
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


On this episode of History of the 90s we continue our look back at the rise of doomsday cults in the years leading up to the new millennium.
The Japanese doomsday cult, Aum Shinrikyo, killed 13 people and injured over 5,000 others in a sarin gas attack on the Tokyo Subway System in March 1995. It’s believed they were trying to bring about a world war that would result in an all-out nuclear war. Aum’s leader Shoko Asahara convinced his members that only they would survive the nuclear war and would transcend to a new utopian society.
Aum Shinrikyo reportedly had 40,000 members in countries around the world including Japan, Russia and the United States. In Tokyo, the majority of their members were highly educated young men who had grown disillusioned with Japanese society’s pressure to succeed. With the help of these followers, Asahara was able to build a network of chemical labs and computer companies worth a billion dollars.
Contact:
Twitter: @1990shistory
Facebook: @1990shistory
Instagram: @that90spodcast
Email: [email protected]
Guest:
Paul Midford, Professor and Director of the Japan Program at the Norwegian University of Science and Technology
For exclusive bonus content subscribe to History of the 90s Patreon page.: https://patreon.com/historyofthe90s
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
By Kathy Kenzora4.7
544544 ratings
On this episode of History of the 90s we continue our look back at the rise of doomsday cults in the years leading up to the new millennium.
The Japanese doomsday cult, Aum Shinrikyo, killed 13 people and injured over 5,000 others in a sarin gas attack on the Tokyo Subway System in March 1995. It’s believed they were trying to bring about a world war that would result in an all-out nuclear war. Aum’s leader Shoko Asahara convinced his members that only they would survive the nuclear war and would transcend to a new utopian society.
Aum Shinrikyo reportedly had 40,000 members in countries around the world including Japan, Russia and the United States. In Tokyo, the majority of their members were highly educated young men who had grown disillusioned with Japanese society’s pressure to succeed. With the help of these followers, Asahara was able to build a network of chemical labs and computer companies worth a billion dollars.
Contact:
Twitter: @1990shistory
Facebook: @1990shistory
Instagram: @that90spodcast
Email: [email protected]
Guest:
Paul Midford, Professor and Director of the Japan Program at the Norwegian University of Science and Technology
For exclusive bonus content subscribe to History of the 90s Patreon page.: https://patreon.com/historyofthe90s
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

37,636 Listeners

764 Listeners

8 Listeners

9 Listeners

4,696 Listeners

568 Listeners

1 Listeners

6 Listeners

10,305 Listeners

1 Listeners

0 Listeners

1 Listeners

222 Listeners

19,168 Listeners

78 Listeners

1,725 Listeners

361 Listeners

4,207 Listeners

162 Listeners

5 Listeners

8 Listeners

58,066 Listeners

5 Listeners

10 Listeners

3 Listeners

54 Listeners

1,166 Listeners

270 Listeners

100 Listeners

41 Listeners

1 Listeners

0 Listeners

4 Listeners