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Saturday, May 30, 2015

SGI Healing Arts Mens Leader Bobby Ash looks ill
































       

I knew Bobby well. Almost didn't recognize him. He is the one who threw my statue of Shakyamuni Buddha in the trash.

8 comments:

  1. 'Bad Boy Bobby' for doing such a thing. Has he ever apologised to Nichiren,Shakyamuni and Mark, especially now since he has the title of men's healing arts leader

    ReplyDelete
  2. Man he looks drawn. Complexion sallow, certainly not fresh as a Lotus Flower. Perhaps he would like to come here and rebut what we say about Shakyamuni Buddha, the Lotus Sutra, Nichiren, interfaith, and the Soka Gakkai. We can talk about the healing arts and he can bring the head of the Doctor's division too.

    ReplyDelete
  3. Actually, he looks sort of scary. Didn't age well. Was a handsome man. George Clooney is aging far better than he and he doesn't even chant and is married to a Muslim.

    ReplyDelete
  4. The following incidents have been reported in the news in
    recent years:

    Feb.10, 1962, Asahi Shinbun: Sixty-eight Soka Gakkal youth
    with saws and pliers entered a Buddhist cemetery at midnight
    on February 10, broke down barricades set up by the Buddhist
    Association of the village, and routed the policemen in
    order to conduct a burial for the father of one Wakameda
    Kushiro (age 45) in Karasuyama, Tochigi Prefecture. Priest
    Iso of the Jchijum Temple of the Shingon Denomination told
    the police that Kushiro had been refused burial rights at
    the cemetery since his lease on the family plot had expired
    and since seven years before he had joined Soka Gakkai and
    withdrawn from the denomination which owned the burial
    ground.

    April 23, 1962, Asahi Shinbun: Mrs. Sui Tamura (age 56) was
    beaten over the head and bruised about the face by her son
    in the latter's fanatic effort to destroy the family
    Buddhist altar 'and convert his mother to faith in Soka
    Gakkai. Fleeing her son and daughter-in-law the mother
    sought asylum at the local police station at 11:00 pm., on
    April 21. The incident took place in a village called Seiro
    in Nligata Prefecture.

    October 27, 1964, Asahi Shinbun: Tadashi Fujiwara (age 33)
    was arrested on a murder charge after being apprehended at
    an inn in Okayama where he had been staying for several
    days. Himself a Soka Gakkai member, it is reported that he
    became angry at the incessant noise created by two Soka
    Gakkai men in an adjoining room and attacked them with a
    butcher knife. Another Soka Gakkai man entered the fight,
    and Fujiwara injured all three of them seriously, one of
    them dying later in the hospital.

    December 11, 1964, Nagasaki Shinbun: Momosuke Maeda, of
    Sasebo, registered a complaint against Soka Gakkai members
    of the 99th District for their excessive intimidation of his
    daugter (age 19) who had just got out of the sickbed. It
    appears that first she had been persuaded by two school
    friends to attend a meeting where she was the target of
    browbeating by eleven members at once and told that if she
    did not convert she would never find happiness, but if she
    converted she was certain to pass the examination at the
    beautician school for a national license. When she refused,
    her signature stamp was aifixed to an application for
    membership against her will.

    March 19, 1965, Osaka Shin Yukan: In Tottori an injunction
    was issued against a nurse in the local hospital on the
    charge that in her fanatical attempt to convert a patient
    she had neglected to report his physical condition to the
    doctor in time to save him from dying.

    March 30, 1965, Hokkaido Shinbun: A youth, Teruo Suzuki (age
    23), who was employed in a factory for the manufacture of
    automobile interiors, in Obihiro, was arrested by the police
    on the charge of arson. Upon his own confession it appears
    that he had set fire to the house of a party whom he had
    tried to convert to Soka Gakkai but had failed. In his
    effort to convert the proslcct he is said to have
    threatened, "If you don't convert your house will catch
    fire."

