Authors: Clark Strand
Published by Middleway Press
A division of the SGI-USA
606 Wilshire Blvd., Santa Monica, CA 90401
© 2014 Clark Strand
All rights reserved.
Printed in the United States of America.
Cover and interior design by Gopa & Ted2, Inc.
10Â Â 9Â Â 8Â Â 7Â Â 6Â Â 5Â Â 4Â Â 3Â Â 2Â Â 1
ISBN 978-0-9779245-6-1
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Strand, Clark, 1957- author.
  Waking the Buddha : how the most dynamic and empowering Buddhist movement in history is changing our concept of religion / Clark Strand.
    pages cm
  ISBN 978-0-9779245-6-1 (paperback)
1. Soka Gakkai International 2. BuddhismâSocial aspects.
I. Title.
  BQ8415.4.S87 2014
  294.3'928-dc23
2013049938
Middleway Press is committed to preserving ancient forest and natural resources. We are a member of the Green Press Initiativeâa nonprofit program dedicated to supporting book publishers in maximizing their use of fiber, which is not sourced from ancient or endangered forests. We have elected to print this title on Natures B19 Smooth Antique, made with 30 percent post consumer waste. For more information about the Green Press Initiative and the use of recycled paper in book publishing, visit
www.greenpressinitiative.org
the spark
an idea ahead of its time
a change in the life of one individual
the foundation
the creation of the soka gakkai
just one verse of the lotus sutra
understanding our common humanity
opening a way toward the future
personal transformation through group discussion
the development
the discovery of modern buddhism
religion serving life, not life religion
the completion
the spread of religious humanism
the oneness of mentor and disciple
the future
a religion for the twenty-first century
the foundation for a happy life
I
N
F
EBRUARY OF
2003, just weeks before the U.S. invasion of Iraq, I came across a photograph of some Buddhist prayer beads made in a Tokyo prison during World War II. With limited resources to draw from, a prisoner of conscience had improvised them using the bottle caps from his daily milk ration.
I found the “beads” in the photograph strangely moving, even beautiful. Not that they were elegantly made. Far from it. The cardboard bottle caps were dark from handling and worn to the point of falling apart. Nevertheless, the photo inspired me to learn more about the imprisonment of Josei Todaâthe man who had made them and then later became the president of the Nichiren Buddhist lay group the Soka Gakkai (Value Creation Society). A month later, I wrote a short article for an American Buddhist magazine that began with a series of questions:
What goes through the mind of the person who chooses to go to jail rather than betray his spiritual convictions, the person who, refusing to be swept up in the militant patriotism that precedes most wars, chooses loneliness and isolation instead? It is hard enough to imagine how such a person passes the days and weeks. What of the hours and minutes? Isn't it conceivable that the resolve of the heart might collapse under the weight of even a single moment?
The article went on to describe how Toda and his mentor, Tsunesaburo Makiguchi, had been arrested by the government as “thought criminals” because of their refusal to support the Japanese war machine. Makiguchi had died in prison, but Toda survived, renewing his resolve day by day, bottle cap by bottle capâa moment's weight ⦠added to another moment's weight ⦠added to another.
Sometime later, when a friend asked why I'd become interested in the Soka Gakkai, I knew the answer right away. Toda hadn't collapsed. He'd borne up under the weight of countless moments when it would have been easier to accept defeat.
One of the most striking things about the Soka Gakkai from a Buddhist point of view is its emphasis on attaining victory in ordinary lifeâsometimes under
extraor
dinary circumstances, like the ones Toda had endured. Soka Gakkai members chant the mantra-like title of the Lotus Sutra, Nam-myoho-renge-kyo, as a way of harnessing the universal life force inherent in their own bodies and minds. According to the teachings of Nichiren Buddhism, that mantra activates the basic, positive creative energy of the universeâa force that animates all sentient beings, driving them to grow and express their true nature eternally, from one lifetime to the next. By chanting Nam-myoho-renge-kyo and working for the happiness of others, Nichiren Buddhists seek to improve their current life condition and demonstrate “actual proof” of the Buddhist principle that all things are interconnectedâthat an inner change in the life of one individual can trigger outer changes in their community, their environment, and ultimately the world at large.
