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Chief Priest Doshuku
Watanabe (30) of Kairen-ji temple in Fukushima, who
announced his intention to secede from Nichiren Shoshu
on March 28, sent a letter, dated April 1, to Nikken
“Calling for the formal apology and resignation
of the high priest. ” A copy of the letter was
also sent to the Soka Gakkai Headquarters. The following
is a translation of Chief Priest Watanabe’s letter,
which was printed with his permission in the Seikyo
Shimbun.
Seitoku-zan Kairen-ji temple has decided to disassociate
itself from the Nichiren Shoshu priesthood out of its
desire for kosen-rufu and the harmonious unity of priests
and lay believers. I would like to express to you my
honest feelings concerning this important decision.
I hope that in your capacity as high priest you will
consider the genuine concerns of this local temple.
It will soon be four years since you so considerately
entrusted me with my assignment as the first chief priest
of Kairen-ji temple. My appreciation for the priesthood,
which has raised me over the many years since I came
to the head temple, shall never vanish. And I shall
never forget my debt of gratitude to you, the high priest.
For this reason, I feel that if I stop at merely clarifying
my doubts and expressing hope for the reform and betterment
of the priesthood, I would be serving no purpose. That
would be regrettable. I believe that the only true way
to repay my debt of gratitude is to strive to help establish
a priesthood that is genuinely in accord with the sublime
spirit of the true Buddha. I want to emphasize that
my disassociation from the priesthood is the result
of such irrepressible concerns.
In addition, Kairen-ji is the 95th temple to be constructed
of the 200 temples promised by Honorary President Ikeda,
and has been supported by the sincere faith and pure
desire of the Fukushima members for kosen-rufu. When
the current problem first broke out, we at the local
temples received no clear explanation of what was happening.
Completely unable to fathom the situation, I felt that
at the very least my temple must maintain harmony with
the laity, and I expressed this to the Gakkai members
in my area.
Despite these intentions, the situation took a turn
for the worse and the flame of hope we had tried to
maintain eventually died out. Nevertheless, even amid
such trying circumstances, Gakkai members chanted through
the night, praying that the priesthood, and particularly
we at Kairen-ji temple, would awaken to the truth as
soon as possible. As a priest who followed the head
temple, which was causing such trouble for the believers,
it is only natural that I should have been subject to
an onslaught of anger and resentment. However, there
were many Soka Gakkai members who, upon meeting me in
the street, would greet me as if nothing had changed
and inquire in an encouraging tone, “How are you
doing?” These Gakkai members have continued to
fight with a prayer for kosen-rufu based upon faith,
unswayed by whatever scheme the priesthood has employed.
As a priest it is my belief that I must never betray
them.
I am deeply sorry for the great trouble and concern
I have caused the local members before my decision to
sever my ties with the priesthood. I am determined from
this point to throw myself into the struggle for kosen-rufu
as a genuine disciple of Nichiren Daishonin.
Beginning with its “Letter of Inquiry” at
the outset of this issue, the priesthood has undertaken
a series of official measures against the Soka Gakkai,
such as dismissing the SGI president as chief lay representative
and amending the tozan procedures. However, whatever
explanation the priesthood offered in each case, I could
not sincerely accept or understand it. On each occasion,
I was troubled by doubt and suspicion. The reason for
this, I believe, is that their stance from the very
outset did not accord with reason or common sense, but
instead was a product of the high priest’s emotionalism.
From beginning to end, the priesthood has responded
in an extremely arbitrary and irresponsible manner.
The ultimate example of this is their handling of the
current issue concerning the “geisha photograph.”
When this photograph was first revealed, you and the
officials of the priesthood insisted that the photo
was doctored—that it was a composite in which
your head was superimposed on a figure that was surrounded
by geisha girls. Was this not your contention? In other
words, you charged that the Gakkai had manufactured
this photograph and thus completely invented a situation
that had never taken place.
However, the testimony of the Rev. Hosho Shiina revealed
that the photo is indeed authentic. You responded with
the statement, “Now I remember.” The photograph
was even published in a special edition of the Daibyakuho
[the Hokkeko Society’s nationwide publication,
which has been a conduit for the priesthood’s
position] along with many other photographs from the
same party. Priesthood officials began to contend that
the high priest’s appearance at such a party was
not a problem. The reason for this, it was stated, was
because you attended the party at the invitation of
others, and that the affair was paid for by its organizer,
the late Rev. Hoin Abe. It was also now alleged that
the Gakkai’s version of the photo first published
in the Soka Shimpo was fraudulent because two individuals
who appeared on either side of the photo had been cropped
out.
