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From the time he was a small child, Chizuo Matsumoto wanted only
one thing, to be rich. It was quite an ambition considering his circumstances.
Born in Kyushu, southern Japan in 1955, he was the fourth son of
a poor weaver, who carved out a meager existence making Tatami,
the closely-woven straw mats, traditionally used as flooring in Japanese
homes.
Ironically, the family was too poor to afford such luxuries, living
as they did in a rough shack with earthen floors.
Poverty wasnt the only challenge the young Chizuo faced. Smitten
at birth with infantile glaucoma, he was blind in his left eye and
only partially sighted in his right.
Because of his disability and timid manner, he was bullied and teased
constantly at school until his parents enrolled him in a government-funded
school for the blind.
He quickly learned that being the only partially sighted child in
a class full of blind students had distinct advantages. It wasnt
long before he became the school bully, dominating and manipulating
his classmates into doing his bidding.
The pursuit of money became an all-consuming passion. He very rarely
performed favors for his sightless colleagues without extracting some
form of payment in return.
As he grew, his reputation grew with him. He became known as a person
who would do anything to gain notoriety and affluence. Many times
during his school years he tried, unsuccessfully, to become student-body
president. He never understood that his classmates feared, rather
than respected, him.
By the time he had reached senior high school, he was well developed
in both mind and body. His grades were good and he had earned a black
belt in Judo.
The ability to make money had also developed so much that by the
time he graduated he had amassed over $30,000.
His ambition continued to grow. He told friends that he intended
to join Japan's ruling political party and eventually become Prime
Minister. As part of his master plan, he enrolled in a prep school
in the nation's capital, seeking entrance into the elite Tokyo University.
His plans were foiled when, despite many months of study, he was refused
entry.
It was a bitter, angry young man that returned home to the village
of his birth. Shortly after his arrival, he was arrested for assault,
following an argument in a massage parlor.
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Tomoko, Chizuo's wife (AP) |
Several months later he returned to Tokyo where he met and subsequently
married a bright, young college student. Their first child followed
quickly, the first of six. His wife, Tomoko, became a steadying influence
in his life and persuaded her family to invest money in a clinic to
be run by her husband.
The Matsumoto Acupuncture Clinic was a success from the start --
due in no small part to the dubious herbal remedies that Chizuo peddled
to the unsuspecting public. These "remedies," accompanied
by a three-month course of acupuncture treatments and yoga exercises
were sold for $7,000.
One such "miracle-cure," proved to be nothing more than
tangerine peel soaked in alcohol. His exploits eventually came to
the notice of police after Chizuo had been reportedly selling his
"cure-alls" to elderly guests in many of the citys
luxury hotels.
He was fined only $1,000. A small sum compared to the $200,000 that
the scam had earned him.
Chizuo Matsumoto was close to achieving his childhood ambition. Money
was plentiful and his reputation as a healer, albeit dubious, was
growing. Despite his success, he yearned for something more, some
"purpose for being," he told his wife, that would give his
life greater meaning.
He delved into the worlds of geomancy and Chinese fortune telling.
Feeling the need for a spiritual experience, he began taking part
in weird religious rituals and spent long periods in deep meditation.
It was after on of these meditative states that he told of the rush
of "psychic energy" that had surged through his body, giving
him the ability to see the auras that surrounded "evil"
people. Chizuo believed that he was destined for greatness and made
plans to seek a way of consolidating his new found spirituality.
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