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Shingyō Hikkei

In 1966, Nichiren Shu established what it called the Protect the Dharma Movement. This movement sought to create a unity of faith and training that would focus and thus amplify efforts to propagate the Lotus Sutra. To that end, Watanabe Kōin, Chief Administrator of the  Nichiren Sect Headquarters, created the Shingyō Hikkei, a handbook for members of the Nichiren Sect.

Writing in the Preface to the handbook in April 1972, Kōin said:

Sufferings of people today could be said to arise from a spiraling egotism. Only the way of Bodhisattva as expounded in the Lotus Sutra can put an end to it. Today the ideal world still seems out of our reach. Once believers of the Lotus Sutra unite themselves, and receive divine response, however, it is next to nothing to overcome worldly interests and desires. Unfortunately there has not been concerted effort among the members of the Nichiren Sect although many have distinguished themselves in scholarship and training. Therefore, just as Japan had established a unified public education system, we intend to focus our efforts in strengthening faith and training of all members of Nichiren Sect through a unified system of faith and training. Beginning with the 750th anniversary (1972) of the birth of our Founder we hope to carry out a great revolution in order to establish the faith and training for the members of the Nichiren Sect.

We realize that opinions differ, but we earnestly urge you to have a broad outlook and join us in a movement which has just been started to bring about the unified system of faith and training so that all Nichiren Sect members who believe in the same faith, no matter which temple or church they may belong to, may be able to learn this unified basic program and be worthy as “Followers of Nichiren,” as Nichiren Shonin put it. We believe that all members of the Nichiren Sect should be able to perform services together, join in discussion sessions, and live together with the same goal of “obtaining Buddhahood together.”

In 1978, the Nichiren-shū Shūmin, the Nichiren sect headquarters, published the first English translation of the Shingyō Hikkei.

In September 1978, Matsumura Juken, Chief Administrator, Nichiren Sect Headquarters, wrote in the introduction to the English translation:

When our Founder Nichiren Daishonin spread the Odaimoku “Namu Myoho Renge-kyo” representing the teaching of the Lotus Sutra, which is the essence of the Buddha’s heart, he pointed out that it should be spread not only in Japan but also throughout the world. In accordance with this, I believe that the Protect the Dharma unity of faith and training movement should also be widely spread overseas. I therefore urged the prompt publication of an English translation of the Shingyō Hikkei. Reverend Kyotsu Hori, Bishop of Hawaii Nichiren Mission, kindly took responsibility for translating it into English. As a result of his efforts we have finally come to greet the day of its publication. I would like to express my deep gratitude to him.

I sincerely hope that those overseas arm themselves with this Shingyō Hikkei and strive to practice the faith and training by reciting (by mouth), keeping (in mind), and practicing (by body) the heart of the Lotus Sutra and the teachings of our Founder, so that this world may become bright and secure, and that everyone may enjoy the life in the land of the Buddha.

I pray from the bottom of my heart that each of the overseas ministers may engage in active missionary works.

I found several copies of the English translation of the Shingyō Hikkei on a dusty shelf in a classroom of the Sacramento Nichiren Buddhist Church. I gave a copy to my son, who recently joined the church. I’ve also put the text of the book on the church website. You can find it here.

Given that (before I published this article) a Google search for “Protect the Dharma Movement” would get you exactly zero articles, one can assume the movement fizzled out. Whether Nichiren Shu headquarters lost interest, or the overseas ministers dropped the ball, the result is the same.

That’s unfortunate.

While I have many doctrinal arguments with Nichiren Shoshu and Soka Gakkai, one cannot fault the top-down direction of this global organization that focuses members on their practice.  Go to any group meeting at a home or a chapter session at a community center and you feel right at home.  It’s like going to Starbucks. No matter where you go, you know you’re in Starbucks and you know what you’ll get.

That’s not what you get with the confederation of temples that is Nichiren Shu. Less like Starbucks, the temples in America (the only ones I have experience with) are more like independent Italian restaurants. The restaurants are recognizable as Italian, but each has a different focus and flavor. The shami who left to strike out on his own focusing solely on Shodaigyo services has established the first pizzeria of the bunch.

I regularly attend services at four different temples. In order to do that I am required to  have four different service books. Woe be to the random online visitor to another temple. Yes, for the most part, one can count of reciting Hoben Pon and Jiga Ge, but not always. Never at that pizzeria and only occasionally at restaurants that like to vary the menu each week.

All things are possible if people are united in one spirit. Nothing can be accomplished if they are not united.

It’s ironic that this quote from Nichiren comes from his Treatise on Cooperation.

The original Protect the Dharma Movement had an element that sought to bind everyone together in the effort to propagate the Lotus Sutra.

At eight o’clock every morning we, members of the Nichiren Sect, wherever we are and whatever we are doing, should direct our hearts towards Lord Sakyamuni Buddha and Nichiren Shonin, who reside on Mt. Minobu, and recite the Odaimoku and say a prayer for the protection of the Dharma.

Let us all practice this prayer and encourage our neighbors to join us.

The way you recite the Odaimoku is up to you. It may be voiced or silent; it may be said three times or ten times. The point is for everybody, no matter where he lives, to say a prayer at the same time in one mind.

If Nichiren Shu in America is going to continue to act as independent Italian restaurants, it would be nice if they could settle on a single act such as the Protect the Dharma Movement prayer to establish a little more itai doshin.