In your attempt to portray the Soka Shimpo’s coverage
of the incident as a lie, you, the high priest, have
instead exposed yourself as the one who has been lying.
While this in itself is a problem, the real problem
lies with your assumption that such a childish excuse
would be accepted within the priesthood.
As I had anticipated, another of your lies was exposed
when the Rev. Hosen Shiina, the chief priest of Jukai-ji
temple (the father of the above-mentioned Hosho Shiina),
verified that it was you, the high priest, who organized
and sponsored the party. While the only concrete evidence
Mr. Shiina can offer to support his assertion is an
entry made in his own journal at the time, I am absolutely
convinced that his account is accurate.
I once had the occasion to visit Mr. Shiina, who was
then also a Nichiren Shoshu propagation district chief,
to deliver some documents. At that time he showed me
a chart he kept of his daily schedule. It was meticulously
detailed. “Written here are my daily responsibilities,”
he said. “A person’s memory is unreliable,
so I carefully write everything down like this.”
I cannot believe that the daily journal of such an exacting
person would be mistaken.
Be that as it may, the Daibyakuho has recently issued
a number of senseless statements [trying to justify
the high priest’s participation in the party].
These include the argument that since parties with geisha
are recognized socially, there is no problem with the
high priest attending such affairs. Another statement
suggests that the high priest’s participation
is excusable because past high priests have been known
to attend similar gatherings. And there is the argument
that the high priests’ attendance at such affairs
is acceptable based upon the spirit to save all people
in the Latter Day equally without the need for practicing
precepts [other than embracing the Gohonzon]. These
statements are no more than shameless attempts to gloss
over the real problem.
It is most likely that you personally ordered the printing
of such statements. However, these sophistic twists
of logic function only to degrade the Law and turn Nichiren
Shoshu into a laughingstock in the eyes of society.
During a meeting for priests in my propagation district
to explain the issue, only one-sided excuses were presented.
Statements like “Do you believe what the priesthood
says, or do you believe [the Gakkai’s] subversive
literature?” were intended only to quash discussion.
Clearly, none of the priests present accepted the explanation
that was offered. Some muttered quietly afterward, “They
have changed their story entirely,” or, “Dead
men tell no tales” [referring to the fact that
Mr. Hoin Abe, who the priesthood claims organized and
paid for the party, is now dead].”
No matter what kind of explanation is offered, isn’t
it absolutely clear to anyone that dining lavishly on
fine food and drink at a high class restaurant while
being waited on and entertained by geishas is not something
a priest should be proud of?
Nikko Shonin, in a document titled “A Complaint
Against the Priests of Jisso-ji Temple,” writes:
“Showing no concern or reverence toward the Buddha,
they continually hold banquets where they entertain
themselves with food, drink and women. Under such circumstances,
is it possible to imagine that they can adequately devote
themselves to administering the temple?” Also,
in his “Twenty-six Admonitions,” Nikko Shonin
writes, “You should refrain from indulging in
poetry or non-Buddhist works, or from engaging in idleness
and chatter without [having the aim of] rebuking slander.”
Clearly, your behavior runs directly counter to the
directions of Nikko Shonin, the founder of the head
temple. At least the other priests who participated
and their family members were aware from the very beginning
that the photo of you posing with geishas published
by the Gakkai was authentic. Clearly, then, they conspired
with you, the high priest [by denying the picture’s
authenticity] in deceiving the rest of the priesthood.
All priests harbor a sense of indignation at having
been taken for fools in this way.
I was unwilling to continue to bear the responsibility
for your behavior. Your lies were being exposed one
after another. Therefore, in spite of pressure from
the Hokkeko not to do so, I repudiated the priesthood’s
statements contained in the special issue of the Daibyakuho.
I have heard that there are also many other priests
who responded the same way.
With no proper explanation or apology, you tried to
deceive us with the kind of lies that quickly became
exposed. Then [when the fact that the party actually
took place could no longer be denied] you defiantly
claimed that there is nothing wrong with the high priest
attending a party with geishas present. As a priest,
I felt only shame, disgrace and sadness.
Desecration of the Cherry
Trees
The same pattern is evident in your felling of a large
number of cherry trees in front of the general lodging
quarters at the head temple. The priesthood’s
explanation is utterly unsatisfactory. The stated reason
was that the trees obscured the view. Even if true,
this would mean that the action was taken based upon
some individual’s subjective sense of aesthetics.
To make such a rash decision without considering the
wishes and the painstaking efforts of those who planted
and cared for the trees, or without the spirit to cherish
living things, clearly indicates a frightful deficiency
on your part as high priest.
