Ryuho Okawa[a] (
Ryuho Okawa | |
---|---|
President of the Happiness Realization Party | |
In office July 22, 2009 – September 12, 2009 | |
Preceded by | Position established |
Succeeded by | Vacant |
In office December 27, 2012 – March 2, 2023 | |
Preceded by | Position established |
Succeeded by | Vacant |
President of Happy Science | |
In office November 19, 1996 – March 2, 2023 | |
Preceded by | Position established |
Chairman of Happy Science | |
In office October 6, 1986 – November 19, 1996 | |
Preceded by | Position established |
Personal details | |
Born | Takashi Nakagawa ( 7 July 1956 Kawashima, Tokushima Prefecture, Japan |
Died | 2 March 2023 Tokyo, Japan | (aged 66)
Citizenship | Japanese |
Spouses | Kyoko Kimura (
(m. 1988; div. 2012)Shio Kondo (
(m. 2012) |
Children | 5, including Hiroshi Okawa ( |
Relatives | Shizuko Nakagawa ( |
Alma mater | Tokyo University, City University of New York |
Occupation | Religious leader Political activist |
Website | https://ryuho-okawa.org/ |
His organization has been widely criticised as a cult.[4][5][6] Adherents of the religion worship Okawa, who claimed to be the current incarnation of a god called “El Cantare ” and a number of other beings, including Hermes and Gautama Buddha.[7]
Early life
editRyuho Okawa was born Takashi Nakagawa on 7 July 1956 in Kawashima (now Yoshinogawa), Tokushima Prefecture as the second son of Tadayoshi Nakagawa (
Okawa said his family was religious; both of his parents believed in God and the Buddha, and Okawa believed in the existence of spirits and souls, and a world after death in childhood.[12] Despite his beliefs, Okawa was not active in religious practice.[13] Okawa and Tomiyama were raised in a strict home environment that was ordinary and not particularly rich nor poor.[9]
Yoshikawa is said to be one of the most important influences on Okawa's life. Okawa said, despite not having a spiritual or religious master, Yoshikawa had an important influence. Yoshikawa edited journals for the Japanese Communist Party and later worked as an agricultural advisor in local government. He was deeply interested in spirituality and religion. He studied in the Christian Church as a teenager, as well as in a new religion called Seicho-no-Ie after World War II. He later became a follower of Shinji Takahashi, leader of the religious organization God Light Association (GLA).[9] He would also later serve as Happy Science's official adviser in its first few years.[b][14] Yoshikawa was demanding on Okawa's success.[1] Yoshikawa gave him and Tomiyama hour-long lectures after dinner at home. The lectures included religious topics like the Bible and The Gateless Barrier, as well as secular topics like Kantian philosophy and Marxism during elementary school,[15][16] although Okawa was not successful in school.[1]
Okawa wanted to be a scholar or a diplomat.[15] He wanted to spread his ideas in academia, or broaden his view on life by experiencing different cultures as a diplomat.[9] Because of this prospect, he started studying until late at night and became amongst the top of his class. He became particularly good at English.[16] He was obese, weighing 60 kg when he was 143 cm tall.[15]
During secondary school, Okawa was an active student. He fished, played tennis, and practiced kendo. He was involved in school activities; he was president of the student union and editor of the school newspaper.[9]
Career
editEducation
editIn 1975, Okawa failed the entrance exam for Tokyo University. After studying for a year, he was accepted into the university's Liberal Arts Division. During his first year, he was not socially adjusted. He said he once wrote love letters to a girl, but was rejected.[15] He felt uncomfortable amongst the students who were uninterested in spirituality.[16] During his second year, a time he calls "the first stage in the 'awakening of wisdom'",[15] he modeled his daily schedule after that of Immanuel Kant, whom he respected deeply. At 3 pm, he would take a walk while writing poetry. At 5 pm, he would go to the local bathhouse and stay there for an hour thinking about his day. Going home, he would have a cheap meal, and buy two books at a local bookstore. From 8:30 to 9 pm, he would read, then drink tea, and then read philosophy.[15] The philosophy he read included those of Plato and Kitaro Nishida.[16]
