(October 3, 1887 â January 6, 1925) was the Japanese founder of , a Japanese new religion based in Tamba, Hyà Âgo Prefecture. She began her religious career after receiving a divine revelation on July 16, 1919. For the next five and a half years until her death at the age of 37, she carried out faith healing and teaching that attracted numerous followers.
Fukada was born in Ogawa Village (å°Âå·ÂæÂÂ), Hikami District (æ°·ä¸Âé¡), Hyà Âgo (now Tanba City). On July 16, 1919 (Taishà  8), at the age of 33, she received a . This date is commemorated by Ennà Âkyà  as the .
From 1919 until her death in 1925, Fukada employed a distinctive set of esoteric devotional and healing practices known as . She gained many followers from the surrounding region due to her charisma and reports of healings.
She died on January 6, 1925 from valvular heart disease.
In the Ennà Âkyà  religion, Fukada is commemorated with the posthumous title .
After Fukada Chiyoko's death, her children and disciples organized the (renamed in 1931) and a separate (founded in 1933). Both groups were dissolved under the 1940 Religious Organizations Law during World War II. After War World II, Ennà  Shà «hà Âkai was revived in 1947, and was organized in 1948 under the Religious Corporations Ordinance; it later merged with Ennà  Hà Âonkai and, in 1952, gained recognition as an independent religious corporation under the Religious Corporations Law.
During the postwar years, leadership centered on the founder's eldest son (1908âÂÂ1976) as first head priest and (b. 1937) as second head priest. Fukada Nagaharu organized his mother's teachings and writings into a coherent doctrine, emphasizing teachings such as: