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August 10, 1992
Volume 2, No. 8
THE ANTI-BUDDHIST BEHAVIOR OF
THE NICHIREN SHOSHU PRIESTHOOD DURING WORLD WAR II
A revealing study of the growing corruption within
the head temple that nearly led to the destruction of
Nichiren Daishonin′s Buddhism five decades ago
(The following is based on a translation of an article
from the August issue of Ushio magazine by Yoshikazu
Abe, who has written articles and books exposing the
transgressions of the Nichiren Shoshu priesthood.)
Besides his expertise in mathematics, sociology and
international relations, Dr. Johan Galtung, a native
of Norway, is also a noted pioneer in peace studies.
He is currently a professor of Peace Studies at the
University of Hawaii. When he was 29, he founded the
International Peace Research Institute in Oslo (PRIO)
and became its first director.
Dr. Galtung contributed to the establishment of peace
studies as an academic research subject. In his book
Buddhism: A Quest for Unity and Peace (BukkyoÊChowa
to Heiwa o Motomete, published in Japanese by the Institute
of Oriental Philosophy), Dr. Galtung examines a possible
role for Buddhism in creating global harmony and peace.
His penetrating insight sheds light on some key issues
that Buddhist practitioners themselves have long forgotten.
Dr. Galtung′s viewpoints in the book′s first
chapter, èRevitalizing BuddhismÊ20 merits and six demerits,î
are particularly interesting. Aside from the 20 merits
of Buddhism, Dr. Galtung points out Buddhism′s
shortcomings as follows:
1) Buddhism, because of its tolerant nature, sometimes
endorses militarism and violence.
2) Buddhism tends to ignore structural violence in economic
policy.
3) Buddhist clergy easily become self-righteous and
removed from society.
4) Buddhism tends to curry favor with authority for
financial rewards.
5) Buddhism easily resorts to the theory of karma as
a pretext to accept defeat.
6) Buddhist clergy tend to become ritualistic and indulge
in luxury.
Dr. Galtung′s points are all applicable to the
current Nichiren Shoshu priesthood, as we can see in
the following instances:
1) During World War II, the priesthood ingratiated itself
with the military government and accepted Shinto. It
punished the first and second Soka Gakkai presidents,
Tsunesaburo Makiguchi and Josei Toda, for refusing to
follow its order to accept Shinto.
2) It financially exploited believers. It is also engaged
in unreasonable economic discrimination toward employees
at the head and local temples.
3) While lacking in common sense and understanding of
the reality of society, it holds the elitist view that
priests are inherently superior to lay believers.
4) It ignores the slanderous behavior of temple believers
who make substantial financial contributions and bestows
special Gohonzon upon them.
5) It lacks the desire and initiative to propagate Nichiren
Daishonin′s Buddhism, simply accepting that kosen-rufu
will be accomplished as a matter of course instead of
struggling to achieve it as mandated by the Daishonin.
6) Many priests indulge themselves in luxury and pleasure-seeking,
oblivious to the modest lifestyle required of them.
Documents Reveal Priesthood′s Support for Military
Regime
The priesthood submitted to the power of the Japanese
military regime during World War II. As Aug. 15Êthe
anniversary of Japan′s unconditional surrender
in 1945Êreturns, this article scrutinizes the priesthood′s
wartime behavior.
In 1936, Japan and Germany signed the Anti-Comintern
Pact. Around the same time, Chiang Kai-shek intensified
anti-Japan feelings in China. In 1937, Japanese military
forces seized Peking, Tientsin, Shanghai, Nanking and
Hangchow, getting mired deeper in the quicksand of the
Sino-Japanese war.
On July 12, 1937, Nichiryu Mizutani, the 61st high priest
of Nichiren Shoshu, received a notice from an undersecretary
in the Ministry of EducationÊthe administrative agency
for all religious organizations:
It is recommended that [Nichiren Shoshu] guide its
believers and help them recognize the current situation,
thus encouraging them to fulfill their duty as Japanese
citizens and unite. [The Ministry of Education] hopes
that [Nichiren Shoshu] will exert its utmost effort
to inspire its believers with the national spirit, thereby
leaving no regret for the future.
Nichiryu immediately responded by instructing the Nichiren
Shoshu Administrative Office to issue a special memorandum
dated July 16 and stating:
The recent [China] incident exposes China′s
insolence toward Japan. At this time we Japanese nationals
must correctly understand the current situation...uphold
the sacred will of the emperor...and display our sincere
dedication to the service for the nation.
This memorandum further demands financial contributions
from Nichiren Shoshu believers and affiliates, stating:
In light of the current critical situation, [the
Nichiren Shoshu Administrative Office] has decided to
solicit financial contributions for the national defense,
thus making known its sincere dedication to home-front
support.
About two months later, on Sept. 27, 1937, the high
priest issued an official directive. It first expresses
the priesthood′s loyalty toward the emperor:
When weÊall affiliates of Nichiren Shoshu, including
certified priests, student priests and lay believersÊhumbly
ponder [the current situation], we are awed by his majesty′s
profound desire for peace and vast benevolence and mercy
that embrace the world....
The directive, devoid of a proper understanding of the
international situation, repeats the Japanese military
regime′s propaganda regarding the Sino-Japanese
war:
Betraying the friendship of her neighbor and acting
in an untrustworthy manner, China has long insulted
and resisted Japan as part of its policy. Without an
iota of self-reflection, China finally violated the
interest of the Empire. Eventually China′s unending
outrageous acts led to the recent incident. This is
our profound regret.
The directive continues:
We shall endure any hardship to show our sincere
dedication and loyalty to serve our nation. We shall
unite our hearts and uphold the true Japanese spirit
in order to realize the unity of the entire Japanese
nation. By taking the initiative in this regard, we
shall aspire to increase the nation′s strength
and glorify the eternally unchanging fortune of the
emperor.
The directive concludes by urging all Nichiren Shoshu
priests and lay believers to support the home-front
campaign promoted by the government. At the beginning
of September 1937, the Japanese cabinet issued an executive
order to promote a ègreat national movement involving
both the government and the people.î This campaign was
designed to èsolidify the people′s resolve to
support war efforts and ensure the thorough implementation
of whatever is necessary toward this end.î
The executive order included concrete guidelines for
the promotion of this national movement as follows:
èIt promotes: any home-front support activities; industrial
productivity; savings; recycling metals; the community
watch system [to suppress any anti-regime activity];
food production; conservation; the donation of weapons
and sale of government bonds.î
In addition, each religious sect was instructed to make
a concrete plan to support this movement among its believers
and hold lecture meetings to promote the nationalistic
spirit.
In response, the Nichiren Shoshu priesthood repeatedly
issued various official documents to express its support
for the government. The priesthood held Buddhist services
to pray for èthe nation′s increased dignity and
eternal fortune to bring about victoryî and sponsored
lectures to promote this military government′s
campaign throughout the nation.
In October 1937, High Priest Nichiryu fell ill and retired.
When Nikkyo Murakami succeeded him as 62nd high priest
of Nichiren Shoshu, he contributed an inaugural address
to Dai-Nichiren, the official publication of the Nichiren
Shoshu priesthood. In this article, Nikkyo states:
His Majesty Emperor [Hirohito′s] magnificence
is increasing all the more; his splendor is expanding
throughout East Asia. Wherever our courageous and loyal
imperial army advances, be it frosty and snowy North
China or South China where cold gusty winds blow, it
wages valiant battles, scoring victory after victory.
I cannot possibly suppress my appreciation and excitement
for this....
Nichiren Daishonin, the founder of our school, states
in the Gosho, èOur nation of Japan surpasses not only
India and China but all other eighty-thousand countries
[throughout the entire continent of Jambudvipa]î (Gosho
Zenshu, p. 1519). As the Daishonin states, it is a matter
of course that our Japanese nation has an inherent great
mission for peace in the Far East. I believe that the
recent [China] incident was an extremely natural course
of action not only for the self-defense of our empire
but for the eternal peace of East Asia and the welfare
of humanity when viewed from the standpoint of justice
and humanism.
[Translator′s note: This passage is from
the Gosho titled èOn the Emperors of the Divine Nationî
(Gosho Zenshu, p. 1516-26). The Daishonin discusses
the theory that Japan, supposedly a divine nation founded
by Shinto dieties and a country with many Buddhist temples
and Mahayana Buddhists, is thus superior to other countries.