In April 1978, after his second year at university, he majored in politics and studied at the Faculty of Law. After his third year, he paused his studies for a year. At the end of the break, he failed a judicial exam and the exam for higher-level civil servants.[15] In his fourth and last year, his interests started to change from philosophy to metaphysics. He read the works of Shinji Takahashi of GLA and Masaharu Taniguchi of Seicho-no-Ie.[16] He accepted a job offer from TOMEN Corporation (now Toyota Tsusho), a major Japanese trading company, because his grades were not sufficient for graduate school.[15][14] After graduating in spring 1981, he took up his job. He was assigned to the foreign exchange department at the headquarters in Tokyo.[15]
Spiritual contacts
editOn 23 March 1981, before graduating from university and working at TOMEN Corporation, Okawa said he experienced his "Buddha Enlightenment", his first contact with a high divine spirit.[15][17] This spirit is believed to be that of Nikkō Shōnin, who was one of Nichiren's disciples.[17] On that day, he had a sudden feeling that a person was trying to communicate with him. He grabbed a pencil and a card. His hand started to move on its own, and wrote "
In June 1981, the religious leader Shinji Takahashi's spirit told Okawa his destiny to found a new religion. His father Yoshikawa, upon hearing of this, went to Tokyo, later becoming one of his followers. The next month, the spirits spoke through Okawa, including those of Kūkai, Shinran, Confucius, Jesus Christ, Moses, and Nostradamus. Yoshikawa and Tomiyama taped the communications.[18][14][c] The tapes were interviews between the interviewing Yoshikawa and the spirits. Okawa acted as a spiritual medium and answered Yoshikawa's questions.[19] The tapes were transcribed and adapted into publishable formats by Yoshikawa.[18][14] Yoshikawa's help allowed Okawa to continue working as a businessman at TOMEN Corporation. Without his help, Happy Science could possibly have started differently and at a later date, or even not have been founded at all.[14] The spiritual messages were given to the publisher Chōbunsha (
Okawa published a vast number of spiritual messages from various spirits in order to prove the existence of the Spirit World to the public.[20] His first thirteen books, published from 1985 to 1987, consisted of these spiritual messages;[21] the first eight were published from 1985 to 1986[20] under Yoshikawa's pen name to avoid Okawa's authorship being found out by his employers.[22][8] The first book, The Spiritual Messages of Nichiren (
The books of spiritual messages were replaced with newer versions when Okawa started publishing under his own name after the foundation of Happy Science. The new books were akin to collected and revised versions of the originals. They are presented as religious tractates which are divided into chapters, rather than interviews between Yoshikawa and the spirits.[19]
Okawa told his readers to not let foreigners read the spiritual messages and to not translate the messages into English, Chinese, or Korean. He says that foreigners should not know about the messages "until the time is ripe"[10] and that propagating them overseas would "only heighten the fear."[10] Astley (1995) says the real reason Okawa discouraged readers from spreading the messages abroad may be because the messages seem to contain a large amount of plagiarism.[10]
Okawa not only claimed to be a reincarnation of Gautama Buddha but also the incarnation of the Highest Spiritual Being named El Cantare.[17] According to Okawa, this was revealed to him by the consciousness of Gautama Buddha himself. This revelation convinced him that his mission was to spread Truth on earth.[e][14]
Business career
editOkawa's life as a businessman went normally despite his communication with the spirits, which continued throughout his business career.[14] In August 1982, Okawa was sent to the company's US headquarters at the World Trade Center in New York for training.[18][14] He took an English course at Berlitz Language School and he studied international finance at the City University of New York.[25][3][f] He dropped out of university after experiencing an intensified inferiority complex from seeing a Taiwanese classmate who spoke fluent English. Around this time, he said he experienced the "second stage in the 'awakening of wisdom'".[18] His inferiority complex went away when he thought about the knowledge he obtained from the over three thousand books he read thus far. In 1983, he returned to Tokyo, and was assigned to work on negotiations with banks. In March 1984, he was sent to Nagoya. By summer of 1985, he had read over four thousand books.[18] Thoughts "spewed forth like water from a spring",[26] and his inferiority complex changed into a sense of superiority.