That principle of interconnectedness corresponds with what we know today about particle physics and planetary ecology, both of which support the view that all things are intimately interrelated and dependent upon one anotherâthat nothing exists as separate and alone. Before Nichiren, however, that teaching was mostly theory, a topic for discussion between religious intellectuals or debate among cloistered monks and nuns. It didn't have much application outside of the sedate (some might say sleepy) world within temple or monastery walls. The idea that individuals could use it to awaken to the possibilities for change in everyday life, producing positive effects in their own lives and the lives of those around them, honoring their responsibilities to society and to the life of the planet itselfâthat had never been put to the test.
Nichiren changed all that. He staked his life on that theory, making it the basis of his teaching and standing alone against the corrupt military government of thirteenth-century Japan. Like Toda and Makiguchi seven centuries later, he believed that religion should serve the lives of individuals rather than merely functioning as a pawn of the state. And, also like Toda and Makiguchi, he ran afoul of the government and of the religious institutions that supported it. Twice attacked, twice exiled, and once sentenced to execution for his uncompromising views, Nichiren refused to back down from his belief that ordinary people could change their karma and attain enlightenment in this lifetime simply by chanting Nam-myoho-renge-kyo. It was a revolutionary vision of Buddhism that empowered lay people to take charge of their spiritual and material destiny, and he was widely condemned for it.
Today, you might call Nichiren Buddhism “an idea way ahead of its time.” After Nichiren's death, the school of Buddhism he founded grew steadily but never became the dominant voice of Buddhism in Japan. When Toda left prison in 1945, it was just what it had been for centuries: a small sect with a big teaching that had never really come into its own. Were it not for his efforts, and those of his successor, Daisaku Ikeda, it is unlikely that anybody outside of Japan would ever have heard of it. As it is, the Soka Gakkai, the largest and most influential lay group in Buddhist history, has now spread the teachings of Nichiren Buddhism to some 192 countries around the globe. How and why that happened, and what it means for religion in the twenty-first century, is the subject of this book. It's the story of an idea whose time has come, and of the people who made it a reality.
L
IFE IS A STRUGGLE.
That is one way of understanding the first noble truth of Buddhism: that life is suffering. Given that reality, it is no surprise that human beings the world over tend to experience their lives in terms of whether they are winning that struggle or notâ in other words, in terms of gain and loss. And yet, these are seldom emphasized by religion. Marx called religion “the opiate of the masses.” Granted, he judged religion mostly on the basis of its failures; nevertheless, it is fair to say that religions the world over have tended to prefer conformity over revolution, complacency over action. Religious teachings offer inspiration and consolation but rarely spark the fire of revolution. Societies prefer the elegant confinement of the candle on the altar over the open flame of reform.
Religions usually grow out of some revolutionary impulse initiallyâin the beginning they may attempt to address racial or ethnic discrimination or economic inequality. However, as time goes on they invariably choose stability over all else, even at the expense of the ongoing spiritual evolution of humankind. Having woken us up initially, they allow us to grow drowsy again, sometimes for decades or centuries on end. That is probably why I felt drawn to the story of Toda's resistance to the war. It was the wake-up call I had been expecting from American Buddhism in the lead-up to the Iraq War, a call that never actually arrived.
In retrospect, I'm not sure why I expected American Buddhism to provide such a call. With the exception of the Soka Gakkai International (SGI), all major schools of Buddhism in America have their origins in the teachings of pre-modern traditions, the appeal of which rests largely upon their antiquity. They are attractive to most converts precisely because they do
not
engage modern issues but provide some solaceâin the form of ritual or silent meditationâfrom the issues and problems of modernity. This may account, in part, for the popularity of the weekend or week-long retreat model so prevalent in American Buddhism, which provides a kind of “spiritual vacation” from many aspects of modern cultureâsuch as most forms of current communication, including phone, e-mail, the Internet, and news bulletins. It is ironic that American Buddhism won the bulk of its initial converts during the countercultural years of the 1960s only to become religiously complacent, if not exactly conservative in the usual sense, as it grew in subsequent decades.