A
Sect's Political Rise Creates Uneasiness in Japan
November 14, 1999, Sunday
FOREIGN DESK
By HOWARD W. FRENCH (NYT) 1422 words
OSAKA, Japan -- Forgoing anything so formal as
a temple or church, four middle-aged women meet each month in
Kumiko Hashimoto's small dining room here to discuss Buddhist
principles and to review the latest teachings of their spiritual
master.
After a session of eerily powerful chanting of
their sect's principal mantra -- ''Nam-myoho-renge-kyo,'' or ''Adore
the lotus of the wonderful law'' -- the four discuss their saddest
experiences. In the end, though, theirs is mostly a light affair,
punctuated with the laughter they say they have recovered since
repairing their lives through the lessons of Soka Gakkai, a lay
Buddhist organization that says it has a presence in eight million
Japanese households.
''Before I joined Soka Gakkai, the words 'love'
or 'progress' or 'courage' had no meaning to me,'' said one of
the women, Ryoko Kunisue, 47, an assistant in an acupuncture clinic.
''Since then, I have been able to reconcile with my husband and
with his family, and I am confident and happy again.''
Using simple themes of self-help and compassion,
and building a disciplined nationwide organization through small
neighborhood groups, Soka Gakkai -- which means Values Creation
Society -- has repeatedly confounded political observers in Japan.
Since its founding in 1930, it has risen from a small, persecuted
sect to one of the countless ''new religions'' that blossomed
in the postwar era, becoming the most powerful religious movement
here.
Its most dramatic step toward the mainstream came
early last month when Prime Minister Keizo Obuchi named a new
coalition cabinet, formally allying his long-governing Liberal
Democratic Party with New Komeito, a political party created by
Soka Gakkai in 1964.
Public opinion polls have shown widespread disapproval
of New Komeito's entry into the government. For many Japanese,
still shaken by the 1995 nerve gas attack in the Tokyo subways
by another once-obscure sect, Soka Gakkai has many of the markings
of a cult, and crosses the strict divide between church and state
established after World War II.
Many people uneasy about its rise regard both
the religious group and the political party as little more than
the personal instruments of Soka Gakkai's longtime leader and
now honorary chairman, Daisaku Ikeda. An enigmatic figure who
has called himself the ''anti-authority'' but clearly relishes
meeting world leaders, Mr. Ikeda, 71, travels the world with his
message of peace, even as his followers have sometimes used violence
to deal with critics.
Mr. Ikeda, who declined to be interviewed, is
said to spend most of his time on spreading the faith to other
countries, including the United States, where Soka Gakkai says
it has 300,000 followers and has founded a university. His words
are studied and cited virtually as scripture by members. His successor,
Einosuke Akiya, who has formally led Soka Gakkai for two decades,
said he consulted Mr. Ikeda every day.
''What we are talking about are not open organizations
or democratic structures, but something like a Communist Party
or worse,'' said Seizaburo Sato, deputy director of the National
Graduate Institute of Policy Studies. ''We are dealing with a
dictatorship built around the person of one man.''
Soka Gakkai officials describe their organization
in very different terms. For them, it is akin to a liberation
movement and is an ardent promoter of social activism and human
rights. They often describe their group as Buddhism's first Protestant
movement, since its ex communication by Nichiren Shoshu, a Japanese
strain of the faith, in 1991.
Soka Gakkai was founded in 1930 as a lay offshoot
of Nichiren Shoshu by a schoolteacher and educational reformer,
Tsunesaburo Makiguchi. Mr. Makiguchi was later imprisoned for
criticizing Shintoism, Japan's official religion at the time.
He died in jail in 1944.
A follower, Josei Toda, undertook the rapid expansion
of the movement after the war ended in 1945, taking advantage
of the lifting of religious restrictions. Mr. Ikeda succeeded
Mr. Toda as the third leader.
There is little agreement about the implications
of the group's rise. Certainly, in his 40 years at, or just behind,
the helm of his organization, Mr. Ikeda has proved himself an
organizational genius. Through the political party, Soka Gakkai
retains the allegiance of nearly eight million voters, placing
it among the most powerful parties in Japan.
For years, detractors have warned that Soka Gakkai's
long-range ambition is to govern Japan indirectly through the
New Komeito Party, allowing it to establish its strain of Buddhism
as an official religion.
Mr. Obuchi has faced criticism for the coalition.
The powerful former secretary general of his Liberal Democrats,
Koichi Kato, called the alliance with New Komeito a political
misjudgment.
Soka Gakkai officials say they have no ambition
to see their type of Buddhism declared a state religion. Soka
Gakkai's main purpose is ''to pursue peace as an ideal,'' said
Mr. Akiya, the president.
Soka Gakkai became involved in politics, officials
said, to guard against the persecution of members and to protect
religious freedom. Since then, in keeping with its lower-middle-class
base, the group has consistently advocated increased social-welfare
benefits.
Critics point to the words of Mr. Toda, who once
wrote, ''Politics and Buddha's law should merge.'' Current writings
by Mr. Ikeda speak more ambiguously of ''setting in motion our
goal of achieving a victory of the people in the 21st century.''
Members of the group have used arson and a bomb
threat against temples of rival Buddhist groups. Soka Gakkai has
also tried to block the publication of critical books, and members
were convicted of wiretapping the house of the Communist Party
leader. A spokesman said the bomb threat and arson incidents involved
''individuals with histories of mental illness'' and denied that
Soka Gakkai had ever ordered violence or harassment.
Mr. Ikeda has been the almost constant subject
of a wide range of allegations that include financial and sexual
abuses, but he was acquitted after his one formal indictment,
on charges of violating electoral laws in 1957.
When Yoshikatsu Takeiri, who resigned as leader
of New Komeito in 1986, published a revealing memoir about the
party and Mr. Ikeda's power last year, he became the object of
a blistering and prolonged campaign of attacks in the party newspaper,
Komei Shimbun, and in the Soka Gakkai-owned Seikyo Shimbun. He
had written bluntly that ''Komeito was subordinate to Soka Gakkai
financially and organizationally.''
Whatever the truth of the statements, even some
critics of Soka Gakkai said they believed that the organization
represented no threat to secular society in Japan, where there
is a long tradition of picking and choosing ceremonies from several
religions. Indeed, some experts said the group had been losing
strength here and was working hard to moderate its behavior and
image to avoid alienating potential recruits.
''I do not feel worried by Soka Gakka,'' said
Nobutaka Inoue, a professor of religious sociology at Kokugakuin
University. ''Their original nature may have been very control-oriented,
like other sects. But in recent years, they have become much more
socialized. They are more and more normal all the time.''
Until the 1960's, Soka Gakkai pursued hard-sell
proselytizing and was known to enter members' houses to smash
relics from other faiths. New Komeito has recently begun writing
to leaders of other religious groups seeking better relations
and pledging to respect the church-state divide.
Soka Gakkai's followers also now more accurately
reflect Japanese society; the group no longer attracts just downtrodden
rural migrants or the poorly educated, but also more upscale adherents.
What the group will do with this strength is what holds Japan
in suspense.
Ms. Hashimoto, 40, has her own answer. Separation
of church and state, she said, must not mean a betrayal of the
populist principles that New Komeito was formed to promote.
At first she dismissed the alliance with the Liberal
Democrats, she said, then realized it was a sign of New Komeito's
becoming ''a very important player." But she insisted: "Komeito
must never forget its commitment to live with the people or die
with the people. If they do, they will hear our voice."
Read
more about Soka