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Lei Furumoto

       Beth Gray

       John Harvey Gray

       Iris Ishikuro

       Harry Kuboi

       Ethel Lombardi

       Barbara McCullough

       Mary McFadyen

       Paul Mitchell

       Bethel Phaigh

       Barbara Weber Ray

       Shinobu Saito

       Virginia Samdahl

       Wanja Twan

       Kay Yamashita

      Hawayo Takata’s students, and their succession of students, brought Reiki to North America, Europe, and other countries.

      Takata’s versions of Reiki history

      Many of the stories that Hawayo Takata and her students told and that were subsequently repeated in many books about Reiki history were later found to be inaccurate. For example, she told stories that Mikao Usui was a Christian minister and that he studied at the University of Chicago. Reiki historians later found that these were untrue.

      A generation of Reiki students learned old versions of Reiki history told by Takata. In today’s world, the embellished story of Reiki is no longer necessary to keep Reiki alive. (See the nearby sidebar “The true role of Hawayo Takata.”)

      THE TRUE ROLE OF HAWAYO TAKATA

      Hawayo Takata did what she could for Reiki to survive in the Western world. Reiki historians showed that some of the stories relayed by Takata weren’t true. However, history now shows Takata to be the Reiki heroine that she truly was. She managed to preserve a Japanese healing method in Hawaii, the very state that was bombed by the Japanese at Pearl Harbor.

      Hawayo Takata fought discrimination on both sides, as the Japanese saw her as an American. Even today, the Usui Reiki Ryoho Gakkai doesn’t train those from other countries or admit them as members of their organization. It’s a miracle that Chujiro Hayashi (see the earlier section “Exploring the Medical Approach: Chujiro Hayashi”) trained her and helped her with her Reiki practice.

      When Hawayo Takata (covered earlier in this chapter) died, none of her students were aware that Reiki existed in Japan. Her Masters students tried to put together their notes from the different teachings that Takata had given each of them. Some of her students wrote books or created new Reiki branches.

      There was no mutually agreed-upon successor to Takata. At this time, the Reiki Alliance is the most prominent branch from Takata, which had Phyllis Lei Furumoto as the successor.

      Reiki in Japan

      After Mikao Usui died in 1926, followers of his system in Japan went on quietly without much public notice.

      People in the West who studied Reiki weren’t even aware that Reiki had survived in Japan. It appears that Japanese Reiki was lying in wait like a dormant seed. In 1985, Mieko Mitsui, a student of Barbara Weber Ray, went to Japan and began to teach some levels of Reiki. Japanese people were eager to study Reiki, and other teachers from the West also taught in Japan.

      Eventually, the increased interest in Reiki stimulated some Japanese-trained Reiki practitioners and teachers to come out of hiding and begin teaching their methods.

      Japanese and Western Reiki today

      Today a distinction is made between Japanese and Western Reiki:

       Japanese Reiki is considered to be more faithful to Mikao Usui’s original style.

       Western Reiki has been altered by changes made by Chujiro Hayashi and Hawayo Takata, and even further altered by successive Reiki teachers.

      Japanese Reiki is now being studied in the West as Reiki students yearn to discover its roots. As information on Japanese techniques becomes available, Western branches are incorporating this information into their teachings.

      Mikao Usui, Chujiro Hayashi, and Hawayo Takata taught many Reiki techniques, and some branches have also incorporated new Western techniques. Here’s a list of the most common Reiki techniques, what they’re used for, and where you can find more information about them in this book.

Name of Reiki Technique Description More Information in Chapter:
Aura cleansing Sweeping energy 13
Byosen Reikhan Ho Scanning and sensing imbalance in the body 11
Chakra balancing Complementary method to Reiki treatment 11
Crystal healing Complementary method to Reiki treatment 12
Distant healing Remote healing 15
Gassho meditation Prayerful hands meditation method 9
Group distant healing Sending healing as a group 14
Gyosi Ho Healing by staring 11
Hand positions

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