Nichiren Daishonin:
(1222-1282 A.D.) The founder of what is now known as Nichiren Shoshu, which
regards him as the original Buddha who appears in the Latter Day of the Law to
open the way to Buddhahood for all people. He was born on February 16, 1222, in
the small fishing village of Kominato in Tojo in Awa Province in what is
presently Chiba Prefecture. His father was called Mikuni no Tayu, and his
mother, Umegiku-nyo. His childhood name was Zennichi-maro. At the age of twelve
he entered a nearby Tendai temple called Seicho-ji, where he studied both
Buddhist and secular teachings under the chief priest, Dozen-bo. According to
the "Seicho-ji Daishu Chu" (Letter to the Priests of Seicho-ji) written in 1276,
Zennichi-maro prayed before a statue of Bodhisattva Kokuzo at Seicho-ji, asking
to become the wisest man in Japan. Because of these prayers he obtained a "jewel
of wisdom" which later enabled him to grasp the essence of all the sutras.
At the age of sixteen, he was formally ordained and took the name Zesho-bo
Rencho. Soon after, he left for Kamakura to further his studies. Three years
later, he returned briefly to Seicho-ji and then set out again for the major
centers of Buddhist learning at Mt. Hiei, Mt. Koya, Mii-dera temple and other
temples in the Kyoto and Nara areas. During these years he studied all the
sutras and their commentaries and the teachings of the different sects. He
became convinced that the highest of Shakyamuni's teachings is the Lotus Sutra (Dharma
Flower Lotus Sutra - Saddharma Pundarika Sutra), and that the Great Pure Law
which leads directly to enlightenment in the Latter Day of the Law is implicit
in that sutra. He also grew convinced that his was the mission of Bodhisattva
Jogyo, who, in the Lotus Sutra, was entrusted with the task of propagating the
True Law in the Latter Day. He resolved to denounce the misconceptions of the
prevailing sects openly in spite of the persecutions which the Lotus Sutra
predicts its votary will experience.
At the age of thirty-two, he returned to Seicho-ji. At noon on April 28, 1253,
he preached at the Jibutso-do Hall in a lodging temple called the Shobutsu-bo to
an assembly of priests and villagers who had gathered at Seicho-ji to hear the
results of his studies. In his first sermon he declared that
Nam-myoho-renge-kyo
is the only teaching in the Latter Day of the Law (Dharma-Ending
Age) which enables all people to
attain (realize) Buddhahood in this lifetime. On this occasion he renamed himself Nichiren
(Sun Lotus). He also denounced the widespread doctrine of the Nembutsu as a
teaching which drives people into the hell of incessant suffering. (The four
dictums, with which he denounced the four leading sects of the time,
Nembutsu,
Zen,
Shingon and
Ritsu, are thought to have been formulated later.) Tojo
Kagenobu, the steward of the area and a confirmed Nembutsu believer, became
furious on hearing of this and ordered his warriors to arrest the Daishonin, who
narrowly managed to escape with the help of two of his seniors, Joken-bo and
Gijo-bo. After converting his parents and giving the Buddhist names Myonichi to
his father and Myoren to his mother, he headed for Kamakura to launch his
lifelong propagation activities.
In Kamakura he lived in a small dwelling at a place called Matsubagayatsu in
Nagoe. He devoted the next several years primarily to converting individuals,
eventually gathering a large number of converts. Among the first priests to
become his disciples were Nissho and Nichiro. Lay converts included Toki Jonin,
Shijo Kingo, Kudo Yoshitaka and the Ikegami brothers.Japan at that time was
experiencing a succession of unusually severe storms, earthquakes, drought,
famine, epidemics and other disasters. Corpses littered the streets. Government
relief measures and prayers offered by shrines and temples all proved
ineffective. An earthquake which struck Kamakura in August of 1257 destroyed a
great many houses and almost all the temples and shrines in the city. The
Daishonin, determined to provide documentary proof of the cause and solution of
these calamities in terms of Buddhism, went to Jisso-ji temple in Suruga
Province to do research in its sutra library. The person who was assigned to
serve the Daishonin there was Nikko Shonin, then a boy of fifteen, who would
later become his successor. On July 16, 1260, Nichiren Daishonin submitted a
treatise entitled "Rissho Ankoku Ron" (On Securing the Peace of the Land through
the Propagation of True Buddhism) to the retired regent, Hojo Tokiyori, the most
influential man in the Kamakura shogunate. In it he attributed the disasters
ravaging the country to slander of the True Law and belief in false teachings.
