extant in the United States that Mikao Usui earned a doctorate of theology at the theological seminary of the University of Chicago,[4] it is evident from further research that he never attended, let alone received any degree from the University of Chicago.[5]
Shugendō is a Japanese mountain ascetic shamanism, which incorporates Shinto and Buddhist practices.[6] The roles of Shugendō practitioners include offering religious services such as fortune telling, divination, channelling, prayer, ritual incantations and exorcism. Shugendo was often used by family clans to heal disease or to avoid misfortune.[7]
Family
Usui's father's common name was Uzaemon,[8] and his mother was from the Kawai family.[8] His brothers, Sanya and Kuniji, grew up to become a doctor and a policeman respectively. He also had an older sister called Tsuru. Usui married Sadako Suzuki, who bore children by the names of Fuji and Toshiko. Fuji (1908–1946) went on to teach at Tokyo University, and Toshiko lived a short life, dying at the age of 22 in 1935. The entire family's ashes are buried at the grave site at the Saihō-ji Temple in Tokyo.[9]
As an adult, it is believed that he traveled to several Western countries, including the Americas, Europe, and China as a part of his continued lifelong study.[8] His studies included history, medicine, Buddhism, Christianity, psychology, and Taoism.[7][9][10]
Usui's ancestors were the once influential Chiba clan and were Hatamoto samurai. According to the inscription on his memorial, Tsunetane Chiba,[8] a military commander during the end of the Heian period and the start of the Kamakura period (1180–1230), was one of Usui's ancestors. In 1551, Toshitane Chiba conquered the city Usui and thereafter all family members acquired that name.[9] Usui was raised as a samurai from childhood, specifically in the martial arts techniques of aiki (合氣術).[7]
Claims of Reiki's Christian origins
Hawayo Takata, a Reiki Master attuned by Chujiro Hayashi (林 忠次郎, 1880–1940), construed Reiki's history of development in order to make Reiki more appealing to the West.[11] To this end she made a relation of Reiki with Jesus Christ and not with Buddhism. She also presented Usui as the dean of a Christian school. While he had obtained the knowledge of Reiki from the Buddhist religious book Tantra of the Lightning Flash, Takata claimed that he had been inspired from the story of Jesus Christ, who had healed with the touch of his hand, and so had come to America to learn Reiki. She told this to spread Reiki among Christians too, believing it would otherwise be extinct. However, in 1994, the original manuscript of Usui was found, which claimed that Reiki had originated from Gautama Buddha.[12]
Teachings
It is believed that the aim of Usui's teachings was to provide a method for students to achieve connection with so-called energies, that would help them in their self-development. What sets Usui's teachings apart from other hands-on healing methods is his use of reiju or attunement to remind students of their spiritual connection. It seems that all students of Usui received five precepts and those with a further interest in the teachings became dedicated students. There does not appear to have been a distinction between clients and students in the beginning though this may have changed at some point. People began coming to Usui Mikao possibly for different purposes – some for healing and others for the spiritual teachings.
Activity in the 1920s
During the early 1920s, Usui did a 21-day practice on Mount Kurama-yama called discipline of prayer and fasting, according to translator Hyakuten Inamoto. Common belief dictates that it was during these 21 days that Usui developed Reiki. As Mount Hiei is the main Tendai complex in Japan, and is very close to Kyoto, it has been surmised that Usui would also have practiced there if he had been a lay priest. This teaching included self-discipline, fasting and prayer.
- “In April of the 11th year of Taisho (1922 A.D.) he settled in Harajuku, Aoyama, Tokyo and set up the Gakkai to teach Reiki Ryoho and give treatments. Even outside of the building it was full of pairs of shoes of the visitors who had come from far and near.” –
- “In September of the 12th year (1923 A.D.) there was a great earthquake and a conflagration broke out. Everywhere there were groans of pains from the wounded. Sensei, feeling pity for them, went out every morning to go around the town, and he cured and saved an innumerable number of people.
See also
- Alternative medicine
- Laying on of hands
- Glossary of alternative medicine
- Chujiro Hayashi
- Hawayo Takata
Notes
- ↑ Lübeck, Petter, and Rand (2001). Chapter 14, pages 108 to 110; Ellyard (2004). Page 79; McKenzie (1998). Pages 19, 42, and 52; Lübeck (1996). Page 22; Boräng (1997). Page 57; Veltheim and Veltheim (1995). Page 72
- ↑ Number of people taught by Usui: (Lübeck, Petter, and Rand (2001). Page 16)
- ↑ Rand, William L (2005). Reiki the Healing Touch: First and Second Degree Manual. Michigan, USA: Vision Publications. p. I-13. ISBN 1-886785-03-1.
- ↑ Arnold, Larry E.; Nevius, Sandra (1985) [1982]. The Reiki handbook (2nd ed.). Harrisburg, PA: PSI press.
- ↑ http://www.reiki.org/faq/historyofreiki.html
- ↑ tangorin.com. "Shugendō – Words – Tangorin.com Japanese Dictionary". Retrieved 27 April 2010.
- 1 2 3 Bronwen, Stiene; Frans Stiene (2005). The Japanese Art of Reiki: A Practical Guide to Self-healing. Hampshire, UK: O Books. ISBN 1-905047-02-9.
- 1 2 3 4 Inscription on Usui's memorial
- 1 2 3 International House of Reiki (2008). "Reiki History – Usui Mikao". Retrieved 27 April 2010.
- ↑ Beckett, Don (2009). Reiki: the True Story: An Exploration of Usui Reiki. Berkeley, California: Frog Ltd. ISBN 1-58394-267-X.
- ↑ Rand, William L. (March 1998) [1991]. Reiki: The Healing Touch, First and Second Degree Manual (Expanded and Revised ed.). Michigan: Vision Publications. ISBN 1-886785-03-1.
- ↑ Yogi, Dr. Bikasananda. Reki Mystery. p. 8.