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The Izu Exile
I have received rice dumplings wrapped
in bamboo leaves, sake, dried rice, peppers, paper and other
items from the messenger whom you took the trouble of sending.
He also conveyed your message that this offering should
be kept secret. I understand.
On the twelfth day of the fifth month,
having been exiled, I arrived at the harbor. When I left
the boat, still in suffering, and even before learning your
name, you kindly took me into your care. What destiny brought
us together? You might have been a votary of the Lotus Sutra
in times past. Now, in the Latter Day of the Law, you were
born as Funamori Yasaburo to take pity on me. Being a man,
it was perhaps natural for you to act as you did, but your
wife might have been less inclined to help me. Nevertheless,
she gave me food, brought me water to wash my hands and
feet and treated me with great concern. It is beyond me
to fathom [this karmic relationship]; I can only describe
it as wondrous.
What caused you to believe in the Lotus
Sutra and to make offerings to me during my more than thirty-day
stay there? I was hated and resented by the steward and
people of the district even more than I was in Kamakura.
Those who saw me scowled, while those who merely heard my
name were filled with spite. And yet, though I was there
in the fifth month when rice was scarce, you secretly fed
me. It would almost seem as though my parents had been reborn
in Kawana close to Ito in Izu Province.
The fourth volume of the Lotus Sutra states,
[If after I {Shakyamuni) have entered extinction there
are those who can expound this sutra, I will send... monks
and nuns and] men and women of pure faith, to offer alms
to the teachers of the Law. The meaning of this sutra
passage is that the heavenly gods and benevolent deities
will assume various forms such as men and women and present
offerings to help one who practices the Lotus Sutra. There
can be no doubt that you and your wife were born as just
such a man and woman of pure faith and now make offerings
to the teacher of the Law, Nichiren.
Since I wrote to you in detail earlier,
I will make this letter brief. But I would like to mention
one thing in particular. When the steward of this district
sent me a request to pray for his recovery from illness,
I wondered if I should accept it. But since he showed some
degree of faith in me, I decided I would appeal to the Lotus
Sutra. If I did, I saw no reason why the ten demon daughters
should not join forces to aid me. I therefore addressed
the Lotus Sutra, Shakyamuni, Taho and the other Buddhas
of the ten directions, the Sun Goddess, Hachiman and the
other deities, both major and minor. I was sure that they
would consider my request and respond. Certainly they would
never forsake me, but would respond as attentively as a
person rubs a sore or scratches an itch. And as it turned
out, the steward recovered. In gratitude he presented me
with a statue of the Buddha which had appeared from the
sea along with a catch of fish. He did so because his illness
had finally ended, an illness which I am certain was inflicted
by the ten demon daughters. The benefit of his recovery
will pass on to you and your wife.
We, living beings, have dwelt in the sea
of the sufferings of birth and death since time without
beginning. But now that we have become votaries of the Lotus
Sutra, we will without fail attain the Buddhas entity
which is as indestructible as a diamond, realizing that
our bodies and minds that have existed since the beginningless
past1 are inherently
endowed with the eternally unchanging nature, and thus awakening
to our mystic reality with our mystic wisdom.
Then how can we be in any way different
from the Buddha who appeared from the sea? Shakyamuni Buddha,
the lord of teachings, who declared in the remote past of
gohyaku-jintengo, "I am the only person [who
can rescue and protect others,]" is none other than
each of us, living beings. This is the Lotus Sutras
doctrine of the three thousand realms in a single moment
of life, and our behavior is a personal demonstration of
"I am always here, preaching the Law."2
How valuable, then, are the Lotus Sutra and Shakyamuni Buddha
for us, but we, ordinary people, are never aware of it.
This is the meaning of the passage in the Juryo chapter,
"I make it so that living beings in their befuddlement
do not see me even when close by." The difference between
delusion and enlightenment is like the four different views
of the grove of sal trees.3
Let it be known that the Buddha with the three thousand
realms in a single moment of life is any living being in
any of the realms of existence who manifests his inherent
Buddhahood.
The demon who appeared before Sessen Doji
was Taishaku in disguise. The dove which sought the protection
of King Shibi was the god Bishukatsuma,4
King Fumyo,5 who was
imprisoned in the castle of King Hanzoku, was Shakyamuni
Buddha, the lord of teachings. The eyes of common mortals
cannot see their true identities, but the eyes of the Buddha
can. As the sutra states, the sky and the sea both have
paths for birds and fish to come and go. A wooden statue
[of the Buddha] is itself a golden Buddha, and a golden
Buddha is a wooden statue. Aniruddhas gold was seen
first as a hare and then as a corpse.6
Sand in the palm of Mahanamas7
hand turned into gold. These things are beyond ordinary
understanding. A common mortal is a Buddha, and a Buddha
a common mortal. This is exactly what is meant by the doctrine
of the three thousand realms in a single moment of life
and by the phrase, "I in fact attained Buddhahood."8
Thus it is quite possible that you and
your wife have appeared here as reincarnations of the lord
of teachings, the World-Honored One of Great Enlightenment,
in order to help me. Although the distance between Ito and
Kawana is short, we are not allowed to communicate openly.