In particular, he criticized the Jodo (Pure Land) sect. Of the three calamities
and seven disasters described in the sutras, he predicted that the two disasters
which had yet to occur - internal strife and foreign invasion - would visit the
nation without fail if it persisted in its support of misleading sects, and
urged that the one vehicle of the Lotus Sutra be embraced without delay. The
submission of the "Rissho Ankoku Ron" is considered his first remonstration with
the government.
There was no official response to this document, but a group of Nembutsu
believers, though to have been incited by priests and government officials,
attacked his dwelling on the night of August 27. The Daishonin escaped with a
few disciples and stayed briefly with Toki Jonin in Shimosa Province. The next
spring, however, he returned to Kamakura. This time the Nembutsu priests and
government authorities contrived to have charges of defamation made against him,
and he was sentenced without trial or further investigation to exile in Ito on
the Izu Peninsula.
The boatmen charged with his transport did not take him to Ito but abandoned him
on a beach called Kawana to the mercy of the local inhabitants, many of whom
hated him and were in any case hostile to exiles. The Daishonin was sheltered
for a time by a fisherman called Funamori Yasaburo and his wife. Later the
Daishonin won the favor of Lord Ito, who converted to his teachings when the
Daishonin successfully prayed for the lord's recovery from illness. The
Daishonin was pardoned and returned to Kamakura in February 1263.
His father had already died in 1258. Knowing that his mother was critically ill,
the Daishonin returned to his native Awa in the autumn of 1264. As a result of
his prayers for her, she recovered quickly and lived four years longer. He
stayed in Awa for a while, and conducted propagation activities. On November 11,
while still in Awa, he set out with a group of believers to visit Kudo
Yoshitaka, one of his followers, at his invitation. En route they were ambushed
by Tojo Kagenobu and his men at a place called Komatsubara. The Daishonin's
disciple Kyonin-bo, and Kudo Yoshitaka, who came rushing to his aid, were killed
in the ensuing struggle. The Daishonin sustained a sword cut on his forehead and
a broken hand. This incident is called the Komatsubara Persecution.
For the next three years or so, the Daishonin devoted himself to propagation
efforts in Awa, Kazusa, Shimosa and Hitachi provinces, returning to Kamakura
early in 1268. On January 18 of that year, a letter from Khubilai Khan of the
Mongols arrived in Kamakura with a demand that Japan acknowledge fealty to the
Mongol Empire and pay tribute or prepare to be invaded. The arrival of the
Mongol's letters substantiated the Daishonin's earlier prophecy of foreign
invasion. In April the Daishonin sent the "Ankoku Ron Gokan Yurai" (Rationale
for Submitting the "Rissho Ankoku Ron") to Hokan-bo, a government official,
pointing out that the prediction made in his "Rissho Ankoku Ron" was beginning
to come true and urging the government to heed his advice. On October 11, he
sent eleven letters to influential political and religious leaders, urging them
to abandon their faith in erroneous teachings and demanding the opportunity to
uphold his teaching in a public religious debate. There was no response.
In 1271 the country was troubled by persistent drought, and the government
ordered Ryokan of Gokuraku-ji temple, and eminent priest of the Shingon-Ritsu
sect, to pray for rain. Hearing of this, the Daishonin sent Ryokan a written
challenge offering to become his disciple if Ryokan succeeded in bringing about
rain; on the other hand, if Ryokan failed, he should become the Daishonin's
disciple. Ryokan readily agreed, but in spite of his prayers and those of
hundreds of attendant priests, no rain fell. Far from keeping his promise, he
vindictively began to spread rumors about the Daishonin, using his influence
among the wives and widows of government officials. He told them falsely that
the Daishonin said their deceased husbands had fallen into the hell of incessant
suffering. On September 10 the Daishonin was summoned to court and interrogated
by Hei no Saemon, the deputy director of the Office of Military and Police
Affairs. Nichiren Daishonin denied the charges of libel against the deceased
officials but added that he had indeed been exposing the heresies they had
followed when they were alive. He reemphasized the evil of misleading religions
and repeated his prediction that the country would face ruin if it continued to
deny the True Law. This encounter marked his second remonstration with the
government.