    It is interesting to see that effort is being made to
    mitigate the effect of such publicity on would-be converts.
    For foreign readers of Soka Gakkai English publications, the
    term shakubuku itself is redefined to help the image:
    Shakubuku means to introrluce the teachings of Nichiren
    Daishonin to non-believers by relating the divine benefits
    of faith. It aims at achieving people's happiness, a
    prosperous society and world peace. . . . Disregarding its
    different shades of meaning, people have interpreted
    Shakubuku as something like "break and subdue." Thus, they
    have misjudged the Sokagakkai's propagation activities as
    coercive or even violent. Such a misunderstanding is quite
    ridiculous.
    continued...

    ReplyDelete
  5. However, conversion through these high-pressure methods
    oftentimes is extremely superficial. Though an individual
    sometimes joins to put a stop to the nagging of a friend, he
    may try to withdraw the commitment when the pressure is off.
    But superstition and fear of divine punishment are employed
    to keep a new member from falling away.

    Hobobarai means, literally, "sweeping out all the slanderers
    of the Dharma." To "slander the Dharma" is to commit the
    unpardonable sin of Buddhism. Specffically hobobarai means
    to remove, forcibly or otherwise, the talisman and amulets
    connected with the worship of Shinto kami and to destroy
    statues and icons of any alien faith.

    In Fukushima Prefecture, Ishikami Mura, a group of seven
    Soka Gakkai men tore down a Kannon temple building and
    burned the image. Several men entered a Christian church in
    Aomori Prefecture, and, when the minister would not convert,
    took his Bible and beat it on the floor. A man came home one
    day to his house on the island of Mukaishirna to discover
    that his wife had thrown into the ocean a Buddhist altar
    which had been in his family for several generations. He
    left her immediately and instituted divorce proeedings. In
    November, 1964, three young men approached a housewife in
    her home when her husband was away on a business trip. The
    woman responded that she might perhaps be interested but
    that she wanted to talk it over with her husband. This
    encouraged the young men to press their advantage, and they
    made their way into the interior of the home, seized the
    Shinto and Buddhist worship objects which they found in the
    altar, and burned them.

    In Nemuro, Hokkaido, on Christmas day, 1964, a man and his
    wife and two other adults, all members of Soka Gakkai,
    called on a friend whose husband was in the hospital.
    According to the report the wife, after four hours of
    browbeating, finally signed her name to the roll. No sooner
    had she registered than the four callers began to rip out
    all the paraphernalia from the altar and god shelf,
    and bumed it in the stove. The wife protested, saying that
    these things belonged to her mother, but her visitors
    insisted that the burning of the icons of false religions
    was her flrst act in her new faith.

    Such is the fervor of Soka Gakkai's iconoclasm.
    The truth of the matter is that Soka Gakkai leaders have
    never been happy about the public image that fanatical
    members especially young member have created, and they have
    consciously sought to change this image and gain as much
    respectability as possible for their organization. One way
    to achieve this, of oourse, is to persuade the press not to
    publish unfavorable reports, and it is understood that this
    has been done. The general director of a leading literary
    joumal told this author in an interview that Soka Gakkai was
    "quite noisy" about unsolicited news coverage in the secular
    press. It is easy to understand how a newspaper with a
    national circulation would be wary of offending a potential
    reading public of several million! Perhaps this may aocount
    for the "silent press . . . created during the last eight
    years," about which Kiyoaki Murata wrote in the Japan Times
    (June 11, 1964).

    However, in spite of recent indications of a more
    oonciliatory attitude, Soka Gakkai continues to be
    intolerant of all other religions. On this point there is no
    evidence of any change of heart.

    continued...

    ReplyDelete

  6. The Shakubuku Kyoten (Manual on Forced Conversions) is Soka
    Gakkai's indispensable guide for conversion activity. In
    this one volume the member is given all that is considered
    necessary concerning the teachings of his own faith, as well
    as the essential characteristics of all other religions (in
    the area of interest of the Japanese). The points most
    vulnerable to attack in other religions are listed, and the
    faithful member has them all on the tip of his tongue. It is
    interesting for members of other faiths to talk to a number
    of members in entirely different situations and listen to
    them voicing the same criticisms. If the conversation
    advances one step beyond what they have been taught from the
    manual they are lost. It is a most sobering experience for a
    Christian, such as the writer, to discover that apparently
    the sum total of all that these people know about
    christianity is what is presented in their Shakubuku Kyoten.
    Probably the followers of other religious faiths feel the
    same way.