Moreover, the priesthood has stated that it was all
right to cut the trees down because they were “mountain
cherry” trees. Do you think that the chief priests
of local temples can offer such a heartless excuse to
the believers before the Gohonzon? Mountain cherries
are cherry trees nonetheless. Don’t they possess
a certain kind of beauty that is not seen in the more
popular someiyoshino variety?
After inspecting the grounds at the head temple where
the cherry trees had been felled, Takekazu Oishi, former
director general of the Environment Agency, is reported
to have said: “How terrible! What a disgrace!
Moreover, no matter how many times I ask why [the trees
were cut], I receive nothing that passes for an explanation.
It should be basic to a religion to cherish living things.
I want to talk to the chief executive officer (the high
priest) about this.” Is it not shameful that the
high priest of an entire sect must be admonished by
an outsider to show respect for the dignity and preciousness
of life? In the spring, when the grounds should be filled
with a profusion of cherry blossoms, how disturbing
it must be for believers and those connected with the
head temple to view the sad remains of the cherry trees
—logs piled in continuous heaps—where these
beautiful trees once stood.
In his “Complaint against the Priests of Jisso-ji
Temple,” Nikko Shonin eloquently elucidates the
offense of cutting down cherry trees, stating, “They
have felled the cherry trees at the temple.... destroying
the ornate beauty of the temple grounds and leaving
bare the area before the Buddha” (Collected Works
of the Fuji School, vol. 10, p. 312.) It is indeed mysterious
that your actions should coincide with what Nikko Shonin
saw as an evil act.
Ultimately, there is absolutely no justification for
this horrible deed. You have only been digging yourself
in deeper with a stream of irrational and defensive
statements. I cannot help concluding that you have once
again inadvertently revealed your cold and callous nature.
This was evidenced in the way you calmly went about
excommunicating the sons and daughters of the Buddha
who earnestly desire kosen-rufu.
Furthermore, plans have been announced to build a 1,000
tatami-mat lodging in the area where the cherry trees
were felled. The explanation given at a meeting of our
greater propagation district is that the structure is
being built to accommodate 60,000 Hokkeko members who
are slated to participate in a general pilgrimage next
year. It was stated that this pilgrimage is scheduled
for only next year, and that no similar activity is
planned for subsequent years. With the continued attrition
of Hokkeko members, it is doubtful whether the goal
of 60,000 participants will even be realized.
Under such circumstances, many chief priests wonder
why it is necessary to build a structure costing from
20 to 30 million dollars that will be used only once.
No effort whatsoever was made beforehand to solicit
opinions from the local temples. Moreover, this comes
in the midst of the issue regarding the establishment
of new propagation offices. At this time when many temples
are experiencing financial difficulty, anyone would
agree that there is no need to build a 1,000-tatami-mat
lodging. It seems that the actual concerns of the priesthood’s
rank and file are the furthest thing from the mind of
the high priest.
Deception in the ‘Zen
Temple Incident’
Although not as recent as those I have been addressing,
the incident involving your erecting a tomb for your
ancestors at a Zen temple involves lies on the part
of the high priest and the priesthood administration
that absolutely cannot be overlooked.
When I read the article reporting the Zen temple incident
in October of 1991, I could not believe my eyes. This
was in part because your visit to the cemetery of the
Zen temple Hakusan-ji in Fukushima City to erect a grand
tombstone for the ancestors of the Abe family and conduct
an eye-opening ceremony took place the day before the
completion and Gohonzon enshrinement ceremony you attended
at my temple, Kairen-ji, on July 17, 1988. Neither I
nor anyone else in my propagation district was aware
of your actions the previous day. Everyone was therefore
utterly astounded when the incident came to light.
For the high priest to visit a Zen temple cemetery and
conduct an eye-opening ceremony clearly constitutes
an act of slander and is a matter of grave seriousness.
For this reason, I decided to go directly to Hakusan-ji
myself to confirm the location of the tombstone. When
I got there, I realized that no matter how I viewed
it, the tombstone was unmistakably on the Hakusan-ji
cemetery grounds. Moreover, I was filled with curiosity
as to why the high priest would find it necessary to
erect a tombstone on the grounds of a Zen cemetery when
excellent plots were available at a nearby Nichiren
Shoshu temple.
Just when I thought it strange that the priesthood had
not referred to the incident at all, an explanatory
document was released. It stated that the place where
the tombstone was erected was not part of the Zen cemetery,
but was in fact on a “public cemetery site”
separated from the Zen temple grounds by a “wall.”