On the afternoon of September 12, Hei no Saemon arrested the Daishonin, who was
subsequently charged with treason and sentenced to exile on Sado Island.
However, Hei no Saemon decided on his own to have the Daishonin beheaded, and
took him late that night to the execution grounds at Tatsunokuchi. Just as the
executioner was about to lower his sword, a brilliant object shot across the
sky, terrifying Hei no Saemon's men and making it impossible to carry out the
execution. This incident is called the Tatsunokuchi Persecution.
At this point, Nichiren Daishonin relinquished his transient status as
Bodhisattva Jogyo who was entrusted by Shakyamuni Buddha in the Lotus Sutra with
the propagation of the Law in the Latter Day, and revealed his true identity as
the original Buddha. This is called hosshaku kempon. Only after that time did he
begin to inscribe the object of worship, and commit to writing his important
teachings, which identify him as the Buddha of the Latter Day of the Law and
clarify the True Law which is to be propagated in the Latter Day.
On October 10, after almost a one-month stay in Echi, Sagami Province, Nichiren
Daishonin left under escort for Sado Island, his designated place of exile, and
arrived at Tsukahara on November 1. There, he was assigned a dilapidated hut in
a graveyard as his dwelling, exposed to the wind and snow. On January 16 and 17
in the following year, he defeated hundreds of priests from Sado and the
mainland who had come to confront him in religious debate. This encounter is
called the Tsukahara Debate. In February of that year, the Daishonin's
prediction of internal strife was fulfilled when Hojo Tokisuke, an elder half
brother of Regent Hojo Tokimune, made an unsuccessful attempt to seize power. In
April the Daishonin was transferred from Tsukahara to the residence of
Ichinosawa Nyudo. On Sado he wrote many of his most important works including
the "Kaimoku Sho" (The Opening of the Eyes), "Kanjin no Honzon Sho" (The True
Object of Worship), "Shoji Ichidaiji Kechimyaku Sho" (Heritage of the Ultimate
Law of Life), "Shoho Jisso Sho" (The True Entity of Life), "Totaigi Sho" (The
Entity of the Mystic Law), "Kembutsu Miraiki" (On the Buddha's Prophecy) and "Nyosetsu
Shugyo Sho" (On Practicing the Buddha's Teachings).
In February 1274, the government issued a pardon for the Daishonin, and he
returned to Kamakura on March 26. On April 8, Hei no Saemon requested an
interview, and asked the Daishonin in a deferential manner his opinion of the
impending Mongol invasion. The Daishonin said that it would occur within the
year and reiterated that this calamity was the result of slandering the True
Law. On this occasion the government offered to build him a temple and place his
sect of Buddhism on an equal footing with all other sects, but the Daishonin
refused. This was his third remonstration with the government.
The government continued its reliance on the Shingon sect and other Buddhist
teachings. Convinced that he had done all he could to warn the nation's leaders,
the Daishonin now turned his efforts toward ensuring the correct transmission of
his teachings to posterity. In keeping with an old maxim that a sage who warns
his sovereign three times and is not heeded should withdraw to a mountain
forest, he left Kamakura and went to live in a small hermitage in the wilderness
of Mt. Minobu. There he gave lectures on the Lotus Sutra and devoted himself to
training his disciples. He also wrote several important documents including the
"Hokke Shuyo Sho" (The Essentials of the Lotus Sutra), "Senji Sho" (The
Selection of the Time) and "Hoon Sho" (Repaying Debts of Gratitude).
