One man's journey from the beginning of faith to worldwide leadership for peace. Excepts from Ikeda Diary 1949-1960. Ikeda is the third president of a global peace movement called Soka Gokkai International.
Daisaku Ikeda was a Buddhist philosopher, peacebuilder, educator, author and poet. He was the third president of the Soka Gakkai lay Buddhist organization and the founding president of the Soka Gakkai International (SGI), which is today one of the world's largest and most diverse lay Buddhist organizations, promoting a philosophy of character development and social engagement for peace.
Ikeda was the founder of the Soka (value-creation) schools, a nondenominational school system based on an ideal of fostering each student's unique creative potential and cultivating an ethic of peace, social contribution and global consciousness. The school system runs from kindergarten through graduate study and includes a university in Tokyo, Japan, and another in California, U.S.A.
Ikeda was a staunch proponent of dialogue as the foundation of peace. Since the 1970s he has pursued dialogue with a wide range of individuals around the world in political, cultural, educational and academic fields. Over 50 of these have been published in book form, with people such as Mikhail Gorbachev, Elise Boulding, Joseph Rotblat and André Malraux. In furtherance of his vision of fostering dialogue and solidarity for peace, Ikeda has founded a number of independent, nonprofit research institutes that develop cross-cultural, interdisciplinary collaboration on diverse issues: the Boston Research Center for the 21st Century, the Toda Institute for Global Peace and Policy Research and the Institute of Oriental Philosophy. The Min-On Concert Association and the Tokyo Fuji Art Museum promote mutual understanding and friendship between different national cultures through the arts.
Ikeda was a prolific writer who has published more than 100 works, ranging from Buddhist philosophy to biographical essays, poetry, children's stories and photographic collections.
This is a great read especially for practitioners of Nichiren Buddhism. It chronicles the beginning of our mentor's practice of Nichiren Buddhism, third Soka Gakai International president, Daisaku Ikeda. I appreciated the fact that even an icon of Peace struggled in the beginning of his practice!
Its truly inspirational to see a 20 year old so focused and so sorted in his thinking process and philosophy of life. His diary entry reveals his thinking process as a young man, and it shows his struggles in those days. In fact the best part was that I could relate to all the existential problems that he faced back then e.g. confusion about career, life, family, love, relationships,faith. Its truly amazing to see how he coped with all such youth problems and still focused on his mission in life. And over years has become a magnanimous personality based on his faith in Nichiren Daishonin's buddhism.
An impressive seeking, humble and hard working man that doesn´t hold back from doing what he understands to be right regardless of severe illness and obstacles. I treasure this more private insight into a man I have chosen as my mentor in my buddhist practice. I say its more private as it it notes from his actual dairy that clearly isn't meant for everyone to read, and I guess I like to see people´s private thoughts as they become more real to me. Ikeda shows himself as a human being with flaws and at the same time I am inspired as to how he challenges these flaws in order to work for peace. In fact I would have wanted even more insights into his more private sphere, details of marriage, kids and names of different people instead of just showing the different people he discussed with capital letters. I guess that would have been a very different book, like an autobiography. I hope this kind of book comes one day.
While things personally seem to be looking hard, my mentor's vow reverberates strongly.
This is a collection of diary notes by Dr. Daisaku Ikeda, third President of Soka Gakkai. They are intensely personal and the struggle is reflected throughout.
No one says it better than the author himself, so I quote: "Wednesday, September 21. Rain and overcast. The first page of my new diary notebook. While life itself is eternal, everlasting, this life is like a dream; like the morning dew or winter frost that vanish instantly before the warmth of the rising sun. The record of this period of my life, my activities, and my future are, for better or for worse, less significant than a microbe. And yet, I will leave a mark on this earth and in the universe, a mark that likely will be seen and pondered by someone in the future. Human affairs are so small, so miniscule when viewed from the standpoint of limitless space and beginningless time. To carefully record one's own feelings, thoughts, recollections, secrets and even resentment in a single work-this, interestingly enough, is significant.".... "I strongly dislike a diary written only as a mere record of events or in an obligatory manner." Daisaku Ikeda "A Youthful Diary" p. 246
Il diario giovanile di Daisaku Ikeda è una lettura fondamentale per ogni persona che segua il Buddismo di Nichiren Daishonin, i dodici anni raccontati descrivono le lotte, gli sforzi, i dolori fisici e psicologici di questo grande maestro buddista. Il grande merito di questa opera è l’umanità espressa che lo fanno sentire più vicino, una figura paterna e amica. Da non perdere