He then poses a question referring to the four emperors
who met tragic deaths. If Japan is superior, how then
did the Buddha and dieties fail to protect its sovereigns?
The Daishonin concludes that because the sovereigns
and people of Japan fell under the influence of distorted
religions, especially the esoteric Shingon teaching,
all of Japan suffered. ]
Nikkyo distorted Nichiren Daishonin′s Buddhism
to justify the Japanese aggression against China, thus
currying favor with the military regime.
Senior Nichiren Shoshu Priest Propounds Erroneous
Doctrine
Around this time, almost every issue of Dai-Nichiren
featured articles supporting the war efforts, including
lectures sponsored by the Nichiren Shoshu priesthood
to promote the national movement. One Nichiren Shoshu
priest who frequently gave lectures was Jimon Ogasawara,
then director of propagation. When Nikkyo started to
launch his campaign to support the national movement,
Ogasawara also started to propoundÊin the monthly magazine
Nichiren of the World (Sekai no Nichiren) of which Ogasawara
himself was editor-in-chiefÊthe erroneous doctrine that
the Shinto Sun Goddess (Tensho Daijin1) is the fundamental
entity while the Buddha is its transient expression.
Ogasawara asserted that the Sun Goddess is true while
Shakyamuni BuddhaÊwho, when viewed from the standpoint
of the Buddhism of Sowing, represents Nichiren Daishonin
as the original BuddhaÊis transient because Nam-myoho-renge-kyo
is not something that Nichiren Daishonin created. He
explained that the Sun Goddess actually manifested Nam-myoho-renge-kyoÊa
cosmic life embracing the entire universe, including
all stars and planetsÊand expounded it in this human
world. Because the Sun Goddess precedes Shakyamuni (Nichiren
Daishonin), it is logically difficult to accept that
Shakyamuni (Nichiren Daishonin) is the original entity
from which the Sun Goddess stemmed as its transient
function, Ogasawara claimed.
Based on this distorted doctrine, which was totally
unbefitting for Nichiren Shoshu′s director of
propagation, Ogasawara continued to give lectures titled
èThe Long-term Holy War and the Revelation of Truthî
at various locations. His lectures were often covered
in Dai-Nichiren to further promote his lecture series.
As director of propagation, Ogasawara was in charge
of Buddhist study and propagation for Nichiren Shoshu.
Unbecoming of his responsibility, however, he took the
initiative to propound a completely erroneous doctrine,
which can be in no way part of the Daishonin′s
Buddhism.
Priest Claims National Flag and Buddhism Are One
and the Same
Director of Propagation Koga Arimoto, Ogasawara′s
predecessor, was also a nationalist-movement zealot.
Arimoto was one of the active senior priests who plotted
a coup d′etat against Nitchu Tsuchiya, the 58th
high priest, and impeached him. At that time, Arimoto
was general administrator of the Nichiren Shoshu Administrative
Office. In 1933, Arimoto wrote the book Declaration
to Conduct a National Flag Ceremony.
In this book, Arimoto writes:
The national flag represents the entire nation and
thus its sovereignty. It also represents the collective
will of the nation. It also displays the nation′s
majesty, power and honor....
The nation is something that must be protected through
blood and death. By the same token, the national flag
must be protected through blood and death as well.
Furthermore, Arimoto tries to justify his assertion
using the Daishonin′s Buddhism:
The fundamental meaning of the establishment of Japan
and the fundamental meaning of the establishment of
the Hokke sect [Nichiren Daishonin′s Buddhism]
are one and the same....
The fusion of government and religion will arrive without
a shadow of doubt. How could we ever doubt this? This
is the essential teaching that Nichiren Daishonin poured
his blood and soul into and proclaimed loudly.
He essentially states that the national flag represents
the Daishonin′s Buddhism itself. Arimoto installed
a flagpole on the grounds of Myoko-ji temple in Shinagawa,
Tokyo, of which he was chief priest. He invited the
head of the Religious Bureau within the Ministry of
Education to a national flag ceremony at his temple.