In October 1274, the Mongols launched a massive military attack against the
southern islands of Iki and Tsushima and advanced to Kyushu. Japanese losses
were staggering, but when the Mongol forces returned to their battleships at
night, an unexpected storm arose and heavily damaged the Mongol fleet. The
Mongols withdrew. In April of the next year, however, the Mongols sent an envoy
threatening another invasion if the Japanese government did not acknowledge
fealty to the Mongol Empire.
During this period, the Daishonin was busy at Minobu
writing letters, training
his disciples and giving lectures on the Lotus Sutra. Nikko Shonin assumed an
active leadership in the propagation activities, and concentrated his efforts in
Kai, Izu and Suruga provinces. His efforts were rewarded with a number of
converts among both the priesthood and laity, and as the number of new believers
increased, so did official pressures. Especially in Atsuhara Village of the Fuji
area, believers were subjected to a series of threats and harassments known
collectively as the Atsuhara Persecution. Twenty believers, all farmers, were
arrested on September 21, 1279, on false charges, and three of them were
beheaded on October 15. Not one of the twenty farmers had abandoned their faith
in spite of these persecutions. Nichiren Daishonin, seeing that a number of his
followers were now ready to give their lives if necessary to protect the Law,
realized that the time had come to fulfill the final purpose of his life, and on
October 12, 1279, he inscribed the Dai-Gohonzon as the object of worship for all
people to attain Buddhahood.
Subsequently, his health began to fail. Sensing that his death was near, he
designated Nikko Shonin as his successor in a transfer document dated September
1282. On September 8, he left Minobu at the urging of his disciples to visit the
hot springs of Hitachi. When he reached the residence of Ikegami Munenaka at
Ikegami in Musashi Province, he realized that his death was imminent. On October
8, he name six senior disciples and entrusted to them the responsibility of
propagation after his death. Early on the morning of October 13, he appointed
Nikko Shonin as the high priest of Kuon-ji temple in Minobu and urged all
believers to follow Nikko Shonin. He passed away that morning, in the company of
his disciples and lay believers.
Source: Dictionary of Buddhist Terms and Concepts
Source: http://www.sgi-usa.org/cgi-bin/lexicon.cgi?exact=on&term=Nichiren+Daishonin
(NOTE: Numerous corrections and enhancements have been made under Shastra tradition and "Fair Use" by an Anonymous Buddhist Monk Redactor (Compiler) of this Online Buddhist Encyclopedia Compilation)
Related Websites:
www.Shakyamuni-Buddha.com,
www.Amitabha-Buddha.com,
www.Amitabha-Sutra.com,
www.Bhaisajya-Guru.com,
www.Medicine-Buddha.org,
www.Avatamsaka-Sutra.com,
www.Flower-Adornment.com,
www.Shurangama-Mantra.com,
www.Shurangama-Sutra.com,
www.Prajna-Paramita.com,
www.Diamond-Sutra.net,
www.Vajra-Sutra.com,
www.Sixth-Patriarch.com, www.Dharani-Sutra.com,
www.Sanghata-Sutra.com,
www.Manjushri-Bodhisattva.com,
www.Avalokiteshvara-Bodhisattva.com,
www.Samantabhadra-Bodhisattva.com,
www.Ksitigarbha-Bodhisattva.com,
www.Ksitigarbha.com,
www.Nagarjuna-Bodhisattva.com,
www.Nalanda-University.com,
www.Tibetan-Thangka.com,
www.Buddhist-Sutras.com,
www.Buddhist-Sutra.com,
www.Ayurvedic-College.org
Primary Original Source: The Tripitaka Sutra, Shastra and Vinaya teachings
(as found in the scripture storehouse of the Indian Sanskrit-Siddham,
Chinese, Tibetan and Japanese traditions of the Nalanda Tradition of ancient
Nalanda University) of Shakyamuni Buddha, and his Arya Sagely
Bodhisattva
Bhikshu Monk and
Upasaka disciples.
