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Articles:
Gratitude
Speech
Ruby
Orendain
Good-Bye
Neil
Fukui
Global
News
Sensei
Eugene Imai
Journeying
with
the Divine Light
Gil
Reoma
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FROM SHUMEI MAGAZINE, VOL: 254, NOVEMBER/DECEMBER 2004
Journeying with the Divine Light
A Personal Testimony of Physical Healing and Spiritual Health
Gil Reoma (Baguio City, Philippines)
My encounter with Shumei started with a friendship way back
in 1997. I was then working with a private voluntary organization based
in Quezon City that dealt with social and environmental issues. One of
my jobs in this organization was to organize a social exposure program
for both Filipinos and non–Filipinos.
One of those who participated in this social immersion activity that I
coordinated was Neil Fukui, a Japanese gentleman who had just arrived
from Tokyo and was looking for ways to integrate himself into the social
environment of Metro Manila. The social exposure program fit his personal
need to know our Filipino ways of living and the social environment in
which he wanted to put down roots. It was also an appropriate opportunity
for him to learn both Tagalog and English. I accompanied Neil to a rather
congested community in Quezon City where my organization at the time,
Green Forum Philippines, was coordinating a program on Solid Waste Management.
Here Neil stayed for three days with one of the families I contacted as
hosts for the social exposure program. Those three days turned out to
be the beginning of a sustained friendship between Neil and the community
members. Those important three days were also the starting period of my
friendship with Neil and his Japanese companions, and eventually my getting
to know about Shumei.
Not long after his social exposure, Neil and I started to exchange calls
and visits. At that time, Shumei had no Center yet. Neil was staying in
the house of Mrs. Ruby Orendain in Quezon City. Ruby, I later learned,
was a long–standing member of Shumei. My friendship with Neil developed
further when we started tagging along with each other. I brought him to
my friends and introduced him to my family. At that time, I was renting
a house in a middle–class subdivision in Bulacan. He, in turn, brought
me to the homes where he and his Japanese friends were staying in Quezon
City.
In many instances when we were together, Neil tried his best
to explain to me what Shumei is all about. Because he was not yet so eloquent
in both English and Tagalog, I just had to content myself with knowing
more about the Shumei philosophy, doctrines, and practices through the
literature that Neil shared with me.
I learned about the three mandates of Shumei: teaching people how to develop
their inner beauty through the appreciation of art and beauty, promoting
health among people through Natural Agriculture, and promoting the health
of people through the purification technique called Jyorei.
Jyorei and Me
I must confess that I did not yet fully understood what Jyorei really
meant, and it was simply because I trusted Neil so much as a friend that
I agreed to receive Jyorei from him. I trusted that he, as a friend, would
not give me something that would damage me physically or spiritually.
The deepest reason, however, why I agreed to receive Jyorei through Neil
was that, at that time, I badly needed physical healing.
When I met Neil in 1997, I was silently suffering from severe back pains.
Earlier on, I had visited a medical doctor and had my back X–rayed.
The diagnosis was that I had a mild case of scoliosis. Since I was with
NGO workers who were strongly promoting alternative modalities of healing,
I underwent a regimen of acupuncture healing. The back pain would stop
shortly after the acupuncture sessions. But after some time it would recur.
When Neil shared with me his stories about Jyorei and its physical and
spiritual effects on the recipient, I gathered all the trusting and humble
attitudes that I had and asked Neil to do Jyorei for me. My Jyorei sessions
with Neil took place almost on a daily basis. We would have Jyorei sessions
in my office, and on many occasions I received Jyorei in public places
like McDonald's and Jollibee. Now I can testify that after about one month
of such healing sessions, I was completely healed of my severe back pains.
Ever since I have been completely free of pain!