Okawa earned a particular reputation at his work, where rumours about him spread. His former colleagues said he claimed to see spirits possessing people and offered to exorcise them. In June 1986, high spirits suggested he retire from work, leading him to dedicate his life to religion. On 15 July, he resigned from TOMEN Corporation and on October 6, founded Happy Science and adopted the name "Ryuho Okawa".[22][2]
Happy Science
editStudy group
editOn 6 October 1986, Okawa opened the first office for Happy Science in Suginami, Tokyo, with four staff members. Happy Science's initial name was Jinsei no Daigaku-in: Kofuku-no-Kagaku (
On 23 November 1986, Okawa gave his first sermon to about 80 followers in Tokyo. This date is now known as one of the most important dates in Happy Science's history. It is known as the day of Shoten-bōrin (
In March 1987, Okawa gave what is known as his first official large public lecture, entitled "The Principles of Happiness", to an audience of about 400 people. In the lecture, he implied that he was a prophet, saying that while spiritual mediums and psychics cannot hear the voice of God, prophets can.[32][h] He said that a prophet's task is to listen to the voice and spread the word of God. He stated that the early years of Happy Science would consist of study.[32]
In June 1987, a new series of books, called the "law" (
At the end of 1989, with the publication of The Rebirth of the Buddha,[i] Okawa officially claimed that he was an incarnation of Buddha and his is teachings were re-interpreted in light of this revelation. The doctrine of Happy Science was interpreted to be fundamentally Buddhist, according to his own followers.[34]
Okawa's audience at his lectures grew larger as Happy Science gained new members. The initial audience of 400 at his lecture in 1987 grew to 10,000 by 1990.[32] The organization grew rapidly. In December 1989, the headquarters was moved to one of the most expensive business buildings in Tokyo in Kioichō, Chiyoda, next to Tokyo's main business and political area. The rent was known to be ¥25 million per month.[39]
Religious organization
editOn 7 March 1991, Happy Science obtained legal status as a "religious juridical person" (
In May 1994, a doctrinal shift occurred.[41] Old publications were revised to reflect the new concept of El Cantare. This included an updated version of the Trilogy of Salvation, which was called the "new" (
Since the founding of Happy Science, Okawa has reportedly published over 500 books,[42] most of which are transcripts of his video recorded lectures.[43] There are 15 films based on his teachings: The Laws of the Sun, The Laws of Eternity, The Golden Laws, The Terrifying Revelations of Nostradamus, Hermes - Winds of Love, The Rebirth of Buddha, The Mystical Laws, The Final Judgement, The Laws of the Universe, I'm Fine My Angel, The World We Live In, and Daybreak.[3]
Organization
editFukui (2004) notes that Okawa's leadership is consistent with sociologist Max Weber's theory about charismatic authority. Okawa's leadership comes from belief in his supernatural traits, as he identifies as the Buddha and El Cantare. Under his authority, Happy Science has undergone rapid changes, including changes in its projects, doctrine, and staff, who do not remain in the same post for a long time. Fukui (2004) says, citing Wallis (1983), that rapid change allows a charismatic leader to stay in power. Rapid change protects the leader from vulnerability stemming from disbelief in their supernatural claims, routinization, or dissenting leaders.[44]
Since its founding, Happy Science has been organized like a secular company. This is reflected in titles of positions, which are secular. Okawa's original title was "Coordinator" or "Chairman" (
Happy Science has been widely criticised as a cult.[4][5][6]
Role as Buddha and El Cantare
editIn Happy Science, Okawa is known as the Buddha, both the Enlightened One and the reincarnation of Gautama Buddha, and the embodiment of El Cantare, the Grand Spirit of the Terrestrial Spirit Group, called Lord El Cantare within Happy Science.[46][17] The name "El Cantare" means "beautiful land of light, Earth".[17] El Cantare is also known as the "Eternal Buddha". This Buddha is related to the Creator God, known as the "Primordial Buddha". Many members believe Okawa is an incarnation of the Creator.[46] Okawa is believed to have many past incarnations. These include a king named La Mu on the continent Mu, a king named Thoth on the continent Atlantis, a king named Rient Arl Croud in the Inca Empire located in ancient South America, Ophealis in archaic Greece, Hermes in ancient Greece, and the Buddha in India.[17][37]