These Good and Wise Advisors (Kaliyanamitra) Dharma Master teachers include Arya Venerables Nagarjuna, Ashvaghosha, Aryasura, Kumarajiva, Shantideva, Chandrakirti, Chandragomin, Vasubandhu, Asanga, Hui Neng, Atisha, Kamalashila, Dharmarakshita, Tsong Khapa, Thogme Zangpo, Patanjali, Sushruta, Charaka, Vagbhata, Nichiren, Hsu Yun, Hsuan Hua, Shen Kai, Tenzin Gyatso, Kyabje Zopa, Ajahn Chah, Vasant Lad, and other modern day masters. We consider them to be in accord with Master Hsuan Hua’s "Seven Guidelines for Recognizing Genuine Teachers"
Nalanda Online University's teachings are based especially on the Dharma Flower Lotus Sutra, the Avatamsaka Sutra, the Shurangama Sutra, the Ksitigarbha Sutra, the Bhaisajya Guru Sutra, the Dharani Sutra, the Vajra Sutra, the Prajna Paramita Hridayam Sutra, the Guhyasamaja, the Kalachakra and their commentaries (shastras) by the above Arya Tripitakacharya Dharma Masters.
At Nalanda Online University
we
practice daily and introduce you to (via downloadable multimedia MP3 audio and WMV
video lectures) the teachings and practices of the
Five Traditions transmitted by
the Buddha Shakyamuni:
1.
Teaching School (Mahayana Sutrayana -
Paramitayana -
Hua
Yan and
Tian Tai,
Yogachara, Nalanda Prasangika
Madhyamika,
Theravada
Sutta)
See also: Tripitaka (1. Sutras, 2. Vinaya, 3. Shastras or Abhidharma, or Tantra), Taisho Catalog Numbering System, Dharma, and names of individual sutras (such as Shurangama Sutra, Avatamsaka Sutra [Flower Adornment Sutra], Lotus Sutra [Wonderful Dharma Flower Sutra], Earth Store Sutra, Dharani Sutra, Brahma Net Sutra, Medicine Master Buddha Sutra, Sixth Patriarch Platform Sutra, Sutra in 42 Sections, Sutra on the Buddha's Bequeathed Teaching, et al.
2.
Moral Regulations School (Vinaya
Pratimoksha
Shila - Bodhisattva
Pranidhana - Vajrayana-Samaya - Yogic Yama)
3.
Esoteric School (Vajrayana -
Mantrayana - Tantrayana - Dharani - Secret
School of the Mahayana)
4.
Meditation School (Indian
Dhyana
Samadhi -
Shamatha -
Vipassana, Chinese
Chan,
Japanese Zen,
Tibetan Mahamudra of Kagyupa, and
Tibetan Dzogchen of Nyingmapa)
5.
Pure Land Devotional School (Bhakti Puja - Buddha-Bodhisattva
Mindfulness and Nama Japa --
Name Recitation of Buddhas
Amitabha-Amitayus,
Medicine
Buddha - Bhaisajya Guru - Akshobhya,
and Bodhisattvas:
Avalokiteshvara-Guanyin-Chenrezig-Mahakala,
Tara,
Samantabhadra Universal
Worthy,
Manjushri-Kalarupa
Great Wisdom,
Maitreya Great Loving-Kindness,
Mahasthamaprapta Great Strength,
Ksitigarbha - Earth Store Great Vows,
Vajrapani,
Vajrasattva,
Chandraprabha Moonlight
Radiance, Suryaprabha Sunlight Radiance,
Medicine King Bodhisattva,
Medicine Superior Bodhisattva
and others Dharma Protecting
Dharmapala Lokapala Bodhisattvas,
Gods and Goddesses)
Compilation Sources for the Above Material on the Teachings of the Buddha:
Primary Compilation Source: Epstein, Ronald B., Ph.D, compiler, Buddhist Text Translation Society's
Buddhism A to Z, Burlingame, California: Buddhist Text Translation Society, 2003.