    ReplyDelete

  7. The Shakubuku Kyoten (Manual on Forced Conversions) is Soka
    Gakkai's indispensable guide for conversion activity. In
    this one volume the member is given all that is considered
    necessary concerning the teachings of his own faith, as well
    as the essential characteristics of all other religions (in
    the area of interest of the Japanese). The points most
    vulnerable to attack in other religions are listed, and the
    faithful member has them all on the tip of his tongue. It is
    interesting for members of other faiths to talk to a number
    of members in entirely different situations and listen to
    them voicing the same criticisms. If the conversation
    advances one step beyond what they have been taught from the
    manual they are lost. It is a most sobering experience for a
    Christian, such as the writer, to discover that apparently
    the sum total of all that these people know about
    christianity is what is presented in their Shakubuku Kyoten.
    Probably the followers of other religious faiths feel the
    same way.

    ReplyDelete
  8. However, conversion through these high-pressure methods
    oftentimes is extremely superficial. Though an individual
    sometimes joins to put a stop to the nagging of a friend, he
    may try to withdraw the commitment when the pressure is off.
    But superstition and fear of divine punishment are employed
    to keep a new member from falling away.

    Hobobarai means, literally, "sweeping out all the slanderers
    of the Dharma." To "slander the Dharma" is to commit the
    unpardonable sin of Buddhism. Specffically hobobarai means
    to remove, forcibly or otherwise, the talisman and amulets
    connected with the worship of Shinto kami and to destroy
    statues and icons of any alien faith.

    In Fukushima Prefecture, Ishikami Mura, a group of seven
    Soka Gakkai men tore down a Kannon temple building and
    burned the image. Several men entered a Christian church in
    Aomori Prefecture, and, when the minister would not convert,
    took his Bible and beat it on the floor. A man came home one
    day to his house on the island of Mukaishirna to discover
    that his wife had thrown into the ocean a Buddhist altar
    which had been in his family for several generations. He
    left her immediately and instituted divorce proeedings. In
    November, 1964, three young men approached a housewife in
    her home when her husband was away on a business trip. The
    woman responded that she might perhaps be interested but
    that she wanted to talk it over with her husband. This
    encouraged the young men to press their advantage, and they
    made their way into the interior of the home, seized the
    Shinto and Buddhist worship objects which they found in the
    altar, and burned them.

    In Nemuro, Hokkaido, on Christmas day, 1964, a man and his
    wife and two other adults, all members of Soka Gakkai,
    called on a friend whose husband was in the hospital.
    According to the report the wife, after four hours of
    browbeating, finally signed her name to the roll. No sooner
    had she registered than the four callers began to rip out
    all the paraphernalia from the altar and god shelf,
    and bumed it in the stove. The wife protested, saying that
    these things belonged to her mother, but her visitors
    insisted that the burning of the icons of false religions
    was her flrst act in her new faith.

    Such is the fervor of Soka Gakkai's iconoclasm.
    The truth of the matter is that Soka Gakkai leaders have
    never been happy about the public image that fanatical
    members especially young member have created, and they have
    consciously sought to change this image and gain as much
    respectability as possible for their organization. One way
    to achieve this, of oourse, is to persuade the press not to
    publish unfavorable reports, and it is understood that this
    has been done. The general director of a leading literary
    joumal told this author in an interview that Soka Gakkai was
    "quite noisy" about unsolicited news coverage in the secular
    press. It is easy to understand how a newspaper with a
    national circulation would be wary of offending a potential
    reading public of several million! Perhaps this may aocount
    for the "silent press . . . created during the last eight
    years," about which Kiyoaki Murata wrote in the Japan Times
    (June 11, 1964).

    However, in spite of recent indications of a more
    oonciliatory attitude, Soka Gakkai continues to be
    intolerant of all other religions. On this point there is no
    evidence of any change of heart.

    continued...

    ReplyDelete