High Priest Himself Praised and Supported War
On April 1, 1938, the Japanese government issued the
National Mobilization Act. In the same year, Japan entered
Tsingtao, installed a Chinese puppet government in Nanking,
withdrew from the League, and took Canton and Hankow.
Nazi Germany started the persecution of the Jews.
In 1939, Japan occupied Hainan and blockaded the British
concession in Tientsin, China. The Japanese government
enacted the National Munitions Act and began drafting
noncombatant Japanese for the war industries. On Sept.
1, Germany invaded Poland and annexed Danzig, thus starting
World War II.
In 1940, Germany entered Paris. Japan, Germany and Italy
signed a military and economic pact. The Japanese military
regime began a national campaign for conservation with
the slogan: èLuxury Is Our Enemy!î
In his 1940 New Year′s greetings, Nikkyo stated:
If we just protect the castle of the Law, we cannot
reply to the Daishonin′s true intent. As he states,
èShould an emergency arise, I will give my life for
my lordî (The Major Writings of Nichiren Daishonin,
vol. 3, p. 224). Our sincere and loyal dedication to
serve the nation and thus reply to His Majesty′s
great expectation is the mission and life of us believers
of Nichiren Shoshu.
In this address, he often quotes Gosho passages to support
the war. Devoid of even a trace of desire to save the
people and achieve world peace, he just frantically
urged believers to give up their lives for the emperor.
In Dai-Nichiren, the high priest wrote of his excitement
in visiting the imperial palace on New Year′s
Day. He also pressed believers to promote the èDay of
Public Service and Development of Asiaî and requested
their cooperation for the suspension of prices and the
promotion of food production and conservation.
On Dec. 7, 1941, Japan bombed Pearl Harbor, starting
the Pacific war. Delighted at this news, Nikkyo issued
the following communique on the same day (Dec. 8 in
Japan):
Today His Majesty [Emperor Hirohito] declared war
on the United States of America and the United Kingdom.
I can hardly suppress my awe and joy at this....
I ask that all believers summon forth the faith and
practice they assiduously developed thus far and ensure
victory in this great, unprecedented battle, through
their resolve to endure any hardship and exert their
utmost in their respective positions and capacities.
In the 1942 January Dai-Nichiren, the high priest stated:
The Daishonin states: èMyo represents death, and ho
represents lifeî (MW-1, 21). Myo also signifies that
His Majesty′s splendor envelopes the world, and
ho the fundamental decree [of the Sun Goddess bestowed
upon her descendants to reign over Japan] as long as
heaven and earth exist. In other words, to complete
the founder′s true advent in this world, that
is, to realize his words: è′The world′ is
the nation of Japanî (Gosho Zenshu, p. 803), we must
fulfill the mission to spread His Majesty′s splendor
throughout the world and display our sincere dedication
to the service of the nation at the risk of our lives.
(Translator′s note: The entire section of
the above Gosho passage from èThe Orally Transmitted
Teachingî reads: èMiao-lo states in his commentary:
′If children spread the father′s Law, the
world will benefit.′ Here ′children′
are Bodhisattvas of the Earth, ′the father′
is Shakyamuni, ′the world′ is the nation
of Japan, ′benefit′ is to attain Buddhahood,
and the ′Law′ is Nam-myoho-renge-kyo. Now
if I examine this yet again, ′the father′
is Nichiren, ′children′ are Nichiren′s
disciples, ′the world′ is the nation of
Japan, ′benefit′ is to attain Buddhahood
through accepting and embracing [the Lotus Sutra], and
the ′Law′ is the daimoku that Bodhisattva
Jogyo transmitted.î èThe worldî here includes Japan,
but does not exclude other countries.)
It might have been extremely difficult for anyone to
calmly observe the situation when the wartime frenzy
swept the entire nation. Aside from the outburst of
his narcissistic emotions, it is regrettable that Nikkyo
did not have the intellect and sensibility to perceive
the reality of the times.
