Court Rejects Suit
March 1, 2002 -- No. 124
The Justice Chronicle,
provided by Soka Gakkai International-USA, is a free monthly
e-mail in support of the Soka Spirit movement. Soka Spirit
is the SGI's educational effort to create value and deepen
our understanding of Nichiren Buddhism through increased
awareness of issues surrounding the Nichiren Shoshu priesthood
and the spiritual foundation of the SGI movement.
1) NEWS
COURT REJECTS NICHIREN SHOSHU SUIT AGAINST REFORMIST PRIEST
On Feb. 22, the Supreme Court in Tokyo dismissed an eviction suit filed
by the Nichiren Shoshu priesthood against chief priest Jizai Watanabe
of Daikyo-ji Temple. The plaintiff had sought to evict the defendant
from his temple after he disassociated himself from Nichiren Shoshu in
October 1992. The Yokohama District Court had ruled in Rev. Watanabe's
favor, but the appellate court overturned the decision. The defendant
then appealed to the Supreme Court, which agreed with the district
court. The latest verdict is the third issued by the Supreme Court in
2002 over similar eviction suits filed by Nichiren Shoshu against
priests belonging to reform organizations.
2) FROM MY DEAR FRIENDS IN AMERICA
This series contains excerpts of speeches SGI President Ikeda made in
the United States which relate to Soka Spirit and are contained in the
book My Dear Friends in America.
THE DEMONIZATION OF RELIGION
I would now like to focus on how religions, in a general sense, change in character and grow authoritarian.
The original purpose of religion is to help people find happiness. But
we find quite frequently that religions, abandoning their doctrines,
act in a way that generates unhappiness. We see teachings of love turn
into evil behavior, compassionate creeds become the rationale for
atrocities -- all of which cause people to suffer. Why is it that
religion undergoes this kind of evil transformation?
Paul Tillich (1886-1965), a renowned philosopher and Harvard University
professor, said: Affirming the finite in the name of the holy as the
majesty of the ultimate, as the Divine, is called demonization. If the
finite were elevated to the level of ultimate, then it would strive to
subjugate all other finite things. And if it found it impossible to do
so, it would seek their destruction.
In Nichiren Daishonin's Buddhism, the ultimate corresponds to the
Gohonzon. If, for example, people who are of finite existence should
raise themselves to the same level of dignity as the Gohonzon and
declare that they were one and the same [as the Gohonzon], we could say
that the demonization of our religion has started. Once this happens,
such people assume a condescending attitude toward all others and try
to force people to submit to their control. This is truly an abuse of
authority. Then they try to destroy anyone who refuses to yield like
slaves to them. I hope that this helps you understand the causes of the
insane behavior [among Nichiren Shoshu priests] of disrupting the
harmonious unity of believers working to achieve kosen-rufu.
Tillich especially stresses the threats posed by demonization of the
church and clergy, naming examples such as belief in the infallibility
of the pope. He says that such institutions only convey the holy or are
symbolic of the holy.
He continues: It is for this reason that an institution which is
demonically destructive will attack all other institutions and
conflicting cultures. Similarly, individuals who engage in
profanization become fanatical.
Asserting that [singing Ode to Joy in] Beethoven's Ninth Symphony,
which was performed earlier at this meeting, is slanderous [as the
priests have done] is a typical example of this kind of attack on
culture.
Born in Prussia, Tillich was driven from Dresden University for his
outspoken criticism of the Nazi regime. In deifying and investing
absolute power in Hitler, a finite being, and in the Third Reich, a
finite nation, the Nazis had turned into demons, just as Tillich
outlines. The concentration camp at Auschwitz bears stark testimony to
this.
With its state and personality cult, Nazism could be termed a kind of
religion. Perhaps in Tillich's mind as he expounded his theory of the
demonization of religion was the recurring thought of the tragedies
that had visited his country. We must absolutely never allow such a
tragedy to be repeated. (pp. 151-52)
Five in a series.
SOKA SPIRIT IN THE PUBLICATIONS
This section highlights articles published in the World Tribune and Living Buddhism related to the Soka Spirit movement.
March 1 World Tribune page 9: SGI-USA General Director Danny Nagashima
encourages the youth of SGI-USA to take the lead in Soka Spirit
activities in his message for March 16, Kosen-Rufu Day, meetings.
March 1 World Tribune page 11: In the first installment of the series
District Leaders Q-and-A with the General Director, Danny Nagashima
discusses the true meaning of Soka Spirit: caring for others.