As El Cantare, Okawa is the main figure of worship in Happy Science. Members have faith in El Cantare.[46] Their worship gives them "comfort, energy, courage, hope, steadiness, and a sense of being guided and looked after."[46] The organization's object of worship (
El Cantare is believed to be needed in this world because the world is in a crisis. Dark thoughts exist in the world, which cause disasters, including wars and other conflicts.[46] In Happy Science's doctrine, like attracts like; the cultivation of the Light of Buddha attracts more light, and the cultivation of dark thoughts attracts more dark thoughts. Dark thoughts currently outweigh the Light in the world, creating the need for a Utopia which reverses the situation. This Utopia is to be realized by El Cantare and his followers.[47]
Because Okawa identifies as both the Buddha and El Cantare, Fukui (2004) believes that he fits both types of prophet which sociologist Max Weber believes exist: the exemplary type who leads people to salvation through exemplary living and the emissary type who declares their demands to the world. Okawa plays the exemplary role as the Buddha by embodying the correct way of living and by guiding people to enlightenment. Okawa fulfills the emissary role as El Cantare by providing "hopes of salvation."[46]
Publications
editA vast amount of literature has been dedicated to Happy Science's doctrine. Okawa said they all have the purpose of learning Happy Science's fundamental scripture, "The Dharma of the Right Mind" (
Okawa is a prolific writer.[50] By the early 1990s, he published about 20 to 30 books per year.[23] He is said to have published over 300 books by 2004.[47]
Many of Okawa's publications became best-sellers.[k] Some of Okawa's books sold over a million copies.[47] Okawa's main book The Laws of the Sun has sold the most copies, with ten million sold by January 2000.[52] Happy Science said that by 1997, over 50 million copies of its titles were sold worldwide.[49]
Unlike traditional religious text, Okawa's writings are very easy to read, with some parts being almost poetic. Okawa does not use old-fashioned, technical or complex language and avoids difficult kanji. He opts for the modern language, even using English loanwords. This simplicity may have helped give his books a popular appeal.[49]
Rivalry with Aum Shinrikyo
editHappy Science came into a bitter rivalry with the cult Aum Shinrikyo dating back to 1990, when Happy Science criticized the cult and its leader Shoko Asahara.[53] Okawa called Asahara a frog, referring to Asahara's aquatic yogic acts. In response, Asahara criticized Okawa for not having undergone ascetic training and having a lack of doctrinal knowledge.[54] In 1991, when Happy Science was going through heavy criticism from the public, academic Hiromi Shimada , a critic of Happy Science, appeared to favor Aum Shinrikyo over Happy Science.[55] Shimada favored Asahara because he went through ascetic training and had familiar knowledge of the doctrine of Buddhism.[56] Okawa was criticized for having little knowledge of his own teachings and having faked his spiritual messages. He was challenged to prove his supernatural powers. Asahara published a book mocking Okawa's superficial knowledge of Buddhism. After the book's publication, Happy Science and Aum Shinrikyo were invited to a live television debate, but Okawa declined to participate.[57] The hostility between the two groups culminated in an assassination attempt on Okawa by Aum Shinrikyo in February 1995.[7][58][59] Aum members attempted to kill Okawa by putting the nerve agent VX in the air conditioning system of his car. The perpetrators did this by injecting the agent into the car's ventilation system with a needle-less syringe. The attempt failed for unknown reasons.[58]
Happiness Realization Party
editIn September 2008, Okawa lectured at the New York branch of Happy Science, in which he talked about the political soft power of Happy Science:[60]
Happy Science is the most powerful and famous religion in Japan. I needed only 20 years to accomplish this. I was first asked for advice by Prime Minister Nakasone in 1988. Then we had Prime Minister Miyazawa who was a member of Happy Science, and after that, we produced a lot of Prime Ministers and Ministers. So I became one of the most influential kingmakers of Japan. The Japanese Prime Minister, Mr. Aso, visited Happy Science recently ... I gave him a strategy to become Japan's Prime Minister. He learned a lot and became the Prime Minister and came to New York to give a speech at the Assembly of the United Nations. It was based on just what I told him. So I am one of the kingmakers of Japan. I can choose a Japanese Prime Minister and I can have a Prime Minister quit in a month. It's a hidden secret of Japan ... Happy Science is the most influential power in Japan. So, if the American President cannot realize some diplomatic policy, he can just ask me and I can realize it in a week or so. It's a hidden secret. In Japan, religion has more power than politics.[61]