Priesthood Deletes Gosho Passages to Curry Favor
Before the Pacific war broke out, the priesthood had
already decided to cater to the military regime and
Shinto. The priesthood′s internal documents revealed
that the head temple administration, in fear of persecution
from the military regime, ordered its priests to delete
Gosho passages that could be offensive to Shinto and
suspended its own publication of the Gosho. Although
the priesthood bore the name of Nichiren Shoshu, or
èorthodoxî school of Nichiren, in reality, it was undermining
the founder′s teaching. It can be said that one
of the distant causes of the current situation traces
back to during World War II.
The Nichiren Shoshu Administrative Office Study Department
Memorandum No. 8 was issued on Sept. 29, 1941. Around
this time, the government top officials were secretly
preparing for the Pacific war in solidarity with the
emperor. The memorandum states:
The Nichiren Shoshu Administrative Office Study Department
hereby decides to delete the following passages from
The Selected Writings of Nichiren published by the Sessen
Publishing Company and refrain from using them in sermons
and lectures. Please be notified of the aforementioned.
The memorandum designates 14 Gosho passages to be omitted.
All of these passages are integral to the fundamental
teaching of Nichiren Daishonin.
For example, the priesthood deleted the following passage
from èA Sage Perceives the Three Existences of Lifeî:
èI am the foremost sage in the entire worldî (MW-2,
259). Here the Daishonin declares that he is the original
Buddha who appeared in the Latter Day of the Law to
save all people of the world. The priesthood, however,
feared that this could offend government officials who
held that the Sun Goddess was the foremost deity of
the world and the direct ancestor of the Japanese imperial
family. Regarding the Daishonin as èthe foremost sage
in the entire world,î or the original Buddha, constitutes
the foundation of faith in the Daishonin′s Buddhism.
The priesthood also decided to delete Gosho passages
referring to the Sun Goddess. For example, the following
passages from èOn the Buddha′s Behaviorî were
deleted. èTensho Daijin and Hachiman2 are respected
as tutelary gods of this country, but they are only
minor gods compared with Bonten, Taishaku, the gods
of the sun and moon, and the Four Heavenly Kingsî (MW-1,
190). èI am the envoy of Shakyamuni Buddha, and those
gods [Tensho Daijin and Hachiman] should prostrate themselves
before me with their palms joinedî (MW-1, 190). The
priesthood considered these passages disrespectful to
the Sun Goddess.
These passages, however, contain important teachings
in Nichiren Daishonin′s Buddhism regarding the
functions of the Buddhist gods or shoten zenjin. The
Daishonin views the Sun Goddess as no more than functions
that protect those who have faith in the Mystic Law.
In Shinto, however, the Sun Goddess is an absolute existence
whom even the emperor worships.
Gosho passages pertaining to the sovereign were also
deleted, such as the following passages considered inappropriate
by the priesthood: èAll sovereigns of the nations in
the entire world represent transient functions of Lord
Shakyamuni. The true identity of Tensho Daijin and Great
Bodhisattva Hachiman is Lord Shakyamuniî (Gosho Zenshu,
p. 1187). èTo all living beings of this nation of Japan,
Shakyamuni Buddha is a sovereign, teacher and parent.
Even gods and emperors throughout the seven reigns of
heavenly gods, the five reigns of earthly gods, and
the 90 reigns from the first human emperor are but retainers
of Shakyamuni Buddhaî (Gosho Zenshu, p. 1410). [Translator′s
note: èThe seven reigns of heavenly gods and the five
reigns of earthly godsî refers to native deities said
to have ruled Japan before the time of the first emperor,
Jimmu.]
These Gosho passages indicate that the original BuddhaÊNichiren
Daishonin, who is represented by ShakyamuniÊis an embodiment
of the fundamental Law permeating all phenomena in the
universe. In comparison, deities and sovereigns represent
transient functions of the original Buddha. This should
be the fundamental teaching for believers of the Daishonin′s
Buddhism. The priesthood′s decision to delete
the passages that contain this important teaching is
beyond comprehension.
Senior Executive Council Suspended Publication of
the Gosho
One month before issuing Study Department Memorandum
No. 8, the Nichiren Shoshu Administrative Office issued
a memo that appears to lay the groundwork for its subsequent
decision to delete the Gosho passages. Memorandum No.
2177, dated Aug. 24, 1941, was addressed to all certified
Nichiren Shoshu priests. According to the memo, the
Senior Executive Council directed the Advisory Board
on the following two points.