Sunday Travels

Enkyoji Rochester
Sunday service at Shoeizan Enkyoji Buddhist Temple of Rochester

This morning I attended the 10am service at Shoeizan Enkyoji Buddhist Temple of Rochester. I was particularly interested in attending after learning that long-time Shami Kanyu Kroll had “retired,” leaving the sangha without a minister.  But members of the sangha have stepped up and Sunday’s shindoku service was excellent. Shami Kroll’s decade of instruction clearly paid benefits in preparing the lay learders.

Sunday service at Kannon
Sunday online service at Kannon Temple in Las Vegas

Then, in the afternoon, I was able to Zoom-in to the Nichiren Buddhist Kannon Temple of Nevada’s kito blessing service. The three-hour time difference worked in my favor. Since I missed the monthly purification ceremony in Sacramento, it was nice to be able to attend Rev. Shoda Kanai’s service.

Letchworth State Park
Letchworth State Park, New York

Even managed to finish off the day with a trip to Letchworth State Park on the Genesee River. After touring the park and taking in the lush fall colors, I had an excellent dinner at Caroline’s in the Glen Irish Inn and returned to Rochester.

I head back to Sacramento Tuesday.

Altar Options

My traveling altar in my motel room in Rochester

In my daily practice, I work my way through the 28 chapters of the Lotus Sutra and then recite the Sutra of Contemplation of Universal Sage. The next day, before I return to the Lotus Sutra, I recite the Sutra of Innumerable Meanings. Thus my practice cycle includes the full Threefold Lotus SutraThreefold Lotus Sutra.

Having finished Chapter 28 yesterday, today was the day to recite the Sutra of Contemplation of Universal Sage. Looking at my motel altar I decided to take advantage of my access to the Shoeizan Enkyoji Buddhist Temple of Rochester.  Since I won’t be able to do this Sunday, I decided to read aloud both sutras.

As an added benefit it meant that the fruit flies were exposed to the full Threefold Lotus Sutra.

20230930_rochester-altar
Practice space at the Shoeizan Enkyoji Buddhist Temple of Rochester

Preparing Miraculous Tales

20230928_enkyoji-rochester
Shoeizan Enkyoji Buddhist Temple of Rochester

I chanted for the fruit flies that they might be reborn as humans and encounter the Lotus Sutra in their next life, just as Priest Chingen explains in The Dainihonkoku Hokekyō.

The fruit flies were my only companions Thursday, Sept. 28, when I chanted the 28 chapters of the Lotus Sutra in shindoku at the Shoeizan Enkyoji Buddhist Temple of Rochester.

Each day my practice is to recite a portion of the Lotus Sutra in shindoku in the morning and then read aloud the same portion of the sutra in English. The first time that I chanted the entire Lotus Sutra in shindoku was on July 20, 2019, during my 21-day staycation retreat.

In May 2022 I uploaded recordings of Nichiren Shu priests chanting the Lotus Sutra. Since then, I’ve recited along with the recording when possible. When a chapter spans more than one day – chapters 1 and 2 for example – I follow along with the recording on the first half and then just recite from the Nichiren Buddhist Sangha of Greater New England’s Myoho Renge Kyo Romanized on the next day.

Until this week I had never played the recordings for entire Lotus Sutra at one time.

I’ve been to Rochester, NY, on several occasions over the years and when visiting I routinely attend services. I had a free day this trip and decided to see if I could access the temple on a weekday. I was given the code to the lock box that holds the key to the temple and told I could visit any day.

I arrived Thursday at the Shoeizan Enkyoji Buddhist Temple on the fourth floor of the Hungerford Building on East Main in downtown Rochester at 8:15am. I set up a table and chair. I brought along a JBL Flip 6 portable speaker to play the shindoku recordings.

It was 8:30am when I started reciting Chapter 1, following along with the recording. I had decided to break up the chanting into eight parts, which is how the sutra was originally organized on scrolls, or fascicles. It was 9:39am when I finished chapters 1 and 2.

The first hour on the metal folding chair convinced me to find some floor pillows. I wasn’t going to make it through another seven  fascicles without padding.

The second fascicle – chapters 3 and 4 – was uneventful but by the third fascicle – chapters 5, 6 and 7 – I found myself getting lost as I read along from the  Myoho Renge Kyo Romanized. Mental focus has never been one of my strong points and as I tired I found myself often losing my place in Myoho Renge Kyo Romanized. When this happened I would search ahead for a place where I could jump back in. This time I became completely lost and decided to just restart the chapter.  As I continued I constantly struggled to keep up and found myself  often briefly lost. I had to repeat chapters in both the seventh and the last fascicle.

It was 6:28pm when I finished Chapter 28, The Encouragement of Universal-Sage Bodhisattva.

During the nearly 10 hours that I had been chanting, I became very attached to the fruit flies. They would stop for awhile and then fly off and then return again. I think I accidentally injured one when I brushed it off my arm in an instinctive reaction. But throughout the day I as I chanted I pondered what benefit the fruit flies would receive from having heard the Lotus Sutra recited. Would I meet them  again in another life chanting the Lotus Sutra in another Miraculous Tale of the Lotus Sutra?

Faith Vs. Practice

I began Higan Week with quotes from a Tibetan stream outside the ocean of the Lotus Sutra. Standing on the stream bank I wondered why Nichiren’s teaching on the Lotus Sutra doesn’t include the deep Bodhisattva practices that appear so beneficial.

In the Nichiren Shu brochure about Higan, the seven-day period that occurs twice a year at the Equinox, it states plainly that Buddhism is About Practice, a sentiment that fit nicely with my question.