But this story ultimately proved to be a deception.
When I asked another priest what he thought about this
issue, he said, “I don’t understand. I don’t
know,” apparently intending to completely ignore
it. When the Zen temple incident came to light, most
priests took the attitude that “it’s better
not to get involved; it’s dangerous just to talk
about it,” abandoning themselves to the sophistry
of the high priest and the priesthood administration.
At the Gohonzon-enshrinement ceremony at Kairen-ji,
you said, “As I have encountered the True Law
in this lifetime, today I am so fortunate to assume
the role of high priest and in this capacity dedicate
myself to protecting the Law....” How disgraceful
are such empty words from one who, in his capacity as
high priest, erected a tombstone at a Zen cemetery just
the day before. What understanding have you of what
it means to protect the True Law or of the hardship
faced by Soka Gakkai members in carrying out shakubuku
[the act of refuting erroneous interpretations of Buddhism,
such as Zen, and leading people to the True Law].
If I were to describe the sorrowful conditions that
have emerged within the priesthood as a result of the
current situation, I must say that it has been the high
priest and the executive officers who have continued
to employ trickery and fraud in order to sidestep and
deceive both priests and Hokkeko members alike. One
can only conclude that not a single ounce of good intention
remains within the senior administration of Nichiren
Shoshu.
This fundamental state of insincerity, in which ordinary
people are scoffed at, is nothing but extreme arrogance.
It is indicative of the corruption and degeneration
that prevail within the priesthood. Unless a reformation
takes place, springtime will never come again to Nichiren
Shoshu. I would even go so far as to say that we are
at a dangerous crossroads beyond which there is no recovery.
I appeal to all priests who now directly confront this
extremely grave situation to seriously consider the
course of action they must follow.
I am still young and inexperienced. However, I have
been able to continue as a priest until today due to
the guidance and encouragement of many seniors and peers
within the priesthood. Another experience that has supported
me greatly is the education and training I received
as a student at Soka Junior and Senior High Schools.
At the suggestion of Nittatsu Shonin, I resolved to
study at the Soka Schools, which were founded by SGI
President Ikeda. Taking the entrance examination as
a priest, I became a member of the eighth class of Soka
Junior High School in 1975, commuting to school from
Daisen-ji temple in Kokubunji City. There I mixed with
gifted young students from across the nation. While
exerting myself in my studies, I shared with them my
true feelings on many subjects. The friendships I cultivated
in this way still remain as my greatest treasure.
I was raised in a house where both my father and grandfather
were priests. The time I spent at school was my one
and only chance to have contact with the world outside
of the priesthood.
The students then were mostly the children of Gakkai
members, and we discussed many things concerning faith.
Among these friends, I experienced a fresh joy in faith
and an enjoyment of working and struggling together
that I had never experienced among priests. In the various
events at school sports festivals, we all pooled our
strength and ability, uniting to experience the joy,
passion and sense of victory one feels in accomplishing
a seemingly impossible task.
This is what I experienced during my school years. I
realized that this was the Gakkai spirit— the
spirit to overcome all difficulties. I truly sensed
that it was with this kind of painstaking toil that
Gakkai members had been striving to advance kosen-rufu.
President Ikeda encouraged the students with heartfelt
sincerity and worried over them as if they were his
own children. On the day I entered Soka Junior High
School, President Ikeda was truly overjoyed to see us,
the acolyte priests who had become new students, and
presented each of us with a fountain pen to commemorate
the occasion. I was so happy that I went back to the
temple and reported it to my seniors. But there were
those even then who told me that I should return the
gift.
A strange atmosphere prevailed at the temple, in which
President Ikeda was spoken of in a condescending manner.
This was because he was considered a “mere lay
believer.” I thought this was strange. It was
then that I first sensed the great prejudice existing
within the priesthood toward the Soka Gakkai and its
president. Around the time I entered high school, the
atmosphere of mistrust worsened between the priesthood
and the Gakkai. At the temple President Ikeda was only
spoken ill of.
Knowing that the founder of my school was not the sort
of person the priests said he was, I felt torn. Unable
to endure the dilemma I was facing, I took my sleeping
bag and left for about two weeks, wandering about and
sleeping under the stars. While I caused considerable
trouble for people both at the temple and at school,
one person who truly showed sincere concern at that
time, sending a message of encouragement to my parents,
was the founder himself, President Ikeda. I will never
be able to repay my debt of gratitude to him for this
as long as I live.