First, the memo states that because Nichiren Daishonin′s
writings were written more than 700 years ago in the
Kamakura period, when the social context was significantly
different from the present, people today might doubt
the Daishonin′s desire to respect the emperor
and protect his empire. Thus, the memo goes on to explain,
the priesthood decided to suspend the publication of
the Gosho. It also adds that the priesthood planned
to publish a small pamphlet titled The Selected Writings
of the Founder.
The priesthood was concerned that government officials
would misunderstand the 14 Gosho passages regarding
Shinto deities and the emperor. The memo indicates that
the priesthood, afraid of offending Shinto and the military
regime, tried to circumvent any possible oppression
from the military regime.
After the passing of Nichiren Daishonin, the five senior
priests burned or destroyed, through the paper-recycling
process, some of the Gosho the Daishonin wrote to believers
in the common people′s language of his day. They
tried to justify their action by saying that they did
this to purge their èlate master′s shame.î The
modern-day priesthood′s decision to suspend publication
of the Gosho and the subsequent deletion of some passages,
amounts to the same sort of slander that the five senior
priests committed.
Second, in its efforts to tailor Nichiren Daishonin′s
spirit to fit within the narrow framework of militarism
and imperialism, the priesthood tried to obviate the
Daishonin′s teaching that the Buddha is true while
deities are transient. Labeling this fundamental teaching
as a èvulgar belief in Buddhism,î the memo then states
that Nichiren Shoshu would downplay the significance
of the teaching. Special attention, it warns, must be
paid when expounding this belief because of the present
circumstances.
The teaching that the Buddha is true while deities are
transient is an essential concept of Buddhism elucidating
the relationship between Shakyamuni Buddha (or Nichiren
Daishonin himself when viewed from the standpoint of
Buddhism of Sowing) and the Buddhist gods, including
the Sun Goddess. Deities, the doctrine explains, represent
the transient functions of the Buddha. Their relationship
can be compared to that of body (the Buddha) and its
shadow (the Buddhist gods). Because the doctrine completely
countermands the military regime′s view that the
Sun Goddess as an absolute existence, the priesthood,
in fear of incurring persecution, compromised its own
belief.
Two days before Memorandum No. 2177 (Aug. 24, 1941),
the Administrative Office issued Memorandum No. 2176.
This memo states that although various versions of the
silent prayers were available at that time, the Administrative
Office would be adopting a revised version henceforth.
The revised first silent prayer, for example, reads:
I humbly thank the Sun Goddess, the ancestor of the
emperor, and all emperors of the successive reigns since
the time of first Emperor Jimmu for the great debt of
gratitude I owe to them. I also offer benefits that
I derive from the Law to the gods of the sun and moon
and all other deitiesÊthe guardians of the Empire. I
sincerely wish that they mercifully accept my offerings.
One may well mistake this for a Shinto prayer. The priesthood
decorated the entire silent prayers throughoutÊfrom
first to fifthÊwith words and expressions supporting
the divinity of the emperor and the nationalistic views
of the military regime. The priesthood′s prompt
and enthusiastic support of war indicates that it had
degenerated into the antithesis of Nichiren Daishonin′s
BuddhismÊa teaching based on humanistic values such
as the dignity of life, freedom and equality.
Priesthood Lost the Daishonin′s Spirit While
the Soka Gakkai Upheld It
In March 1941, the Peace Preservation Act was completely
revised. That year, as seen above, the priesthood, which
already had been supportive of the military regime,
made further drastic decisions, one after another, to
endorse nationalistic views based on Shinto.
The purpose in revising the act was to crack down on
religious organizations not supportive of the military
regime. Any organization that èpropagates views that
deny the sovereignty of the nation or slight the dignity
of Shinto shrines or the imperial familyî was subjected
to severe punishment, including the death penalty. Simply
put, the priesthood waved a white flag in the face of
government oppression.
Only the Soka Gakkai upheld the Daishonin′s spirit,
resisted the dark storm of the government authority
and experienced honorable persecution for the sake of
the Law.
Members of the then Soka Kyoiku Gakkai, centering on
the first president, Tsunesaburo Makiguchi, courageously
practiced and propagated the Daishonin′s Buddhism.