But does the Lotus Sutra really teach that individual practice is the path to enlightenment?

On the same day that I bemoaned a lack of focus on the Six Perfections in Nichiren Buddhism, my daily reading of the Lotus Sutra covered Chapter 17, which discusses the merits one receives from understanding that the Buddha’s lifetime is beyond measure and that any discussion of his death is just an expedient used to bring listeners to the wisdom of the Buddha.

Consider these gāthās from Chapter 17:

Suppose someone practiced
The five paramitas
For eighty billion nayuta kalpas
In order to attain the wisdom of the Buddha.

Throughout these kalpas he offered
Wonderful food and drink,
Excellent garments and bedding,
And monasteries made of candana
And adorned with gardens and forests
To the Buddhas,
To the cause-knowers, to the disciples,
And to the Bodhisattvas.

Throughout these kalpas he made
These various and wonderful offerings
In order to attain
The enlightenment of the Buddha.

He also observed the precepts,
Kept purity and faultlessness,
And sought the unsurpassed enlightenment
Extolled by the Buddhas.

He was patient, gentle,
And friendly with others.
Even when many evils troubled him,
His mind was not moved.

He endured all insults and disturbances
Inflicted upon him by arrogant people who thought
That they had already obtained the Dharma.

He was strenuous and resolute in mind.
He concentrated his mind,
And refrained from indolence
For many hundreds of millions of kalpas.

He Lived in a retired place
For innumerable kalpas.
He sat or walked to avoid drowsiness
And to concentrate his mind.

By doing so, he became able to practice
Many dhyāna-concentrations.
His mind was peaceful, not distracted
For eighty billion kalpas.

With these merits of concentration of his mind,
He sought unsurpassed enlightenment, saying:
“I will complete all these dhyāna-concentrations,
And obtain the knowledge of all things.”

He performed
The meritorious practices
As previously stated
For hundreds of thousands of billions of kalpas.

The good men or women who believe my longevity,
Of which I told you,
Even at a moment’s thought
Will be able to obtain more merits than he.

Those who firmly believe [my longevity],
And have no doubts about it
Even for a moment,
Will be able to obtain more merits [than he].

On the second day of Higan week, my daily reading covered Chapter 18: The Merits of a Person Who Rejoices at Hearing This Sūtra, which begins with a discussion of the merits to be received by the 50th person who rejoices at hearing even a phrase of the sutra. Here, again, we find actual deeds superseded by simple faith.

Suppose there was a great almsgiver.
He continued giving alms
To innumerable living beings
For eighty years according to their wishes.

Those living beings became old and decrepit.
Their hair became grey; their faces, wrinkled;
And their teeth, fewer and deformed.
Seeing this, he thought:
“I will teach them because they will die before long.
I will cause them to obtain the fruit of enlightenment.”

Then he expounded the truth of Nirvana to them
As an expedient, saying:
“This world is as unstable
As a spray of water,
Or as a foam, or as a filament of air.
Hate it, and leave it quickly!”

Hearing this teaching, they attained Arhatship,
And obtained the six supernatural powers,
Including the three major supernatural powers,
And the eight emancipations.

The superiority of the merits of the fiftieth person
Who rejoices at hearing even a gāthā [of this sūtra]
To the merits of this [great almsgiver]
Cannot be explained by any parable or simile.

At this point it seemed fair to suggests that other sutras may focus on the practice of Buddhism, but faith, not practice, is key in the Lotus Sutra. This observation was tempered slightly by the Daily Dharma from Sept. 24:

Needless to say, anyone who not only keeps this sūtra but also gives alms, observes the precepts, practices patience, makes endeavors, concentrates his mind, and seeks wisdom, will be able to obtain the most excellent and innumerable merits. His merits will be as limitless as the sky is in the east, west, south, north, the four intermediate quarters, the zenith, and the nadir. These innumerable merits of his will help him obtain the knowledge of the equality and differences of all things.

The Buddha makes this declaration to Maitreya Bodhisattva in Chapter Seventeen of the Lotus Sūtra. We often think of merits as bonus points we get for good deeds. Good karma we create to offset the bad karma that came from our less skillful actions. Another way of looking at merits is as a measure of clarity. The more merit we gain, the more we see things for what they are. When we offer our merits for the benefit of all beings, we resolve to use this clarity to enhance the lives of others.

The Daily Dharma is produced by the Lexington Nichiren Buddhist Community. To subscribe to the daily emails, visit zenzaizenzai.com

But any suggestion that practice is remotely comparable to faith in Nichiren Buddhism, was put to rest by the Quote of the Day on Sept. 20:

It is said that the merit of all the Buddhist scriptures (except the Lotus Sutra) is that men can become Buddhas after they have done good deeds, which means that attainment of Buddhahood remains uncertain. In the case of the Lotus Sutra, when one touches it, one’s hands immediately become Buddhas, and when one chants it, one’s mouth instantaneously becomes a Buddha.

This daily quote comes from the Raihai Seiten, a Nichiren Shu Service Book Companion compiled by the Los Angeles Nichiren Buddhist Temple’s Nichiren Shu Beikoku Sangha Association. This was compiled in 2001-2002 when Rev. Shokai Kanai was the head priest.

This particular letter appears among the Writings of Nichiren Shonin in Volume 7, Followers II. This idea that faith, not practice, is essential is underscored in the letter. Following the above quote it says on page 59:

For example, when the moon rises above the eastern mountain, its reflection immediately shows on the water. Sound and resonance also occur simultaneously. It is written [in the Lotus Sutra] that one who listens to the Lotus Sutra will never fail to attain Buddhahood. The meaning of this passage is that whether there be 100, or even 1,000 people, all those who believe in this sutra [the Lotus Sutra] attain Buddhahood.

