Nikken Withdraws Seattle Incident Claim
Feb. 1, 2002 -- No. 120
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.
NEWS
NICHIREN SHOSHU WITHDRAWS SEATTLE INCIDENT CLAIM
Following the Tokyo High Court judge's strong recommendation, on Jan.
31, Nichiren Shoshu completely withdrew its claim accusing Soka Gakkai
of libel in the Seattle Case. In 1993 Nichiren Shoshu had sued the Soka
Gakkai for libel regarding coverage of its high priest Nikken Abe's
alleged altercation with prostitutes in Seattle in 1963. In March 2000,
the Tokyo District Court had found that the incident had indeed taken
place as reported, so the Soka Gakkai publications were not libelous.
Nichiren Shoshu then appealed this decision.
In 1992, the Soka Gakkai bi-monthly publication Soka Shimpo had
reported that, during an official trip to the city of Seattle in 1963,
Abe, then head of Nichiren Shoshu's study department, had gone out at
night and become involved in a dispute with prostitutes. When Soka
Shimpo published this allegation, based on an eyewitness account by a
Soka Gakkai women's division member, Nichiren Shoshu sued the lay
Buddhist organization for libel.
The Tokyo District Court dismissed the lawsuit on March 21, 2000,
ruling that the Soka Gakkai had presented compelling and convincing
evidence to corroborate the truthfulness of the witness's account,
while Abe's own testimony was highly ambiguous and lacked credibility.
The court concluded that Soka Gakkai had published articles in the
public interest and that in view of the truth of the allegations, there
was no incidence of libel.
Soka Gakkai attorney, Morio Miyahara, comments, For Nichiren Shoshu to
withdraw their claim brings this case to a welcome end and demonstrates
the validity of the District Court's ruling.
2) FROM MY DEAR FRIENDS IN AMERICA
This series contains Soka Spirit-related excerpts of speeches SGI
President Ikeda made in the United States which are contained in the
book My Dear Friends in America.
THE SGI MOVEMENT FOSTERS DEMOCRACY
The noted American scholar of education, Dayle M. Bethel of the
International University, Osaka, Japan, has observed: During the
nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, democracy became the great
hope of the world's peoples. The democratic current that swept through
the world during that period whispered to people everywhere that they,
as individual human beings, had the ability and the potential to be the
salvation of themselves and their families....
What people all over the world are having to face up to during the
final quarter of this century is that democracy...has failed....
Throughout the world at the present time, people are reacting to this
failure of democracy by placing their hope in various types of
religious fundamentalism. In these fundamentalist perspectives, hope
for salvation, for the possibility of improving conditions for oneself
and one's family, rests not in oneself and in democracy but in the
authority of a deity or in the clergy or in political leaders who
profess to speak for the deity. The dangers for individuals and for
societies stemming from such blind following of absolutist religious
authority are, I think, obvious.
As I observe the Soka Gakkai organization, I see it as running counter
to this fundamentalist trend of the times. It is a movement that seeks
to develop people who can think and discern for themselves; a movement
that rejects authoritarianism because it impedes human growth. Two
general types of religious organizations can be observed in the world:
dogmatic religions that seek to gain the allegiance of the people
through authority and blind faith and those who seek to develop people
who are free-thinking and self-determined. For the sake of humanity's
future, this latter type of religious organization is most important....
It is important, therefore, that the people of...religious
organizations engage in periodic reflection and examine themselves and
the organization of which they are a part from the standpoint their
original purpose....
When activities and ways of thinking that were once fresh and unique
and effective in serving people become taken for granted and routinized
they, ironically, wind up eventually restricting and controlling the
very people they were supposed to serve. Secretive actions and
oversensitivity to suggestions and criticism signify the stiffening and
bureaucratization of an organization (The Soka Gakkai's Movement
Fosters Democracy, Issues Between the Nichiren Shoshu Priesthood and
the Soka Gakkai, vol. 2, pp. 137Â41).
As Professor Bethel points out, self-righteous religions obsessed with
making the people yield to their authority demand blind obedience from
their followers and try to restrict and control them.
The original purpose of religion is to serve humanity and lead people
to happiness. Toward this end, the Daishonin's Buddhism is the ultimate
teaching that espouses humanity and delivers freedom and dignity
equally to all human beings, refusing to bend to any authoritarian
power or force.
If anyone who embraces the Daishonin's Buddhism looks down on the
Buddha's children and creates discrimination among believers, then they
shall not deserve to be called the Daishonin's followers.
The history of the Soka Gakkai, as Professor Bethel remarks, has been a
continuous battle against authoritarianism, which hinders human growth.
In its course we have taken our movement promoting true democracy to
all parts of the world. For this we have been the target of constant
criticism and persecution. Therefore, we must have keen perception to
see through devilish functions and continue to wage our battle against
evil without retreating an inch. This is the way we can protect the
True Law, faith, the Buddha's children and democracy. (pp. 118-119)
Three 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.
Feb. 1 World Tribune Friends for Peace p. ffp-4: In her Soka Spirit
Quizzer LaVora Perry poses the question of why second high priest
Nikko Shonin left the five senior priests.
