HIGASHI HONGANJI BUDDHIST TEMPLE NON-PROFIT ORG. U.S. POSTAGE PAID Los Angeles, CA Permit No. 24616 The Way Vol. 66 | No. 10 October 2014 HIGASHI HONGANJI LOS ANGELES BETSUIN |Celebrating 110 Years in Los Angeles TEMPLE SCHEDULE OCTOBER 26 10:00am Sunday Service 11:00am Dharma School Halloween NOVEMBER 2 10:00am Kaikyo-ki • Shotsuki Service 8 6:00pm HOONKO Gathering 9 10:00am HOONKO Service 16 10:00am Family Service 23 10:00am Sunday Service 30 10:00am Sunday Service Discussion Group DECEMBER 7 10:00am Shotsuki Service 14 10:00am Bodhi Day/Year-end Family Service 21 10:00am Temple Clean up HOONKO November 8 & 9 HOONKO Gathering HOONKO Service Informal gathering and discussion in English Formal service honoring Shinran Shōnin's memorial SATURDAY, november 8 sunDAY, november 9 6:00pm 10:00am Kaikyo-ki Shotsuki Memorial Service Sunday, november 2 10:00am DHARMA SCHOOL Sunday, OCTOBER 26 HALLOWEEN PARTY join us for food + fun after service please RSVP! The Way Volume 66 | Number 10 | October 2014 HIGASHI HONGANJI BUDDHIST TEMPLE • LOS ANGELES BETSUIN WHAT IS THE TEMPLE FOR? Rinban Noriaki Ito The Higashi Honganji North America District has recently begun a new educational program called “Dharma Seeds.” For the next three years, selected members from each of our four temples will study together and hopefully become catalysts at their temples encouraging others to listen to the Buddhadharma. In planning for this program, it gave me a chance to look back into the origins of the district educational program. 1991 was the year the original program was initiated. The inaugural event was a 2-day retreat that was held at the West Covina temple where I was assigned as the resident minister. Our speaker was the Rev. Michio Miyato, a wonderfully engaging speaker, perfect for this initial event. Because the lectures and discussions dragged on for hours totally disregarding the time schedule, one participant referred to it as Buddhist boot camp. It was exhausting and exhilarating at the same time. For us ministers too, it was like a wake up call, questioning our complacency regarding our efforts to share the teachings with our members. Rev. Patti Nakai and I served as the interpreters and so I remember the content of Rev. Miyato’s presentation well. He made us think deeply, he made us laugh, he made us cry, he made us question how much we understood and implemented those teachings in our everyday life in a very engaging, self-deprecating way. His talks that weekend of February 16-17, 1991 are summarized in a paperback book called Awakening to the Nembutsu and I would like to share some of my favorite stories with you in this article. Rev. Miyato started by talking about the Dobo-kai movement in Japan. Back in 1961, after a measure of normalcy came about after a collaborative effort to reconstruct the country after World War II, reflection of the status quo among the leadership of the Higashi Honganji led to the conclusion that there are no true followers of the Buddha. What arose from such a dismal assessment was the Dobo-kai movement, an educational movement to encourage all members and ministers of Higashi Honganji temples to study together. Rev. Miyato started out by saying that the primary role of a temple is to produce true human beings. From the respected philosopher, Martin Buber, he quoted, “If the future world does not restore the relationship of I-and-Thou, we will cease to exist as human beings.” In Buddhism, we do not have a concept of Thou. But Rev. Miyato explained that we basically regard people as you and things as it. We use a fan in the summer to cool the air. When fall comes, we put away the fan. The fan doesn’t mind since it’s an it with no feelings. But, he says we have the tendency to treat people as its, discarding them when they are no longer useful or beneficial to us. So oftentimes, we relate to other people not as you, but rather as it, as things. In theistic religions, Thou is used to refer to God, to Allah, or Jesus Christ. It is an expression of utmost respect. Our challenge then, is to refer to all people, to all living things as Thou. Sometimes we don’t even regard others as you. But Buber, I believe, is encouraging us to go further…to regard all people with the attitude of Thou. So this would be the first step. In his self-deprecating way, he shared another example. One day Rev. Miyato received a letter from a temple member saying that he has decided to cut his ties with the temple and to join another religious group. His first response was, this is terrible. But that thought didn’t arise because of any guilt Sensei felt that he had failed to adequately serve the needs of the member. What he said was, “…what I was thinking was