This Higan week has been a cautionary tale. Books from other streams of Buddhism – waters that lack the salty taste of the ocean of the Lotus Sutra – need to be viewed through the lens of the Buddha’s ultimate teaching.

The perils of relying on provisional teachings or suggesting to others their equivalency with the Lotus Sutra are detailed by Nichiren in “Shoshū Mondō-shō,” Questions and Answers Regarding Other Schools, Writings of Nichiren Shōnin, Doctrine 3, Page 179-181.

Higan: Life’s Transience and Our Practice

Today is the Fall Equinox, the middle of Higan week, the three days before the equinox and the three days after. As explained in a Nichiren Shu brochure:

For Buddhists, this period is not just one characterized by days with almost equal portions of light and dark. Rather, it is a period in which we strive to consciously reflect upon ourselves and our deeds.

Below is a 2017 lecture on Higan by Ven. Kenjo Igarashi of the Sacramento Nichiren Buddhist Church.


As Buddhists, we observe several religious customs throughout the year, many of which involve praying for our ancestors. Most recently, we had the Obon (お盆) service in August, followed by the upcoming Ohigan (お彼岸) service in the fall. While there may be many meanings and reasons behind observing these Buddhist traditions, there are two that I would like to focus on in this article. They include (1) acknowledging life’s impermanence and most importantly, (2) reflecting on the importance of our Buddhist practice.

(1) Recognizing Life’s Transience
There are certain Buddhist customs, including those mentioned above, that remind me of the notion of shogyo mujo (諸行無常), or in English, “the impermanence of worldly things”. I first learned this concept in college when training to become a priest. We are made aware of this impermanence in our daily lives, ranging from daily tasks that we do (e.g. watering plants to prevent them from wilting) to happenings that we hear about from others that are beyond our control (e.g. the unexpected deaths we hear about on the news). However, it is often funerals and memorial services that amplify this notion of impermanence. They evoke a stronger sentiment because of our direct connection to the deceased. It also forces us to face and acknowledge that life on this earth, including our own, is transient.

Throughout my approximate 50-year career as a minister, I have always reflected on this notion of impermanence as a way to help me understand death as a sad, but unavoidable end to the course of one’s life. However, no matter how many funerals I have attended or conducted, it remains one of the most difficult tasks that I must do as a priest.

(2) The Importance of One’s Buddhist Practice
As previously mentioned, many Buddhist customs focus on expressing gratitude and remembering those that have passed. However, some people tend to focus too much on this idea. In fact, many spend little or no time understanding the significance that these traditions play in furthering a person’s Buddhist practice and faith.

Many of Nichiren Shonin’s writings include letters he wrote to his followers who expressed their individual concerns about reaching Enlightenment. As many of you know, in Buddhism we believe that the deceased goes on a 49-day journey after their death, where they will reflect on their lifetime of memories. They will be reminded of the most joyous moments of their life, as well as some of the difficult times. Nichiren Shonin knew of the hardships that one might face throughout this journey, as explained in a letter to one of his followers:

“I, Nichiren, am the world’s utmost devotee of the Lotus Sutra. If you pass away after me, remember that there are many trials that you must undergo (throughout your 49-day journey). Pass each trial by declaring in front of the judge that you are the follower of Nichiren, the world’s utmost devotee of the Lotus Sutra. When you must cross the fast ripples of the deep river, the Lotus Sutra will become your boat. When you must climb the treacherous mountains, it will become your vehicle. And when you must travel along a dark road, it will become that glimmer of light in the darkness. I, Nichiren, will promise to wait for you at the entrance to the Northeast gate to Enlightenment, so that you do not lose your way.”

Nichiren Shonin provides positive reassurance in his letter thus far. Yet his tone changes in the subsequent lines, informing the individual of consequences that could result from lack of Buddhist practice and faith. He continues:

“However, I must warn you of the importance of having faith (in the Lotus Sutra). An individual lacking piety should not expect to receive help upon claiming to be Nichiren’s follower. They will enter into the suffering world as quickly as the large rock that tumbles down the cliff, and the raindrops that fall from the sky and hit the earth.”

Nichiren Shonin’s statement directly relates to the teachings in Chapter 6 of the Lotus Sutra. It states that while everyone has the potential to become the Buddha, whether or not the individual achieves enlightenment depends on his or her level of commitment to practicing Buddhism. The hope is that they do not just rely on praying during services at the temple, but also make an effort to individually practice Buddhism in their daily lives.

Since an individual’s life is transient, we have a limited time (i.e. our individual lifespan) in which we can practice our faith in this world. I am hoping that many of you will try to incorporate both of these ideas as you continue to practice and find ways to deepen your faith in Buddhism.

Ven. Kenjo Igarashi
September 2017

A Higher Practice

Recently I was browsing my library and noticed the Dalai Lama’s book, “Transcendent Wisdom,” his commentary on the Wisdom section of Santideva’s “The Bodhicaryavatara: A Guide to the Buddhist Path to Awakening.”  I picked up the Dalai Lama’s book and read it. In the book, the Dalai Lama makes reference to “The Precious Garland, An Epistle to a King” by Ācārya Nāgārjuna. I purchased it and read it. That’s how my system works. Random journeys along various streams, imagining these flowing into the great ocean of the Lotus Sutra.