ISBN: 0881393533 Paperback: 284 pages.
www.BTTSOnline.org
www.Amazon.com
http://www.bttsonline.org/product.aspx?pid=118
http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0881393533/ref=ase_medicinebuddh-20
Secondary Compilation Source: The Seeker’s Glossary of Buddhism, 2nd ed., San Francisco, California: Sutra Translation Committee of the United States and Canada, 1998: www.budaedu.org.tw
Secondary Compilation Source: Muller, Charles, editor, Digital Dictionary of Buddhism [DDB], Toyo
Gakuen University, Japan, 2007: Username is "guest", with no password.
http://buddhism-dict.net/ddb - Based in large part on the
Dictionary of
Chinese Buddhist Terms with Sanskrit and English Equivalents (by Soothill
and Hodous) Delhi, India: Motilal Banarsidass, 1997.
Secondary Compilation Source: Ehrhard, Diener, Fischer, et al, The
Shambhala Dictionary of Buddhism and Zen, Boston, Massachusetts: Shambhala
Publications, 1991. 296 pages. ISBN 978-0-87773-520-5
www.Shambhala.com,
http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0877735204/ref=ase_medicinebuddh-20,
http://www.shambhala.com/html/catalog/items/isbn/978-0-87773-520-5.cfm
The Dharma is a Priceless
Jewel,
thus these research compilations
and audio and video teaching materials are
offered free-of-charge by this
anonymous Buddhist Monk
for the Bodhi Resolve benefit of
All Sentient Beings in the
Universe...
...under a Creative
Commons License.

The rights to textual segments
("quoted, paraphrased, or excerpted") of the are owned by the
author-publisher indicated in the
brackets next to each segment and are make available and commented on (under the
"shastra tradition") under Fair Use. For
rights regarding the Buddhist "Encyclopaedia - Glossary - Dictionary"
compilation as a whole, please know that it is offered under this
Creative
Commons License.
This Nalanda University site (www.Nalanda-University.com)
is redacted by
an anonymous
Buddhist monk
for the benefit of all
living beings
so they may diligently (virya
paramita)
cultivate freely to
realize Bodhi
enlightenment for the sake of all.
On the Buddha Shakyamuni's Birthday 2007,
this free redaction is
offered (received, upheld, read, recited, studied, pondered, explained, and
written out),
in accordance with the
Lotus Saddharma Pundarika Sutra Chapter 19: "Merit
and Virtue of a Dharma Master" as a
selfless offering to the
Buddhas and Bodhisattva
Sangha above to adorn the
Pure Lands and
to liberate
living beings suffering in samsara below by
compassionately
helping them to plant good
roots in this and their future rebirths.
The
merit
is dedicated to
anuttarasamyaksambodhi.
Increasing Effect
Mantra:
Om Sambhara Sambhara (These
Bhikshu Bodhisattva
Bodhichitta
Vows)
Bimana Sara (Spread) Maha
(Greatly) Java (Rapidly) Hum (recited 7x)
To increase by 100,000 times the
merit created:
Tadyatha Om Pancha Griya (five offerings or five faces) Ava
Bodhani Svaha (7x)
Om Dhuru Dhuru Jaya (Victory) Mukhe (Face or Mouth) Svaha (7x)
I Now Universally Transfer the
Merit and Virtue of to All Beings to realize
Anuttara-Samyak-Sam-Bodhi
(“Unsurpassed Proper and Equal Right Enlightenment”)
Sarva Mangalam.
May all be Auspicious.
Arya
Bhikshu
Shantideva’s Bodhisattvacharyavatara says:
Just as Manjushri
works
To fulfill the aims of all limited beings
To the far reaches of space in the ten directions,
May my
behavior become just like that.
For as long as space remains,
And for as long as wandering beings remain,
May
I too remain for that
long,
Dispelling the sufferings
of wandering
beings.
(Like Ananda says in the Shurangama Sutra introduction
to the Shurangama Mantra,
"And even could the nature of
shunyata melt away, my vajra-like
Supreme Resolve would
still remain unmoved.)
Whatever sufferings wandering beings might have,
May all of them ripen on me,
And through the Bodhisattva
assembly,
May wandering beings enjoy happiness.
May
the teachings,
the sole medicine for the sufferings of wandering beings
And the
source of all happiness,
Continue to endure for a very
long time,
With material support and shows of
respect.
Updated May 10, 2008