not so much of his spiritual needs but of the donations that I would be losing because his family had supported my temple for many generations.” He realized that he was treating this member as an object, a source of income for the temple, rather than as a human being. He quoted from the eminent Shin Buddhist teacher, Rev. Ryōjin Soga, who said, “the most precious jewel the Japanese people received from Buddhism was the eye by which we see inside ourselves.” Another story to illustrate this idea of how self-centered we tend to be (Please see TEMPLE, page 3) Celebrating 110 Years in Los Angeles For our 110th year in Los Angeles, we are raising funds to put toward several anniversary projects to add to the betterment of our temple. These projects include new flooring and fresh paint for several areas of the temple as well as upgrades to audiovisual equipment to enhance our services. We welcome any contributions to our 110th Anniversary Fund. Thank you for your continued support and we look forward to many more years of serving our members and friends. HIGASHI HONGANJI LOS ANGELES BETSUIN Page 2 The Way Betsuin News E-Mail [email protected] HOONKO Gathering & Service Autumn Ohigan Service & Seminar Higashi’s Tanabata Kazari HOONKO is the memorial service for Shinran Shōnin, the founder of our Jodo Shinshu denomination. The literal meaning of HOONKO is “a gathering to repay a debt of gratitude.” It is, therefore, an occasion to express our appreciation for having been given this opportunity to encounter the Buddha’s teaching. According to Higashi Honganji tradition, the memorial date of Shinran Shōnin is November 28, 1262. This year, our HOONKO services will be on the weekend of November 8th and 9th. Overseas District Abbot Chōyū Ōtani will come again to officiate at our HOONKO on behalf of Abbot Chōken Ōtani. This year, we will have our HOONKO Gathering, an English-speaking discussion on Saturday, November 8th at 6:00pm with speaker Rev. Peter Hata. On Sunday morning at 10:00am, speakers for our HOONKO Service will be Rev. Peter Hata in English and Rev. Tomoyuki Hasegawa in Japanese. We hope that you can join us for this special annual observance. The Autumn Ohigan Service was held on September 21st, with a Dharma Talk by Rev. Tomoyuki Horibe, head minister of Rinshō temple in Takaoka City, Toyama prefecture and chair of Eastern Japan Earthquake/Tsunami Restoration Support Group. Thank you to Rev. Horibe for his enlightening words for this special service. Thank you to Mr. Shin Ito for chairing service and Toban 1 and other members for a delicious chicken and vegetarian curry lunch with a variety of salads and lots of dessert. We appreciate your support of this year’s Autumn Ohigan Service. Following the service and otoki, we had our Autumn Seminar in the social hall. Rev. Tomoyuki Horibe spoke on the topic “Lessons from Fukushima: Sharing Stories of Challenge and Hope.” He shared his experiences during relief efforts in both the tsunami-devastated areas of Japan and in Fukushima where radiation continues to be a threat to those who live there. Thank you to Rev. Horibe for an afternoon of eye-opening and contemplative discussion. During the weekend of August 9-10, Nisei Week celebrated the 6th Annual Tanabata Festival. Businesses, organizations, and community groups were encouraged to participate by submitting a Tanabata kazari. This year on behalf of Higashi Honganji’s 110th Anniversary, we submitted a purple, lavender, and white kazari whose streamers flew in the wind alongside 168 other kazaris adjacent to the Japanese American National Museum. Many thanks go to all of the Sangha members who participated in this year’s creation. It was truly a group effort. Hopefully we will start a little earlier next year! And for a limited time the kazari will hang in the foyer of the temple. So come and see it! Kathy Ikeda Dharma Gathering About 25 members of our Higashi sangha met at Mark Nakatani’s home on Saturday, August 30th to enjoy a meal and a discussion of what compassion is and of the difficulties of being truly compassionate. Although it was a very warm day, several people helped Mark with the barbecue and everyone enjoyed the delicious potluck food. There are plans for another gathering so stay tuned and plan to join us next time. LUMBINI CHILD DEVELOPMENT CENTER OPEN ENROLLMENT! spaces available now FOR CHILDREN AGES 2 1/2 TO 6 YEARS TEL: 213-680-2976 FAX: 213-626-6850 EMAIL: [email protected] WEBPAGE: http://LumbiniCDC.org open year round: MONDAY through FRIDAY 7:30am to 6:00pm closed national holidays The Way (TEMPLE, con’t. from page 1) was about the huge hanging bell at his temple. It hadn’t been too long before that his temple did not have a