Sometimes in this randomness I forget that I’ve been on this path before. Back in November 26, 2018, I published a blog post entitled, “The Purpose of a Buddhist Practice,” in which I bemoaned my early Buddhist focus on “my wishes” to the exclusion of all else.

Then in 2021 I read “The Six Perfections: Buddhism and the Cultivation of Character,” Dale Wright’s detailed discussion of Buddhist teachings about six dimensions of human character that require “perfecting” – generosity, morality, tolerance, energy, meditation, and wisdom. I was immediately struck by how much I admired the concept of setting the goal of your practice to perfect these characteristics.

On March 1, 2021, I wrote “On the Way to the Other Shore,” in which I pointed out that twice a year during the spring and fall Equinox, Nichiren Shu officially observes a week of focus on self-improvement guided by the six perfections. The only problem was that at that time in 2021, none of the American sanghas I was familiar with offered such a practice. Only Rev. Igarashi at the Sacramento Nichiren Buddhist Church made reference to Paramita Week.

Today is the first day of Higan week, the three days before the equinox and the three days after. And as I mark the occasion I want to offer some quotes from Chapter 5 of “The Precious Garland, An Epistle to a King” by Ācārya Nāgārjuna.

In short, the good qualities that a bodhisattva should develop are generosity, morality, tolerance, heroic effort, concentration, wisdom, loving kindness, and so on. 35

To be generous is to give up one’s wealth; to be moral is to endeavor to help others; tolerance is the abandonment of anger; heroic effort is enthusiasm for virtue. 36

Concentration is unafflicted one-pointedness; wisdom is definitively determining the truths’ meaning. Loving kindness is a state of mind that savors only compassion for all sentient beings. 37

From generosity comes wealth, happiness from morality. From tolerance comes beauty, splendor from heroic effort. Through meditation, one is peaceful, through understanding comes liberation. Compassion is what accomplishes all aims. 38

Through the simultaneous perfection of all these seven, one attains the object of inconceivable wisdom – lordship over the world. 39

The Precious Garland, An Epistle to a King, p78-79

For me, Nichiren Buddhism does not do enough to encourage striving to perfect oneself and benefit others. It shouldn’t just be two weeks out of the year.

Where is the vow encouraged by Nāgārjuna?

As long as there is even some single sentient being somewhere who is not yet free, may I remain (in the world) for that being’s sake, even if I have attained unexcelled awakening. 85

The Precious Garland, An Epistle to a King, p86

Nichijo: The Missing Piece of Provoo’s Story

This is the final article of my series discussing the book, Nichijo: The Testimony of John Provoo.


John David Provoo was a gay man. Much of the Post War effort by the federal government to convict him of treason was inflamed by institutional homophobia. But none of that is discussed in Nichijo: The Testimony of John Provoo.

John Oliver, who co-wrote the book with Nichijo Shaka and who revised and published the book after Nichijo’s death in 2001, says plainly:

He was gay, of course. He had enjoyed relations with several serious girlfriends, including three marriages, but he made no secret that his preference was for men. “Gay as a tree full of owls!” he would say of himself. I don’t quite understand the reference, but I quote it here faithfully, as his self-portrait.

We decided to skirt the gay issue in the telling of his story. In the decision of the Appellate Court, “…No authority has been cited that homosexuality indicates a propensity to disregard the obligation of an oath. The sole purpose and effect of this examination was to humiliate and degrade the defendant and increase the probability that he would be convicted, not for the crime charged, but for his general unsavory character.” It was prosecution dirty tricks that tried to connect the facts of his sexual orientation with treasonous acts, and should never have been part of the trial and, hence, not part of the chapters we call “The Testimony of John Provoo.” In a more enlightened time, it would not have mattered.

Nichijo: The Testimony of John Provoo, p245

Today is that “more enlightened time,” and I believe that removing Provoo’s sexual orientation from his testimony distorts the picture of the life presented in the book, especially Provoo’s journey to Minobu.

In the 1930s Provoo started a lucrative career in broadcast radio:

This was 1933 and 1934, at the end of alcohol prohibition, a time when a speakeasy in San Francisco was easier to find than a water fountain. I floated into my brother’s high life of big paychecks, flashy cars, smoke-filled studios and highballs for lunch, with ease. I did my parts at KFRC, learned that I had affinity for debauchery, scattered the money like flower petals, spent too much time in those nightclubs.

I continued with my Buddhist studies but two parts of my nature were developing, at odds with each other. Just when I had taken vows accepting poverty, I had been steered into San Francisco’s fast lane. I was the sincere, searching, scholarly mystic … a Buddhist Priest; and I was the flamboyant and theatrical prodigy of materialistic America. I was becoming a man with two heads, irreconcilable heads.

Nichijo: The Testimony of John Provoo, p24

At the time he conquered this “affinity for debauchery” by abandoning his radio career and taking a clerk’s post in the San Francisco Federal Reserve.

Nichijo’s book alludes to this conflict between the material world and the spiritual one, but readers are left without a realistic  understanding of this complex man if the impact of Provoo’s  closeted gay life is left unexplored.

Recalling the overturning of his conviction, he says:

I hadn’t been victorious, I hadn’t won acquittal; I had merely maneuvered the government to a stalemate. In the public eye, I had gotten off on a technicality. In my own mind, I had deserved to win an acquittal: it was the government that had gotten off on a technicality.

Nichijo: The Testimony of John Provoo, p220

This had a deep impact on Provoo.

The ten years following my release from legal jeopardy was an unhappy odyssey, which I would come to describe as dragging an enormous shipwreck of a reputation through the hostile swamps the government and the media had created for me.

