The sun of jiyu over a new land

To my treasured friends of Los Angeles, the city of my dreams

A brilliant, burning sun

rises above the newborn land,

aiming toward a new century,

raising the curtain on a new stage

of humanity’s history.

Shedding its light equally on all things,

it seeks the sky’s distant midpoint.

In this land wrapped

in the limitless light

of the morning sun,

my splendid American friends

make their appearance,

bearing the world’s hopes;

with power and vigor they commence

their progress anew.

To my beloved and treasured friends I say:

“Long live America renewed!

Long live SGI-USA reborn!”

Ah! This enchanting city, Los Angeles!

Land of freedom and pioneering spirit!

From jagged mountain ranges

to the Pacific Ocean,

variegated nature changes ceaselessly—

rich agricultural lands

nurtured by the sun’s dazzling rays,

and the groundbreaking efforts

of those who came before.

Downtown, clusters of buildings soar skyward.

To think that this vast metropolis

could grow from a single aqueduct

stretched across the barren desert

from beyond the distant mountains!

It is said that in America

new winds blow from the west.

And indeed, the fresh breezes

of new ways of thinking,

new styles of living,

have arisen in California

and spread to the entire United States.

So many stories of the silver screen,

created here in Hollywood,

have delivered bountiful gifts

of romance and dreams

to the world’s people.

This rich spiritual soil,

this great earth alive with the diversity

of peoples and traditions—

giving rise to new culture,

a new humanity.

Los Angeles is a city pregnant with future,

a city where, in the words of one writer,

you can set new precedents

with your own energy and creativity.

And more, Los Angeles is a bridge

linking East and West,

a land of merging and fusion

where cultures of the Pacific

encounter traditions of the West.

Ah, the Pacific that opens before our eyes!

The boundless, free and untamed sea

for which the great Melville

voiced his respect and praise:

“It rolls the midmost waters of the world …

the tide-beating heart of earth.”

Once, the Mediterranean

was inland sea and mother

to the civilizations of the surrounding regions—

Europe, the Middle East and Africa.

In like manner, the Pacific’s depths

must not divide—

but be the cradle of a new civilization,

an enormous “inland sea” connecting

the Americas North and South,

the continents of Asia and Australia.

This is my firm conviction—

California will be the energy source

for the Pacific region

in the twenty-first century,

and Los Angeles its eastern capital.

In October 1960, I took my first steps on

the American continent

in California, the Golden State.

The honor and glory of becoming

the first chapter established in North America

belongs to the Los Angeles Chapter.

Since then, this city has been

the core and center of kosen-rufu

in the United States, the starting point

for world kosen-rufu.

My dear friends, never forget

this mission which you

so decidedly possess.

In the thirty-three years since that time,

I have visited Los Angeles seventeen times.

Kansai is the heart

whose beating drives the movement

for kosen-rufu in Japan;

Los Angeles plays this selfsame role

for the entire world.

For this reason, on each visit,

staking all, I drove in deep

and deeper

the pilings of construction.

In 1980,

the first SGI General Meeting was held,

and in 1987, SULA,

Soka University’s first campus outside Japan,

opened its doors.

Ah, February 1990!

I postponed my visit

to South America and for seventeen days

gave myself heart and soul

to the work of encouraging

my beloved fellow members

here in Los Angeles!

Those impassioned, consuming days

of unceasing toil and action

are the collaborative

golden poems of shared struggle.

Nor can I ever forget

the spring of 1992—

even now my heart is rent with pain

when I recall how the

tragic news of the civil unrest in Los Angeles

raced around the world.

Heartrending images

of the evening sky shrouded in black smoke,

buildings collapsing in flames,

once peaceful streets shattered by riot,

the entire city gripped

by a battlefield tension.

People standing lost in confusion,

a woman holding an infant cried out:

What has become of the ideals of this country?

What are we supposed to teach our children?

Her woe-filled words tore

like talons at my heart.

I received continual reports,

extended prompt relief.

And, putting everything aside,

I sat before the Gohonzon and

single-mindedly prayed—

for the safety of my treasured friends,

for the immediate restoration of order,

for a world without violence and discrimination.

Ah, America, land bringing together

so many different peoples!

A republic of ideals

born beneath the lofty banners,

the uniting principles of

freedom and equality.

As this century draws to its close,

the soul of your idealism

grieves at the stark realities of racial strife.

What is to become of the

spirit of your nation

fostered by so many people of

wisdom and philosophy?

My treasured friends.

There is no question that

your multiracial nation, America,

represents humanity’s future.