This led to the imprisonment of President Makiguchi
and General Director Josei Toda. Makiguchi eventually
died in prison.
In contrast, within the priesthood, faith died with
the decision to compromise the Daishonin′s spirit
and support the military regime. One elderly priest
recounted his memories of the head temple during World
War II: èBack then, every day was so depressing that
none in particular left any significant impression on
me. We attended funerals, together with priests from
other slanderous Buddhist sects, of those who died in
action. We didn′t question our behavior at all.
All we were concerned about were air raids by American
bombers and how we would get food to survive each day.
Although we were priests, we didn′t care about
Buddhism.î
Young priests were recruited. The current high priest,
Nikken Abe, was one of them. He was then a student at
Rissho University, a school established by the Minobu
sect. As a second lieutenant in the navy, he was assigned
to an anti-aircraft emplacement in Hakodate, Hokkaido.
He once proudly reminisced of his days in military service:
èEvery day I had nothing to do. My daily chore was to
line up my subordinates and hit them on their buttocks
with a thick wooden club called a ′spiritual stick.′î
What the priesthood gained from the long, miserable
war was a lack of self-awareness of its slander and
servility toward authority, as well as indolence and
violence, instead of the sincere pursuit of the Buddhist
philosophy as religious practitioners, a sense of responsibility
for war and a renewed desire for peace.
Although the priesthood completely lost the Daishonin′s
spirit during World War II, it still experienced the
benefit of the refreshing breeze of faith after the
war, brought about through the efforts of the Soka Gakkai.
Now that the priesthood is attempting to destroy the
Soka Gakkai, however, it has reverted to its slanderous
nature.
During World War II, the priesthood committed the grave
offense of betraying the Daishonin by supporting militarism.
It deleted important Gosho passages, suspended publication
of the Gosho and revised the silent prayers to suit
State Shinto and support the military regime. Now Nikken
Abe has been committing even graver offenses as he tries
to destroy the Daishonin′s Buddhism and obstruct
the flow of kosen-rufu.
Forty-seven years have passed since the end of World
War II. Through the long-standing, sincere dedication
of the Soka Gakkai to the priesthood′s development,
the head temple grounds bristle with magnificent structures
Êwithout a trace of its post-war devastation. In reality,
however, the head temple has now turned into a breeding
ground of slanderers.
Footnotes:
1. Tensho Daijin: Also Amaterasu Omikami. The
Sun Goddess in Japanese mythology, who was later adopted
as a protective god in Buddhism. According to the oldest
extant histories, the Kojiki (Record of Ancient Matters)
and the Nihon Shoki (Chronicles of Japan), she was the
chief deity and also the progenitor of the imperial
clan. In many of his writings, Nichiren Daishonin views
Tensho Daijin as a personification of the workings of
the universe that protect the prosperity of those who
have faith in the True Law.
2. Hachiman: One of the main deities in Japanese
mythology, along with Tensho Daijin (Sun Goddess). There
are several views on how he came to be worshiped. According
to one explanation, in the reign of the 29th emperor,
Kimmei, the god Hachiman appeared as a smith in Usa,
Kyushu, southern Japan, and declared that in a past
life he had been Emperor Ojin, the 15th emperor. His
aid was sought in his capacity as the god of smiths
when the great image of Vairochana was erected at Todai-ji
temple in Nara, and from then on, Hachiman came to be
increasingly associated with Buddhism. Early in the
Heian period (794-1185), the imperial court named him
Great Bodhisattva, an early example of the fusion of
Buddhist and Shinto elements. Around the mid-ninth century
Hachiman was revered as a protector of the capital,
and later, with the rise of the samurai class, he was
particularly venerated by the Minamoto clan. In the
latter 12th century, Minamoto no Yoritomo, the founder
of the Kamakura shogunate, built a Hachiman shrine at
Tsurugaoka in Kamakura, and, with the spread of the
samurai government, the worship of Hachiman as a protective
deity of the villages became predominant throughout
Japan. In the Gosho, Nichiren Daishonin views Hachiman
as a personification of the function promoting the agricultural
fertility of a land whose inhabitants embrace the True
Law.
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