Ok..Thank you Ernesto..so they admitted there conduct and felt justify....
 
Now what does that event have to do with SGI Today? Like I said..everything 
that happened by then was in the context of a historic Event ww2..II..

--- On Sat, 6/19/10, [email protected] <[email protected]> wrote:


From: [email protected] <[email protected]>
Subject: [GohonzonForum] Toda, the YMD and Ogasawara
To: [email protected]
Date: Saturday, June 19, 2010, 12:08 AM


  




Miguel,
 
Here is the quote in full:
 
    "Toda felt particularly bitter toward one Taiseki-ji priest, Jimon 
Ogasawara, who had favored the merger of Nichiren Shoshu with Nichiren Shu at 
Minobu to conform with the government policy of unifying all Nichiren sects. 
Ogasawara also advocated the eclectic Shinto-Buddhist theology, according to 
which Buddhist deities were merely manifestations of the true deities--those of 
Shinto. Such had been the atmosphere at Taiseki-ji when Makiguchi was called to 
the temple and directed to moderate his outspokenness in the interest of good 
relations between the temple and the authorities. Toda felt that the priests, 
and Ogasawara in particular, were thereby largely responsible for the 
government suppression of Soka Kyoiku Gakkai and for Makiguchi's death in jail.
    "Toda never forgot this, nor did he forgive Ogasawara. On the eve of April 
28, 1952, when Taiseki-ji held a major service to commemorate the founding of 
the Nichiren Sect in 1253, Toda visited the temple with four thousand members 
of his Youth Division and assaulted Ogasawara. Toda felt justified in doing so 
to avenge his late teacher and demanded an apology from the octogenarian 
priest. When Ogasawara refused, the young men, who included Ikeda, later 
president of Soka Gakkai, mobbed him and carried him on their shoulders, 
tagging him with a placard inscribed 'Tanuki Bozu' (Racoon Monk). Ogasawara was 
taken to Makigushi's grave, where he was forced to sign a statement of apology.
    "Recalling this incident in an interview with the author in July 1956, Toda 
admited hitting the priest 'twice' and said that this was the cause of the 
extremely unfavorable press his organization then received--which labeled Soka 
Gakkai as a 'violent religion.'
    "Ogasawara filed a complaint with the authorities against Soka Gakkai for 
assault and battery. In November 1958, Nissho, the high priest of Taiseki-ji, 
reprimanded Toda for the April 27 incident, and Toda responded with an apology 
printed in Seikyo Shimbun, Soka Gakkai's organ. He promised that Soka Gakkai 
would follow 'the iron rule of absolute obedience to the policy of the 
[Taiseki-ji] administration' and would continue to serve its interests. 'In 
response to the high priest's admonition,' he said, 'we shall forget completely 
what happened in the past. . . .But if Mr. Ogasawara should take steps like 
those he took during the war . . . we will resolutely carry out a firm struggle 
to safeguard our cannon. For the sin of having troubled the high priest, I am 
resolved to atone and apologize with the conversion of the entire nation. It 
goes without saying that members of the Youth Division follow me in this 
regard.'
    "In a pamphlet issued in May 1955, Ogasawara similarly 'repented' his 
'indiscretion in having had the unfortunate conflict with Soka Gakkai.' Ikeda, 
who led the four thousand young men to mob Ogasawara, says now that the 
incident was an act of kindness because the old priest, made to realize his 
apostasy, was grateful to Toda and Soka Gakkai and died a happy man."
 
This excerpt was taken from pages 95 to 97 of the book, Japan's New Buddhism: 
An Objective Account of Soka Gakkai, by Kiyoaki Murata, published by 
Walker/Weatherhill in 1969. LCC Card No. 74-83640.
 
In the book's Foreword, on pages ix and x, Daisaku Ikeda writes the following 
about this book:
 
    "As for the facts given in this book concerning the Soka Gakkai, I can say 
with assurance that the book is more accurate than any other on the subject. 
Some of the bits of information the author has dug out in the course of his 
research are printed for the first time."
    "I hope that this work by Mr. Kiyoaki Murata will play a role in bringing 
correct understanding of the Sokagakkai to many people..."
 
To which I say, "Indeed!"
 
Ernesto
 

In a message dated 6/18/2010 07:21:08 A.M. Pacific Daylight Time, 
desertmonk2002@ yahoo.com writes:






Ernesto I am very interested in the quote...As you know..".from the mouth of 
two or three witnesses".. ...

--- On Thu, 6/17/10, kokoroi...@aol. com <kokoroi...@aol. com> wrote:


From: kokoroi...@aol. com <kokoroi...@aol. com>
Subject: Re: [GohonzonForum] Re: [The Bible of Shakubuku] supervised by Taisaku 
Ikeda, SGI
To: GohonzonForum@ yahoogroups. com
Date: Thursday, June 17, 2010, 3:28 PM


  




Him and some of his mates in the SGI battered a Priest who was in his 60s 
because he disagreed with their views. This happened way back in the days, 40s 
or 50s. If you search the net you will find the correct information as I did. 
This event is discussed in the now long out of print book, Japan's New 
Buddhism. The priest is described there as being an "octogenarian, " meaning he 
was in his eighties, not sixties. The YMD went to the old priest's home and 
dragged (literally and eventually carried) him to a cemetery in the middle of 
the night. He was roughed up and forced to apologize to the tomb of Makiguchi 
in his underwear. If I recall correctly, the old priest's "crime" was in 
writing a doctrinal paper stating that the time for Shakabuku was over (but I 
might be wrong about this). Ikeda, himself, wrote the preface to this book, 
highly praising it. It was either the first, or one of the first, scholarly 
works to be done about the Gakkai by
 an independent source. If anyone is interested, I can post a quote directly 
from the book, as well as publishing information.


Ernesto


 
 







      

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