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  1. In Japan, both Zen and “spirituality ” are important factors in both media and the lived religious environment. This article aims to investigate how and to what extent “Zen ” and “spirituality ” are related as narratives and religious practices in a contemporary Japanese context.

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  2. healing suggests a limited, one-time remedy, while calling it salvation introduces a universal element that connects it with the existential suf- ferings shared by all human beings.

  3. 1 Νοε 1995 · In this article healing is understood as an activity of holistic recovery, and an exploration is made of its social background and spread in the youth culture of contemporary Japan. Although healing takes many forms in this subculture, fundamentally it is oriented towards harmony with others and with nature.

  4. Specifically, I focus on a ritual often used to heal and empower women in Bud-dhist temples in Japan. The terms “healing” and “empowering” in this context signify effecting the restoration of a sense of well-being which may have been temporarily diminished during childbirth, or enhancing a sense of well-being and wholeness.

  5. Japanese Culture is a valuable source for those wishing to understand Zen in the context of Japanese life and art, and remains one of the leading works on the subject. Wabi-Sabi, Mono no Aware, and Ma: Tracing Traditional …

  6. Japanese Culture and Therapeutic Relationship. Abstract. Japanese culture is collectivistic by nature, and there are some culturally indigenous patterns which govern forming relationships in Japan. One of the important patterns is hierarchy. Counselling and psychotherapy are based on Western concepts and the Japanese view them diferently.

  7. Focusing mainly on contemporary healing practices in Japanese new religions, Justin Stein, points to the various scientistic terms and metaphors which founders and representatives of new religions use in order to describe how their modalities of healing work.

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