I am writing this letter for your future reference. Do not
discuss these matters with other people, but ponder them
yourself. If anyone should learn anything at all about this
letter, it will go hard with you. Keep this deep in your
heart, and never speak about it. With my deepest regard.
Nam-myoho-renge-kyo.
Nichiren
The twenty-seventh day of the sixth month
in the first year of Kocho (1261)
To be sent to Funamori Yasaburo.
Footnotes:
- The Lord Shakyamuni.... at a time even more distant
than gohyaku-jintengo: Refers not to Gautama Buddha
in India, but to the eternal Buddha who has continued
to exist since time without beginning. The phrase, "a
time even more distant than gohyaku-jintengo,"
indicates that the Daishonin is shifting his reference
from the temporal framework of gohyaku-jintengo
to that of kuon ganjo, time without either beginning
or end.
- Lotus Sutra, chap.
16.
- Four different views of the grove of sal trees: The
grove of sal trees was where Shakyamuni expounded his
last teaching, the Nirvana Sutra, and died. The four different
views represent the four kinds of lands: the land of enlightened
and unenlightened beings, the land of transition, the
land of actual reward, and the land of eternal light.
According to the capacity and life condition of people,
the grove of sal trees is viewed in four different ways,
that is, as a grove composed of earth, trees, plants and
stone walls; as a place adorned with seven kinds of treasure,
including gold and silver; as a place where all Buddhas
practice Buddhism; and as the eternal, enlightened land
of the Buddha.
- Bishukatsuma: (Skt Viivakarman) A god who serves the
god Taishaku, who lives on Mt. Sumeru. His story appears
in the Daichido Ron. When Shakyamuni in a past
existence practiced Buddhist austerities as King Shibi,
Taishaku assumed the form of a hawk, and Bishukatsuma,
that of a dove, as a test of the king's sincerity. In
order to save the dove, Shibi gave his life, offering
his flesh to the hungry hawk.
- Fumyo: Name of Shakyamuni when he engaged in the practice
of observing precepts in a past existence. King Fumyo
and ninety-nine other kings (nine hundred and ninety-nine
kings according to another source) were captured by King
Hanzoku and were about to be killed. In grief, Fumyo said
to King Hanzoku, "When I was taken from my country,
I had promised offering to a certain monk. I am not trying
to avoid death, but breaking that promise is hard to bear."
King Fumyo received seven days' grace and returned to
his country. He gave the monk offerings and transferred
the throne to his son. After proclaiming to his people
that keeping a promise is the most important precept,
he returned to King Hanzoku. Hanzoku was so impressed
by Fumyo's sincerity that he released not only Fumyo but
the ninety-nine other kings as well. Furthermore, he was
converted to Buddhism.
- Aniruddha's gold was seen first as a rabbit and then
as a corpse: Aniruddha was one of the ten major disciples
of Shakyamuni and was known as "foremost in divine
insight." He was a cousin of Shakyamuni. The Sanskrit
aniruddha, means to be unobstructed, or to gratify
every wish and be without desire. His story appears in
the first volume of T'ien-t'ai's Hokke Mongu. Long
ago, a pratyekabuddha named Rida engaged in the practice
of begging alms but gained nothing. Seeing this, a poor
man offered him barnyard millet. Later, when the poor
man went deep into a mountain to find millet for Rida,
a rabbit happened to jump on his back and then turned
into a corpse. Frightened, he tried to shake it off, but
in vain. As soon as he arrived at his house, however,
the corpse fell off and turned into gold. Hearing of this,
wicked men came to rob him of the gold, but to them it
looked like a mere corpse. To the eye of the poor man,
however, it was a genuine treasure of gold, and he became
wealthy. Ninety-nine aeons later, he was born as Aniruddha.
- Mahanama: One of the five bhikkhus, or ascetic
monks. When Shakyamuni forsook the secular world and entered
the religious life, his father, the king, ordered five
men to accompany him. They followed and practiced asceticism
with Shakyamuni, but left him when he renounced ascetic
practices. However, shortly after Shakyamuni attained
enlightenment, he preached his first sermon to them at
Samath, known as the Deer Park, and they became his first
disciples. The exact identity of these five ascetics is
unknown. According to the Zoichi Agon Sutra, however,
Mahanama is said to have possessed occult Powers. The
story of "sand in his palm turning into gold"
appears in Ts'ung-i's supplementary note to T'ien-t'ai's
three major works on the Lotus Sutra.
- Lotus Sutra, chap.
10. Shakyamuni explained his original enlightenment
by saying that he had actually attained enlightenment
in gohyaku-jintengo, revealing his true identity.
Nichiren Daishonin revealed the deeper meaning of the
phrase, "since I in fact attained Buddhahood."
In his orally transmitted teachings,
he states that "I" indicates all people of the
Ten Worlds in the universe, while "attain" means
to open and reveal. Accordingly, "attain Buddhahood"
signifies that people of the Ten Worlds can reveal their
eternally inherent Buddha nature.
Major Writings of Nichiren Daishonin,
Vol. 2.
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