Nichijo: The Testimony of John Provoo, p221

Following his release from jail, Provoo describes his inability to keep jobs each time his past is brought to light. He married only to divorce a few years later. But the depth of his misery during this period is absent from his telling.

ONE Magazine, self-described as the first gay magazine in the United States, reported in its June-July 1956 issue that the Baltimore Sun had reported Provoo was assaulted and robbed by a youth he invited to his apartment one morning.

One year later, on Sept. 8, 1957, the New York Times printed on page 58 an Associated Press article reporting that Provoo, then 40 years old, had pleaded guilty to contributing to the delinquency of a minor.

“He blamed a ‘misguided conscience’ for leading him to accompany a 16-year-old Annapolis, Md., youth who ran away from home last week.

“He said the youth had a home life that ‘leaves a great deal to be desired’ and he felt sorry for him.

“Provoo and the youth, Robert H. Lane, were found at a rooming house here [Lincoln, Neb.] about midnight last night.”

On Aug. 30, 1958, the New York Times published on page 32 a single paragraph from an Associated Press story under the headline, Treason Trial Figure Jailed. The Times reported that Provoo, then 41, had been sentenced to three years in the Nebraska men’s reformatory on a morals charge that involved an 18-year-old Lincoln boy. (The discrepancy in the age of Robert Lane is unexplained.)

The conviction and prison sentence aren’t mentioned in this book, but their impact was clearly felt:

It was the winter of 1964, and I was unable to keep up the payments on our car by myself, so I let it go. I had no money and worse, I had no inspiration. I just left one day heading north. I had enough bus fare to make it to Washington, D.C., and that’s all. I stayed overnight in a gospel mission there, and the next day hitchhiked north to Baltimore, where I had found work before. I checked the situation at all the hospitals with no luck. I spent the night in a rescue mission again. The next day I continued hitchhiking north into Pennsylvania. I was dropped off near the town of Williamsport and began walking, I didn’t know where to. It was snowing and my clothes were inadequate for the cold and my shipwreck seemed especially burdensome. I was walking along the road in the snow reviewing all the times someone had been trying to kill me and I began entertaining the idea that it would have been just as well if I had allowed it to happen… if I had been killed long ago. If a bomb had fallen on me running across the smoldering moonscape of Corregidor, if I had been judged a spy by the Japanese tribunal and shot down like Captain Thomson; if I had been beheaded for offering ice water to a Japanese field marshal; if I had succumbed to the injection given me in Malinta Hospital; if I had died of beri-beri at Karenko; if American bombs had fallen on Radio Tokyo; if I had burned in the electric chair at Sing-Sing like the Rosenbergs. Finally, there was no other motive to put one foot in front of the other, and I stopped. I moved myself a short distance off the road and lay down in the snow. Snow fell lightly on my face and began to cover me and I just let myself go.

A family that lived nearby found me several hours later. They had seen my shoulder sticking out of a mound of snow by the roadside. I was stiff and nearly dead. I awoke in a warm bed piled high with blankets and hot water bottles. I was in the home of a family of devout Christians more than willing to nurse a helpless stranger back to health. I remembered the icy heart with which I had resolved to die, but I could not prevent it from thawing in the warm bed of their unselfishness. I had truly been reborn. …

Their love was all that I had needed. Like all of my darkest moments, help had appeared from an unexpected source. I had reached the bottom, the very bottom, and it had found me there, too. I found a job at the Polyclinic Hospital in Williamsport, sometimes working in the emergency room and on ambulance runs, and life was slowly rebuilt in the material sense; my inner strength had been totally renewed by the family of good Samaritans.

Nichijo: The Testimony of John Provoo, p222-224

On April 26, 1968, before Nichijo Shaka had established his temple in Puna, Hawaii, the Honolulu Star-Bulletin published an interview with him. As a retired newspaperman, I find this article a fitting way to conclude my exploration of Nichijo: The Testimony of John Provoo

Buddhist Priest ‘Towed Shipwreck’ Many Years

nichijo-1968-Star-Bulletin-article
Photo of Nichijo Shaka that accompanied the article.

By Nadine Wharton
Star-Bulletin Writer

A man who spent many of the years of his life “towing a shipwreck” is bringing the teachings of Nichiren Shu Buddhism to Hawaii.He is Shaka Provoo Nichijo, an ordained priest in the Buddhist sect, who teaches classes each Wednesday at 8 p.m. in the Temple of the Eternal Buddha, 32-A Kepola Place, in Nuuanu.

The “shipwreck” belongs to John David Provoo, a U.S. Army Sergeant who was convicted of treason against the government of his country.

They are one and the same person.

Provoo was confined, off and on, from the end of World War II until 1955 — 10 years. Six of those years he spent in the concrete basement maximum security cells of the West Street Detention Center in New York City.

He won his freedom in 1955 on the treason charge. But his lengthy and sensational trial made him a marked man. In the years after his release from prison he had great difficulty in getting and keeping a job.

“It was like towing a shipwreck after you,” he said.

“It was extremely difficult living with it and there was no living without it,” he said of the years between then and now.

He made no attempt to change his name. And he said, “I have never really been estranged from my country. I was disenchanted with the jury that convicted me of treason, but I never gave up faith in America. I never had any idea of changing my allegiance to my country.”

Perhaps the story should begin when Provoo, now about 51, started studying Buddhism at a small temple near his home in Burlingame, Calif. He was 11 years old.