Your land holds secret stores

of unbounded possibility, transforming

the energy of different cultures

into the unity of construction,

the flames of conflict

into the light of solidarity,

the eroding rivulets of mistrust

into a great broad flow of confidence.

On what can we ground our efforts

to open the horizons

of such a renaissance?

It is for just this reason,

my precious, treasured friends,

that you must develop within yourselves

the life-condition of jiyu—

Bodhisattva of the Earth.

As each group seeks their separate

roots and origins,

society fractures along a thousand fissure lines.

When neighbors distance themselves

from neighbors,

continue your uncompromising quest

for your truer roots

in the deepest regions of your lives.

Seek out the primordial “roots” of humankind.

Then you will without fail discover

the stately expanse of jiyu

unfolding in the depths of your life.

Here is the home, the dwelling place

to which humankind traces

its original existence—

beyond all borders,

beyond all differences of gender and race.

Here is a world offering true proof

of our humanity.

If one reaches back to these fundamental roots,

all become friends and comrades.

To realize this is to “emerge from the earth.”

Past, present, future…

The causes and effects of the three existences

flow ceaselessly as the reality of life;

interlinked, they give rise to all

differences and distinctions.

Trapped in those differences

human society is wracked

by unending contention.

But the Buddhism of true cause,

expounded by the Daishonin

whose teachings we embrace,

enables us to break the spell

of past karma, past causes and effects,

and to awaken to the grand humanity

—the life of jiyu—

that had lain dormant in our hearts.

My mentor, President Toda,

taught us that when one embraces

the Mystic Law,

all intervening causes and effects

ebb and retreat, and there emerges

the “common mortal of kuon ganjo.”

This, another name for Bodhisattva of the Earth,

is the greatness and splendor

of the human being writ large,

after all false distinctions and adornments

have been removed.

Awaken to the life of jiyu within!

When the bright sun of “true cause” rises

the stars and planets

of past cause and effect grow dim

and the supreme world

of harmonious unity emerges—

the unity of friends and comrades

each manifesting the life-condition

of Bodhisattva of the Earth,

offering timeless proof that, indeed,

“The assembly on Eagle Peak has not yet dispersed.”

Ah, my treasured friends,

whom I so deeply love and respect!

It is critical for you now

to directly perceive

the web of life that binds all people!

Buddhism describes

the connective threads of

“dependent origination.”

Nothing in this world exists alone;

everything comes into being and continues

in response to causes and conditions.

Parent and child.

Husband and wife.

Friends. Races.

Humanity and nature.

This profound understanding

of coexistence, of symbiosis—

here is the source of resolution

for the most pressing and fundamental issues

that confront humankind

in the chaotic last years of this century.

The Buddhist scriptures include

the parable of “Two Bundles of Reeds”

aptly demonstrating this relation

of dependent origination.

Only by supporting each other

can the two bundles stand straight—

if one is removed, the other must fall.

Because this exists, so does that;

because that exists, so does this.

For several brilliant centuries

Western civilization has encouraged

the independence of the individual,

but now appears to be facing

a turbulent twilight.

The waves of egoism

eat away at the shores

of contemporary society.

The tragedy of division

wraps the world in a thick fog.

Individuals are becoming

mere scraps, mere fragments,

competing reed bundles of lesser self

threatened with mutual collapse.

My friends!

Please realize that you already possess

the solution to this quandary.

First you must break the hard shell

of the lesser self.

This you must absolutely do.

Then direct your lucid gaze

toward your friends, fellow members.

People can only live fully

by helping others to live.

When you give life to friends

you truly live.

Cultures can only realize

their further richness

by honoring other traditions.

And only by respecting natural life

can humanity continue to exist.

Now is the time for you to realize

that through relations

mutually inspiring and harmonious,

the “greater self” is awakened to dynamic action,

the bonds of life are restored and healed.

And blossoms in delightful multitude

exude the unique fragrance

of each person, of each ethnicity,

in precise accord with the principle of

“cherry, plum, peach and damson.”

Our goal—

the Second American Renaissance.

Holding high the standard of humanity

we advance—

from divisiveness to union,

from conflict to coexistence,

from hatred to fraternity.

In our struggle, in our fight,

there cannot be

even a moment’s pause or stagnation.

My beloved friends,

Bodhisattvas of the Earth

readying yourselves

for the new century’s dawn!

With your own efforts

bring about a renaissance here,

in this “magnetic land”!

The certain signs of America reborn,

Los Angeles rejuvenated,

are to be found within your hearts.

