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was a Shin Buddhist priest in
ÅŒtani-ha ÅŒtani-ha (真宗大谷派, ''ShinshÅ« ÅŒtani-ha'') is a Japanese Buddhist movement. It belongs to JÅdo ShinshÅ«, also known as Shin Buddhism. The movement has approximately 5.5 million members. The headquarters of ÅŒtani-ha are in Kyoto,http://w ...
. For a decade he was a student of the Shin reformer
Kiyozawa Manshi was a Japanese Shin Buddhist reformer and priest of samurai background who studied at Tokyo University in Western philosophy under the American philosopher Ernest Fenollosa.Popular Buddhism In Japan: Shin Buddhist Religion & Culture by Esben A ...
. Akegarasu was also a former head of administration of the
Higashi Hongan-ji , or, ″the Eastern Monastery of the Original Vow″, is one of two dominant sub-sects of Shin Buddhism in Japan and abroad, the other being Nishi Honganji (or, 'The Western Temple of the Original Vow'). It is also the name of the head temple of ...
who was a major inspiration to the formation of the Dobokai Movement.''Popular Buddhism In Japan: Shin Buddhist Religion & Culture'' by Esben Andreasen, pp. 46,71,72 / University of Hawaii Press 1998,


Early life

He was born into a Jodo Shinshu temple family in Ishikawa prefecture and was the family's only son. Due to his father Enen's death when he was 10, his mother Taki struggled through the hardships associated with poverty and single parenthood while raising him. He received traditionalist
JÅdo ShinshÅ« , also known as Shin Buddhism or True Pure Land Buddhism, is a school of Pure Land Buddhism. It was founded by the former Tendai Japanese monk Shinran. Shin Buddhism is the most widely practiced branch of Buddhism in Japan. History Shinran ( ...
teachings until his fateful meeting, and by the age of fourteen, the talented writer had published several books of 31-syllable poetry.


Revival movement

Rev.
Kiyozawa Manshi was a Japanese Shin Buddhist reformer and priest of samurai background who studied at Tokyo University in Western philosophy under the American philosopher Ernest Fenollosa.Popular Buddhism In Japan: Shin Buddhist Religion & Culture by Esben A ...
, a great Japanese Shin reformer who taught Buddhism through life experience, met him on September 11, 1893, and became his teacher. Akegarasu was 16 and Kiyozawa was 31. For approximately the next ten years the two attempted to translate Buddhism into ordinary language and to manifest it into their simple everyday living. When Kiyozawa died on June 6, 1903, Akegarasu felt that he had been thoroughly crushed by his teacher's teachings. Akegarasu then led Kiyozawa's revival movement and wrote extensively for the next decade. A series of severe crises struck Rev. Akegarasu during his mid-30s. His wife died, then his reputation as a minister and as the leader of Rev. Kiyozawa's revival movement came under attack by party-spirit factionalists. At that time, the
AmitÄbha AmitÄbha ( sa, अमिताभ, IPA: ), also known as AmitÄyus, is the primary Buddha of Pure Land Buddhism. In Vajrayana Buddhism, he is known for his longevity, discernment, pure perception, purification of aggregates, and deep awarene ...
Buddha image that Rev. Akegarasu cherished was shattered, and no traditional forms of practice satisfied. But upon re-reading the
Longer SukhÄvatÄ«vyÅ«ha SÅ«tra The ''Longer SukhÄvatÄ«vyÅ«ha SÅ«tra'' (or ''Infinite Life Sutra'', Chinese: ''FóshuÅwúliàngshòujÄ«ng'' 佛說無é‡å£½ç¶“; Vietnamese: Phật Thuyết Kinh Vô Lượng Thá»; Japanese: Taisho Tripitaka # 360) is one of the two Indian M ...
he felt that he was finally beginning to realize the essential message of his teacher Rev. Kiyozawa, via the text of that Sutra. His experiential insight was that the story of Larger Sutra, where the hero, Dharmakara Bodhisattva, eventually becomes Amida Buddha, was expressing a timeless spirit emerging then and there within his own heart-mind. Amida's primal vow was his own authentic aspiration to become a Buddha and to save all sentient beings. From then on he taught that Amida Buddha represents that which practitioners should become. In 1949, Akegarasu focused Shin practice in the direction of faith alone, declaring in a statement to his disciples: "First ''
shinjin In Shin Buddhism, Shinjin (信心) was originally the Japanese word for the Buddhist concept of citta-prasÄda (clear or clarified heart-mind), but now carries a more popular related meaning of faith or entrusting. According to Ueda, "shinjin is ...
'', second ''shinjin'', third ''shinjin''." This is basically the moment where Dobokai became official, although the movement did not receive official recognition until 1962. The early roots for the Dobokai Movement faith movement began in 1947 as the '' shinjinsha'', or, 'true person community'.


Death

Akegarasu died August 27, 1954.


Writings

The earliest English translation of Akegarasu's writings can be found in ''Selections From The Nippon Seishin Library'', which Akegarasu published in 1936 (translators Hata Taigan, Hanaoka Kimi, Imadate Tosui and others). In 1977 to commemorate the centennial of Akegarasu's birth, two ministers of the Buddhist Temple of Chicago who were his direct students published their translations: ''The Fundamental Spirit of Buddhism'' translated by Gyomay Kubose with Nancy DeRoin and ''Shout of Buddha: Writings of Haya Akegarasu'' translated by Gyoko Saito with Joan Sweany. One of Akegarasu's main students was Shuichi Maida (1906-1967). Gyoko Saito and
Gyomay Kubose Gyomay Kubose (June 21, 1905–March 29, 2000), born Masao Kubose was a Japanese-American Buddhist teacher. In 1944, after leaving the Heart Mountain internment camp, he founded the Chicago Buddhist Church, later renamed the Buddhist Temple ...
were also among his prominent students. Akegarasu's poem “Who am I?†concludes:
I alone
am the most noble:
I embrace the cosmos. What an indescribable, subtle
existence I am! - I cannot in
speaking or writing
put down who I am!

I always touch this indescribable self,
always follow this indescribable self.
Truth is here.''Shout of the Buddha: Writings of Haya Akegarasu'' translated by Gyoto Saito and Joan Sweany (1977) Orchid Press, p.197


References


External links


Writings of Haya Akegarasu
{{DEFAULTSORT:Akegarasu, Haya Pure Land Buddhism Japanese Buddhist clergy 1877 births 1954 deaths JÅdo ShinshÅ« Buddhist priests