A few months later, Okawa announced the founding of the Happiness Realization Party (HRP), the political wing of Happy Science. In April 2009, Okawa presented the party's Declaration (
Okawa's wife Kyoko became party leader on 4 June 2009.[62] On 22 July, Okawa was appointed as president of the party.[66] In that year's general election, the party fielded 337 candidates, including 75 women, in 288 out of the 300 constituencies in Japan. This number of candidates was rivalled only by the two major parties at the time, the Democratic Party of Japan and the Liberal Democratic Party.[63] However, the party did not win any seats. It claimed to have just over one million votes, which is 1.4% of all votes cast, despite Happy Science having about ten million members.[63][67][l] The party also unsuccessfully ran for the 2009 Sendai mayoral election.[62] Kyoko stepped down as party leader and became head of the party's publicity department on 29 July before resigning from the party on 15 August.[68] Okawa resigned as president on 12 September and a turnover of top party officials occurred.[62]
In May 2010, the party gained its first seat in the House of Councillors when Yasuhiro Oe left the Democratic Party of Japan and joined HRP.[62] On 21 April, Okawa was appointed honorary president of the party.[69] A House of Councillors election was held in July, where no HRP candidates won. In December, Oe left HRP.[62][68]
On 27 December 2012, Okawa was reappointed as president of the party.[70]
Personal life
editOn 10 April 1988, Okawa married Kyoko Okawa (
In February 2011, it was reported that Okawa and Kyoko were preparing for divorce.[75][76] Happy Science announced that she had been permanently expelled for allegedly causing great personal and administrative damage to the organization, libeling the organization in various newspapers, and besmirching the name of Lord El Cantare.[77]
Okawa and Kyoko had five children: eldest son Hiroshi (
Hiroshi worked for Happy Science after graduating from university. However, he stopped working there because he felt he was not competent enough for the job. He then worked at a construction company for three years before returning to Happy Science in December 2015. Since January 2016, he was president of Happy Science's entertainment agency. He was involved in film production and music, working as an actor and a singer.[78] He was intended to be Okawa's successor as leader of Happy Science.[7] On 1 October 2018, he declared that he broke up with Happy Science on his personal YouTube channel. In an interview with Shūkan Bunshun on 28 February 2019, he said the reason is because at the end of January 2017, he felt pressured by his father to marry the actress Fumika Shimizu, who became a member of Happy Science in February. On 18 November, when he refused the marriage, his father became furious, and after that day, Hiroshi left Happy Science.[79][80] Happy Science has denied the accusation of Okawa pressuring Hiroshi to marry Fumika, saying that it was Hiroshi himself who was interested in marrying her.[79] He has since renounced his father, stating "I believe what my father does is complete nonsense."[7] He said that from an early age, he was taught that his father is a god. However, Hiroshi said he never thought of Okawa as a god and that he never wanted to follow in his father's footsteps nor has he ever wanted to do religious work.[80]
Sayaka is said to be the managing director and general manager of Happy Science. On 1 September 2015, she married Naoki Okawa (
On 19 December 2012, Okawa married Shio Okawa (
Okawa had an aunt named Shizuko Nakagawa (
Death
editOn 28 February 2023, Okawa was hospitalized after fainting at his home in Minato, Tokyo. He died on 2 March, at the age of 66.[84]
Controversy
editOkawa was accused of having anti-Korean sentiment,[85][86][87] although he denied this.[88] He has also expressed beliefs that are widely associated with historical revisionism in Japan, including that Koreans had never been forced to labor by Japan, and that comfort women (euphemism for forced prostitutes) were also never forced to work.[88][87] To this end, Okawa stated that:[87]
Those Koreans who presented sob stories decades later were plucked from weepy funerals and "bribed" to blacken Japan’s name, such lies now being firmly "embedded in Korean culture".