Jyorei and My Child
My friendship with Neil expanded into friendship with the
other members of Shumei. Neil and the others also became friends of my
wife and children. In 1999, Shumei Philippines inaugurated its first Center,
located at Barangay Del Monte in Quezon City. It was in this Center that
I participated, for the first time and then regularly, in the Monthly
Sampai of the organization. Monthly Sampai is a regular celebration of
fellowship. The fellowship is defined by chanting, offering, and sharing
from the deep thoughts and golden teachings of Mokichi Okada, now revered
as Meishusama (Master of Light). The times that I participated in the
Monthly Sampai were always opportunities for me to gain more insights
into the mind, heart, and soul inherent in Shumei members. There were
times that I brought my wife and children to Shumei gatherings, which
included the celebration of Christmas. At Christmas 2000, another blessing
came to me through Jyorei.
Some weeks before December of 2000, my oldest child, Agnes, was complaining
of pains in her right leg. During those days of pain, some marks of blood
clots would manifest in her leg. We were told that it was because of a
certain vitamin deficiency. We gave the child the prescribed vitamins.
But the pain kept returning.
Towards the end of that Shumei Christmas celebration in 2000, I asked
Tommy, one of Neil's pioneering companions, to give Jyorei to my daughter.
Tommy spent some thirty minutes giving my child Jyorei. Afterward, we
went home feeling warmhearted because of the Christmas greetings we had
exchanged with the other members and friends of Shumei. Early the next
morning, Agnes was the first among my children to wake up. She jumped
up out of bed, happy to find that her leg pains were gone. Ever since
then, Agnes has been free of those leg pains
.
Jyorei and My Wife
Health and healing are continuing needs for everyone. After
my problems and then my oldest child's, it was my wife's turn to be a
recipient of God's healing energy.
In the middle of 2001, my wife, Cynthia, contracted pneumonia while serving
as a teacher of an improvised nursery school in a remote coastal barangay
in Infanta, Quezon. The disease weakened her so much that she had to be
confined in a hospital in Metro Manila. We were on the brink of giving
her up to God because apparently her body was already surrendering to
the attacks of the disease. That was when I asked Neil, Tommy and the
other Shumei friends to visit her at the hospital and appeal for God's
healing power. Tommy did Jyorei for my wife for almost two full hours!
While he was doing this, I was also fervently praying for God's intervention.
Now, with full faith and sincere gratitude, I can affirm that Cynthia
recovered that very night. A few days later, the doctors advised us that
we could bring her home to complete her recovery.
Continuing the Journey with Love and Light
It's obvious that Neil and his companions are determined to carve a place
for Shumei in our country. After the celebration of the First Anniversary
of the Shumei Center in 2000, the first Shumei “board” was
formed. Neil, Tommy, and Mrs. Ruby Orendain were at the center of this
group. We met once a week at the house of Mrs. Orendain. The meeting was
always focused on how to improve the Center and its services, how to inform
and educate the members, and how to increase the number of people visiting
the Center and getting to know the Shumei spirituality.
My modest contribution in this regard was to connect Shumei
with the NGOs with whom I was working. First, I was able to introduce
Shumei to the network of NGOs that have been celebrating “Earth
Day” every April 22 at the Quezon Memorial Park in Quezon City.
Since 2000, Shumei has been giving more variety to the activities of Earth
Day celebrations with its Shumei chanting, Jyorei, and lectures about
Art and Beauty and Natural Agriculture. Then, I introduced Shumei to the
Peacemakers' Circle (a group that advocates Peace by “drinking”
from the Well of Spiritual Traditions of different Faiths and Persuasions
and initiating dialogue with one another). No doubt, the Shumei philosophy
and teachings have also enriched this circle of peacemaking persons. At
the moment, Cathy Oida, a member of Shumei, serves as Board Member of
the Peacemakers' Circle.
In May this year, Neil and his wife, Sarah, visited me in Baguio. My family
and I moved to Baguio in 2001 because, by God's grace, I have been employed
there by St. Louis University as professor of Religious Studies. From
May to July this year, Neil and Sarah have already visited me three times.
So far, I have introduced them to many different sorts of people representing
different walks of life: from mainstream medical doctors to Pranic Healing
practitioners to businessmen and artists to Catholic priests and Muslim
Imam. Where we are leading from here, I have no clear idea at the moment.
What is clear to me now is that my journey with Shumei continues. And
with all the blessings that I have received from God through our friends
from Shumei, I am definitely excited with this continuing journey. I am
ready for more delightful surprises from Meishusama.
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