bell in the courtyard. He had always been envious of the nearby temple that had one. Finally he persuaded a wealthy member to donate funds. He said I was ecstatic…but only for three days. He realized that now that the temple had the bell, he had to ring it every morning. After a few days, he and his wife would do jankenpo (rock, scissors, paper) to determine who would have to go out at 5:00 am to ring the bell. The source of what was to be so much happiness had turned to be a source of suffering. And it was because of his self-centered way of looking at life. Buddhism, he says, has the power to change us. As Rev. Soga said, we can receive from Buddhism the eyes that enable us to see inside of ourselves. When we say Namu Amida Butsu, some might think we’re praying for something, or offering praise to a higher being. But Rev. Soga also said, “Namu Amida Butsu is the Buddha living in words.” For human beings, words are so very important. Words have the power to kill as well as the power to heal, to make us feel alive. Rev. Miyato said that saying Namu Amida Butsu is not our conscious effort to say nice words. Rather, it is our way of hearing the good words of the Buddhas, hearing words that can brighten our hearts, words that can bring peace to our lives. Among his temple members, there was a couple that had just celebrated their 20th anniversary. For the first ten years of their married life, everything was wonderful. But from then, life became a challenge for them. They had two kids, and also were caring for his elderly parents. He had to move to Tokyo to increase his income. Life, therefore, was extremely difficult for the wife. Their 20th wedding anniversary had come and after dinner, they were toasting the day with glasses of beer. She, however, was thinking back and became more and more upset about her fate in life. She was thinking she had to express her frustrations to him. But just as she was about to begin, he suddenly said to her, “Gee it’s been 20 years. I’m so sorry you got saddled with such a terrible husband as me. Thank you for all you’ve done. Thank you for staying with me.” As soon as she heard those words, her anger disappeared. Those words were the Namu Amida Butsu that solidified their relationship. Rev. Miyato said, this is how Buddhism leads us toward becoming decent human beings. Taking the eyes that the Buddhadharma gives to us to look inward, we are guided toward a life in which we can move forward naturally with the flow of life. It is in this way that the temple is able to succeed in producing true human beings. At the retreat, Rev. Miyato gave us a phrase we can remember. He said, “Let us all catch the cold of the Nenbutsu and pass it on.” Once we come to a true appreciation of the Buddhadharma, he implies that we cannot help but share our enthusiasm. Upon reflection, I realize that I need to do a better job of infusing that kind of spirit here at our temple. Page 3 West Covina Higashi Kiku Crafts & Food Fair WCBT will hold its 6th annual Kiku Crafts & Food Fair on Sunday, November 2, 2014, from 10:00 AM – 3:00 PM at the East San Gabriel Valley Japanese Community Center, 1203 West Puente Ave, West Covina, California. A selection of artists will present Asian & Hawaiian inspired crafts, clothing, jewelry, and giftware, and an array of foods for a fun day of holiday shopping and lunching. Music, raffle prizes, and trivia questions all add to the holåiday atmosphere. Delicious foods and beverages can be enjoyed on the premises or to take home…just the right event to bond with friends and families. Free admission and free parking. This event is sponsored by the West Covina Buddhist Temple. For a list of participating vendors and pictures of some of their work, go to: http://livingdharma.org/CurrentEventsWCBT.html Contact person: Hisako Koga, 909626-6131 Our deepest condolences to the family and relatives of … Ms. Nancy Hatsumi Kikuchi (52) September 10, 2014 Mr. Hitoshi Matsumoto (89) September 14, 2014 Mrs. Mary Nobuko Hazeyama (86) September 16, 2014 Mrs. Chiyo Matsumoto (99) September 22, 2014 Namu Amida Butsu Help The Way The Way needs your help and welcomes your contributions. With the cost of printing and postage steadily increasing, we request your support in helping to make our newsletter available in the years to come. Please consider making a donation to The Way to offset some of the cost. Thank you for your continued support and readership. Onegai-shimasu! SUBMISSION DEADLINE! visit our website at www.hhbt-la.org and “like” us on facebook at http://www.facebook.com/hhbt.la Submissions for The Way are due the 10th of each month for the following month’s issue. 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