See also
editReferences
edit- ^ a b c Astley 1995, p. 344
- ^ a b Winter 2013, p. 422
- ^ a b c "
大川 隆 法 公式 サイト |幸福 の科学 グループ創始 者 兼 総裁 ".大川 隆 法 公式 サイト (in Japanese). Archived from the original on 23 August 2022. Retrieved 23 August 2022. - ^ a b Musasizi, Simon (21 June 2012). "Clerics call for probe into Happy Science". The Observer. Archived from the original on 22 December 2015.
- ^ a b "Happy Science, a new cult offers celebrity guide to heaven". The Jakarta Post. 22 July 2012. Archived from the original on 25 August 2012.
- ^ a b Donnelly, Beau (2 November 2015). "Blooming 'Happy Science' religion channels Disney, Gandhi, Jesus and Thatcher". The Age. Archived from the original on 23 August 2022. Retrieved 23 August 2022.
- ^ a b c d Kestenbaum, Sam (16 April 2020). "Inside the Fringe Japanese Religion That Claims It Can Cure Covid-19". The New York Times. Archived from the original on 15 March 2021. Retrieved 12 April 2021.
- ^ a b Winter 2013, p. 425
- ^ a b c d e f Fukui 2004, p. 63
- ^ a b c d e Astley 1995, p. 377
- ^ Yoshikawa 1985, back cover
- ^ Fukui 2004, p. 62
- ^ Fukui 2004, pp. 62–63
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j Fukui 2004, p. 66
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j Astley 1995, p. 345
- ^ a b c d e Fukui 2004, p. 64
- ^ a b c d e f g Fukui 2004, p. 65
- ^ a b c d e f g Astley 1995, p. 346
- ^ a b Winter 2013, p. 427
- ^ a b c d e f g Fukui 2004, p. 67
- ^ Fukui 2004, pp. 66–67
- ^ a b c Astley 1995, p. 347
- ^ a b Hotaka 2012, p. 144
- ^ Astley 1995, p. 350
- ^ ENRM 2004, p. 467
- ^ Astley 1995, pp. 346–7
- ^ a b c Baffelli 2007, p. 86
- ^ Fukui 2004, p. 68
- ^ a b c Leto 2014, p. 195
- ^ Fukui 2004, pp. 68–69
- ^ a b c d e Fukui 2004, p. 69
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Fukui 2004, p. 70
- ^ Winter 2013, pp. 427–428
- ^ a b c Winter 2013, p. 428
- ^ a b Fukui 2004, p. 102
- ^ a b Fukui (2004)
- ^ a b c d e Winter 2013, p. 429
- ^ Fukui 2004, pp. 72
- ^ Fukui 2004, pp. 70–71
- ^ a b Fukui 2004, p. 73
- ^ Fukui 2004, p. 108
- ^ a b McNeill, David (4 August 2009), "Party offers a third way: happiness", The Japan Times, archived from the original on 7 November 2013, retrieved 6 August 2009
- ^ Saint-Guily, Sylla (3 October 2012). "Happy Science Is the Laziest Cult Ever". Vice. Archived from the original on 27 November 2015.