With this pride and conviction,

be victorious in your daily life,

overcome your own weaknesses every day.

Never forget that it is only through

relentless challenge

—one step following another—

that you can steadily transform

your ideals into reality.

Buddhism is reason.

Therefore always maintain self-control.

Be the master of your actions.

Exercise common sense in society.

Keep a smiling countenance at home.

Be courteous to your friends and fellow members,

like a warm spring breeze to the suffering.

Reason exhaustively with the confused.

But, when you deal with the arrogant ones,

be bold and fearless like the lion king!

Look!

Seen from the Malibu Training Center

the Pacific Ocean’s unbounded expanse

is bathed in radiant California sun.

An ocean of peace across whose surface

innumerable waves murmur and dance.

Beloved Los Angelenos!

I want you each to be

like the California sunshine

showering on all people

the bright light and warmth

of your compassion.

Be people who extend hope and courage,

who inspire respect and gratitude

wherever you go.

Buddhism teaches us the means

to overcome life’s fundamental pain

—the sufferings of birth, aging, illness and death—

which none can escape,

and which no degree of wealth and fame

can relieve in the slightest.

Everyone, anyone

when returned to

their solitary human existence

is but a karma-laden “reed,”

trembling before the onslaught

of the four sufferings.

Seeking eternity within impermanence,

crossing over delusion to nurture confidence,

building happiness from anguish,

rush forward from today

toward tomorrow

in the prodigious battle that is

our human revolution!

For you are the Buddha’s emissaries

upholding the ultimate philosophy of life!

Comrades!

Fellow Bodhisattvas of the Earth!

Born here, gathered together here in Los Angeles

that you might fulfill your mission—

Raise your voices in songs of praise

for freedom, democracy and humanity!

Wave the banners of culture and peace!

Ah, Los Angeles!

Here is to be found SULA,

a palace of intellect

for the pan-Pacific era

of the twenty-first century.

Here is located the World Culture Center,

dynamo of American kosen-rufu.

And here rises the splendid form

of the future site of the SGI Headquarters—

which will become the mainstay

of the grand endeavor of world kosen-rufu.

Truly a new wind will blow from the West!

Los Angeles, the stage on which you act

with such freedom and vigor

is the launching site for world kosen-rufu,

the cornerstone that links East and West.

Walt Whitman

giant of the American Renaissance

penned these words:

“Come, I will make the continent indissoluble,

I will make the most splendid race

   the sun ever shone upon,

I will make divine magnetic lands,

   With the love of comrades,

     With the life-long love of comrades.”

Ah, Los Angeles!

The sun rises beyond the Rockies,

spreading its light over the wide Pacific.

Now! In its luminous beams,

let friend and friend pull together

in perfect unity, rowing into the seas—

embarking on a new leg

of our journey of kosen-rufu!

Grip the rudder,

hold firm to your course—

the Stars and Stripes,

the tricolor flag of the SGI,

ripple as a hopeful breeze fills our sails.

The lapping waves beat out their message

of congratulations upon our ship’s bow!

Our destination—

America’s distant future,

the lights and colors

of a century of life,

the brilliant glory of human harmony.

   Commemorating the

   Second SGI-USA General Meeting

   January 27, 1993


Presented at a meeting held in Santa Monica, California, on January 27, 1993.

jiyu: literally, “to emerge from the earth.” See Bodhisattvas of the Earth.

Herman Melville (1819–91): American novelist and poet best known for Moby Dick; or, The Whale.

“It rolls the midmost waters”: Melville, Moby Dick, p. 355.

Kansai: a region spanning the south-central area of Japan’s main island. In his youth, the author led the Soka Gakkai’s activities in the region, and since then it has always served as the driving force of major organizational endeavors.

Buddhism of true cause: a Buddhist term that indicates Nichiren Daishonin’s teachings.

kuon ganjo: a Buddhist term indicating the fundamental state of freedom and purity inherent in all life.

Eagle Peak (Skt Gridhrakūta): a mountain near the city of Rājagriha in Magadha in ancient India. It is also sometimes called Vulture Peak. It is said to be the place where Shakyamuni preached the Lotus Sutra.

“The assembly on Eagle Peak”: trans. from Nichiren, Nichiren Daishonin gosho zenshu, p. 757.

cherry, plum, peach and damson: a Buddhist principle that likens each individual to a beautiful flower that has its own unique mission and potential.

“Come, I will make”: Whitman, “For You O Democracy” in Leaves of Grass, p. 272.