After many encouraging experiences during my high school
years, I attended college and then returned to the head
temple. At that time I regrettably became aware of many
problems with the education of acolytes at the Daibo
lodging. At the Daibo, a strict hierarchical structure
was being forced upon junior and senior high school
age children. Little or no concern was shown toward
the junior acolytes, and their strenuous efforts went
without reward or compensation. Fearing only the wrath
of the high priest and other seniors, such acolytes
later learned the skill of enjoying themselves while
evading the scrutiny of others. Today, from among those
acolytes of junior high school age, we see many who
perfectly imitate the high priest in their actions,
disposition and way of thinking. The education of acolytes
at the Daibo is producing priests who lack common sense,
faith or any understanding of society outside of the
priesthood, let alone appreciation for the earnest efforts
of the lay believers. When I see this, I can only predict
how dark a future is in store for the priesthood of
Nichiren Shoshu.
As the current situation progresses, I feel it is most
important for you, the high priest, to issue a formal
apology that is free of any deception. While this is
something that the senior priests and executive administrators
ought to tell you directly, I am afraid they lack the
strength of will to do so. For this reason, I have dared
to speak out myself. The seemingly insane series of
actions and plots by the priesthood against the Soka
Gakkai include the scheme called “Operation C,”
the dismissal of Honorary President Ikeda from his position
as chief lay representative, the enactment of provisions
for the punishment of lay believers, the rejection of
the SGI as a lay organization, the forced amendment
of the tozan system and finally, the excommunication
of the Soka Gakkai.
Episodes such as the geisha party, the Zen temple tombstone
affair and the Seattle incident indicate a breakdown
in moral self-discipline. Various other scandals surrounding
your behavior include your excursions to expensive hot
spring spas and the felling of the cherry trees on the
head temple grounds. Beyond this, you have attempted
to alter the significance of the Sho-Hondo, lectured
erroneously on the principle of the heritage of the
Law, tried to praise the slanderous Hakiri Sanenaga
and put forth many other dubious doctrinal interpretations
that have in no time at all piled as high as a mountain.
It is natural that the members of the Soka Gakkai are
angered when they hear of these transgressions. In addition,
with the awareness that it is you the high priest who
is responsible for the destruction of the sect, a nagging
sense of distrust and feelings of antipathy and anger
have been growing among the priests of Nichiren Shoshu.
Regarding the measures you have taken and the explanations
you have offered for your actions, never once did you
or the senior priests consult or solicit opinions from
the other members of the priesthood. Everything was
carried out based upon your individual judgment and
ultimate authority. Therefore, as the high priest and
chief executive officer of the sect, there is no way
for you to avoid taking the responsibility. I must ask
you to cease your prevarication and stop trying to evade
responsibility or foist it upon others. Should you succeed
in thoroughly destroying the sect, there will be no
way for you to claim ignorance later on and escape the
blame.
If you would just consider your accountability as high
priest, you would properly clarify the details of what
has happened, offer an acceptable apology and take responsibility
by stepping down. Of course, your simple words of apology
and your resignation will not adequately compensate
for cruel injustices you have inflicted against President
Ikeda and the entire Soka Gakkai. Your crimes have been
so grave that they will not be atoned for so easily.
However, what is most necessary now is an expression
of profound self-reflection and deep Buddhist apology
from you the high priest, accompanied by a clear revelation
of the facts behind the current issue. This is needed
so that we may correctly record this period of evil
history for the sake of future generations of priests
and so that we may make a fresh start based upon a reawakening
of faith in our mission for kosen-rufu. If you cannot
do this much, then you will be remembered only as a
person who utterly disqualified himself as a disciple
of Nichiren Daishonin. I implore you not to allow your
arrogance and ignorance to further occlude the future
of Nichiren Shoshu.
In spite of my shallow understanding and ability, I
have directly stated what has been on my mind. What
I have stated must be painful for you, but I ask you
once again to somehow consider what I have written here
out of my utmost sincerity.
In seceding from Nichiren Shoshu, I hope also to part
company with the thoughtlessness that I myself have
shown in the past and make a fresh start as a priest
and as a true disciple of Nichiren Daishonin. I will
always from here on show deep respect to the believers,
who are my comrades in fulfilling the Daishonin’s
will for kosen-rufu. I pledge to the Dai-Gohonzon that
I will persevere in carrying out my mission as a priest
whose spirit accords with that of Nichiren Daishonin
and Nikko Shonin. I want also to continue ceaselessly
to train and develop myself.
Thank you for everything you have done for me over the
years.
April 1, 1993
Doshuku Watanabe, Kairen-ji Temple Chief Priest
To High Priest Nikken
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