“I am no convert. I have always been a Buddhist,” he said.

As the years went on he studied in Japan. And he studied in Hawaii with the Rev. Ernest Shin Kaku Hunt for several summers.

During the war, he was captured by the Japanese when Corregidor fell. He was later accused of collaborating with the enemy, when he was a prisoner of war and he was convicted of treason.

Nichijo is in Hawaii for several reasons. He feels there is a definite need for
Buddhist teachers who are competent in English. He says the University of Hawaii “is such a live force in the community.”

“Hawaii really has a kind of civilization that is unique in many ways,” he said. “Life generally is better here for everybody than on the Mainland.”

Every night except Wednesday, Nichijo works at the Lavada Nursing Home. “I tend the sick,” he said. “I have been doing that for many years.”

He said he hopes to build a temple and a “dojo” or retreat temple here. “I work so I can make a temple for the people,” he said.

Nichijo said he is not dependent on anyone, and does not ask for contributions. He said he does not require much money. “I lived most recently in Japan on an income of $14 a month.”

He said he hopes to dispel some of the popular illusions about Buddhism. “Buddhism is no ism,” he said. “It is not a system of ethics or dogma and it is not a creed—it is a way of life, the aware way of life,” he said.

And the man who once felt his life consisted of “towing a shipwreck” said: “My heart is overflowing with gratitude for the way things really are.”


Nichijo Shaku died Aug. 28, 2001, at the age of 84. He was inurned Oct. 8, 2001, at the Hawaii Veterans Cemetery No. 2.


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Nichijo: The Buddhist School of America

This is another in a series of articles discussing the book, Nichijo: The Testimony of John Provoo.


After his ordination, Nichijo Shaka sought to create a training program for foreign students in Japan.

I had been trying to arrange a program for foreign students to be established at Minobu, and though I had the support of the Lord Abbot, I was meeting some resistance from the administrative hierarchy. A few days before my departure for America, I went to meet with the order’s leaders at Shumuin headquarters in Tokyo. When they repeated their reluctance I confronted them head on and harangued them for their provincial attitude. I said that when I had established a temple in America, I would open the gates wide to all who wished to study the Lotus; Chinese, Koreans, Caucasians, anyone – Nichiren was a saint for the world, not just Japan.

Nichijo: The Testimony of John Provoo, p235-236

As Nichijo Shaka prepared to return to America he received some telling advice when he questioned Archbishop Nichijo Fujii about establishing his temple in America.

How would the temple survive, how would I know where to build it, how would I raise the funds? The Lord Abbot answered, “If your teaching is valid, everything will support you; if it is not, nothing will.”

Nichijo: The Testimony of John Provoo, p236

Nichijo Shaka sailed for America this time with a sense of meaning and mission.

Much had been resolved inwardly and outwardly during my training. I felt that the very nature of reality almost by conscious design, had guided me through the worst ordeals of life to reveal the innate symmetry of karmic justice: That whenever I had abandoned my fate, something unexpected had come to my rescue; that each time I was placed in captivity, among my captors there had been an ally; that within every destructive thing lies the seeds of its own destruction; that the machinations and maneuvers of my legal defense had not been able to prevent my conviction, it was the ruthlessness and dirty tricks of the prosecution that had ultimately freed me; that within a seemingly omnipotent government, dispassionately bent on my execution, there were men of justice. The perfect void within which all visible things exist acts as a mirror that reflects hatred and evil back on themselves; and love, giving and compassion back on themselves, too. Hatred need not be reciprocated, it is self-destructive; and love need not be rewarded, the giving of it is the source of happiness.

Nichijo: The Testimony of John Provoo, p236

In 1967, he had intended to sail from Japan to San Francisco but during  a layover in Honolulu he was instead enticed to stay in Hawaii. Nichijo Shakya eventually received some heavily forested land in the Puna District of the Big Island and established the Buddhist School of America. According to a Honolulu Advertiser newspaper article, by 1981 he had trained and ordained 17 priests, many of them women.

Nichijo Shakya concludes his testimony:

This is photo of Nichijo Shaka provided by David L Schroeder in an Amazon review of “Nichijo: The Testimony of John Provoo”

For years, I had been burdened with feelings of guilt, rage and resentment. Now a major change was taking place within me. Everything began to fit. I was increasingly aware of that vast area above and beyond self-centeredness: When I was young, and for marked periods thereafter, this consciousness had been my usual state. Now it was returning, and in greater depth.How marvelous that change, the constantly evolving process of life, never ceases! We go towards the light. “The Kingdom of God is spread upon the earth, and men do not see it.” The idea took on new depth and imminent meaning. As tears of anguish bring clearer sight, so do years of justice denied bring glorious vision and some glimmer of knowingness. Life is the real trial, and without this insubstantial phantasmagoria of phenomenal existence, there can be no Nirvana. The ceaseless burden of expiation, alienation and exile has been lightened. The forest is filled with birdsong, and the faded flowers thrown from my little shrine cabinet take root and flourish in abundance. I think continually of the wonderful people who have come to my forest retreat to share with me the loving care and friendship while learning of the Dharma teaching. Each one is to me a perfect Lotus of truth.

“All things work together for good” has become electrically real. The higher power, intelligence, grace, eternal-that-which-is by whatever term we might employ, recreated the entire spectrum of the universe in splendor and in peace. Clarity resulted from meditation, and I became aware of the beautiful cosmic creativity and spontaneous nature of existence. In all of this, everything happened just as it should, without any preordained plan or intention of my own. It was as if I had spent the major portion of my existence trying to bring life to an arid plot of wasteland, and at long last miraculously there appeared flourishing fields of grain. Now my entire being resonates with a gratitude beyond understanding or expression. Words fail.

All praise and adoration be to all things, such as they now are; ever were; and ever will be.

In love and reverence, Nichijo, September 1984

Nichijo: The Testimony of John Provoo, p240-241

Daniel Montgomery’s Fire in the Lotus contains a section on Nichijo Shaka.  For purposes of comparison with Nichijo’s testimony, I offer Montgomery’s error-prone view of Nichijo’s Buddhist School of  America.


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Fire in the Lotus: Buddhist School of America

As part of my series of articles discussing the book,Nichijo: The Testimony of John Provoo, I’m reprinting here the portion of Daniel Montgomery’s Fire in the Lotus discussing Nichijo Shakya. This material, which was published in 1991, has several factual errors. For example Montgomery suggests Rev. Shobo Aoyagi was at the Sacramento Nichiren Buddhist Church in 1940 when John Provoo formally converted to Nichiren Buddhism. Aoyagi  was in San Francisco. Montgomery also mischaracterizes why Provoo’s conviction for treason was overturned. Several other facts differ from those in Nichijo’s book.


Buddhist School of America

Nichijo Shaka is the most colorful and controversial Nichiren leader in America. In spite of his Japanese name, he is a Caucasian American from San Francisco. Born John D. Provoo in 1917. He was introduced to Oriental philosophy by his mother, who was an early Montessori advocate. She later converted to Buddhism under the guidance of her son. Provoo was so impressed by Buddhism that in 1940 he accepted the Precepts (formally converted) under the Rev. Shobo Aoyagi of the Sacramento Nichiren Buddhist Church. Never one to do things by halves, he went to Japan to study for the priesthood at Mount Minobu. He had been there seven months when his studies were cut short by a call from his draft board back in California (Young East, Autumn 1965, 13).

The draft board ignored his claim to be a theological student and assigned him to the army, which soon shipped him back to the Orient, this time to the Philippines. When the Japanese invaded the Philippines in 1941, Provoo suddenly found himself in the thick of desperate fighting. However, with the fall of the American fortress of Corregidor, he was taken prisoner.

Provoo was one of the few American prisoners who could speak Japanese. Moreover, he had a lively interest in Buddhism and Japanese culture. The Japanese found him a willing spokesman for the prisoners — perhaps too willing. Within two days of his capture, he was thought to have made accusations against an American lieutenant which led to the latter’s execution. As the weary years passed, many American prisoners, who were living under appalling conditions, came to resent Provoo’s behavior and favored treatment from their Japanese captors. They believed that his cooperation with the enemy had passed over to collaboration. “The consensus among the men on Corregidor,” says Lt. Gen. John Wright, a former fellow-prisoner, “was that Provoo was a traitor, a turncoat, a self-centered individual not to be trusted.”

When the war ended, Provoo was at first overlooked in the flush of victory, but his fellow prisoners of war had not forgotten him. Eventually some of them managed to get him charged with collaboration with the enemy — treason — and brought to trial. Throughout the trial Provoo steadfastly maintained his innocence, but former prisoners lined up against him. Among them was no less a personage than General Wainwright, the highest ranking American prisoner of war. Provoo was found guilty and condemned to a federal prison. His lawyers, however, had not yet given up, and carried his case to the Supreme Court of the United States. There he was declared innocent on a technicality: the statute of limitations had expired. Provoo’s conviction was reversed, and he was set free.

In 1965 a large Japanese delegation came to the United States to participate in the 12th Congress of the World Association of World Federalists. The delegation was headed by Archbishop Nichijo Fujii, the highest ranking abbot of Nichiren Shu. After the close of the congress some of the delegates, including Archbishop Fujii and Professor Senchu Murano, made a tour of the United States to meet American Buddhists. In New York City Professor Murano was approached by John Provoo, who asked to be introduced to the Archbishop. The two got on well. Provoo became the personal disciple of the Archbishop, who took him back to Japan to continue his studies at Mount Minobu.

Provoo concluded his studies satisfactorily. He was ordained a priest, and in 1968 the Archbishop gave him the right to train and ordain future American aspirants. Provoo changed his name to Nichijo Shaka — Nichijo in honor of the Archbishop and Shaka for Shakyamuni Buddha. By 1981, when he came to the “Big Island” of Hawaii, he had trained and ordained 17 priests, of whom many were women. (The Honolulu Advertiser, 30 August 1981)

Nichijo Shaka never attempted to start a mass movement. His aim was to establish an American training center for serious students who would then bring orthodox Nichiren Buddhism back to their home towns. Because he wanted his center to be purely American, he refused to accept official support for it as a Nichiren Shu foreign mission. He lived simply as a Buddhist monk, and it was not until Dr Richard E. Peterson of the University of Hawaii gave him the use of three acres on the “Big Island” that he was able to build a permanent center.

Like Nichiren, who was finally granted land on Minobu only to find his health deteriorating, Nichijo Shaka found himself in the same predicament. He founded the “Buddhist School of America: Perfect Law of the Lotus Teaching” when he was too ill to supervise it properly. Therefore he ordained the Rev. Nichizo Finney as his successor, and took him to Minobu to complete his training. (History of Nichiren Buddhism in Hawaii, 34, in Japanese)

Nichijo Shaka’s career is drawing to its close. The success or failure of his efforts now rests with those he trained, and their impact remains to be seen.

Fire in the Lotus, p251-253


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