- ^ a b Fukui 2004, p. 96
- ^ a b c d Fukui 2004, p. 97
- ^ a b c d e f g Fukui 2004, p. 118
- ^ a b c Fukui 2004, p. 119
- ^ a b Fukui 2004, p. 121
- ^ a b c d e f g Fukui 2004, p. 120
- ^ Shields 2009, p. 50
- ^ a b Fukui 2004, p. 125
- ^ Fukui 2004, pp. 119–120
- ^ Astley 1995, pp. 343–344
- ^ Astley 1995, p. 373
- ^ Astley 1995, p. 368
- ^ Astley 1995, pp. 368–369
- ^ Astley 1995, p. 369
- ^ a b "Chronology of Aum Shinrikyo's CBQ Activities" (PDF). Monterey Institute of International Studies. June 2016. Archived (PDF) from the original on 11 April 2018. Retrieved 12 April 2021.
- ^ Astley 1995, p. 373
- ^ Dessì 2013, p. 109
- ^ Dessì 2013, pp. 109–110
- ^ a b c d e f Dessì 2013, p. 110
- ^ a b c d e Shields 2009, p. 52
- ^ Shields 2009, p. 56
- ^ Shields 2009, p. 60
- ^ "「
幸福 の科学 」大川 隆 法 氏 、衆院 選 比例 東京 から立候補 へ". asahi.com (in Japanese). 22 July 2009. Archived from the original on 6 June 2021. Retrieved 23 August 2022. - ^ a b Shields 2009, p. 53
- ^ a b Tsukada 2010, p. 46
- ^ "『
幸福 実現 党 』幸福 の科学 グループ大川 隆 法 総裁 の党 名誉 総裁 就任 、並 びに党首 交代 についての発表 ".幸福 実現 党 (in Japanese). 23 April 2010. Archived from the original on 2 June 2021. Retrieved 23 August 2022. - ^ "
幸福 実現 党 の総裁 人事 ・党首 交代 等 について".幸福 実現 党 (in Japanese). 28 December 2012. Archived from the original on 15 August 2022. Retrieved 23 August 2022. - ^ a b Akiko 1998, p. 15
- ^ Fukui 2004, p. 126
- ^ Fukui 2004, p. 124
- ^ a b Fukui 2004, p. 98
- ^ Shūkan Bunshun 3 February 2011, p. 140–43
- ^ Shūkan Shinchō 3 February 2011, pp.136–37
- ^
幸福 の科学 が大川 きょう子 氏 を永久 追放 [Happy Science permanently expels Kyoko Okawa]. The Liberty Web (in Japanese). IRH Press Co., Ltd. February 22, 2011. Archived from the original on 16 June 2022. Retrieved July 2, 2012. - ^ a b c d e "
大川 隆 法 の嫁 &息子 と娘 まとめ!離婚 した元 妻 との間 に子供 5人 ". MATOMEDIA. January 2020. Archived from the original on 23 August 2022. Retrieved 23 August 2022. - ^ a b "
大川 隆 法 長男 が語 る「『幸福 の科学 』決別 の理由 は清水 富美 加 との"結婚 強制 "」". Bunshun. Archived from the original on 20 February 2019. Retrieved 24 January 2022. - ^ a b c "
価格 .com - 「大川 宏 洋 」に関連 する情報 | テレビ紹介 情報 ". kakaku.com. Archived from the original on 24 January 2022. Retrieved 23 August 2022. - ^ Okawa, Ryuho Okawa & Shio (2014-11-21). In Love with the Sun: Spiritual Messages from Goddess Gaia. IRH Press Company Limited. ISBN 9781941779262.
- ^ "
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法話 ・霊 言 公開 情報 ".幸福 の科学 (in Japanese). Archived from the original on 13 October 2016. - ^ "【
速報 】幸福 の科学 ・創始 者 で総裁 の大川 隆 法 氏 (66)が死去 都内 の自宅 で倒 れる|FNNプライムオンライン". FNNプライムオンライン. 2 March 2023. Retrieved 2023-03-02. - ^ Gilbert, David (2021-02-25). "A Japanese Cult That Believes Its Leader Is an Alien From Venus Is Speaking at CPAC". Vice. Retrieved 2023-09-21.
- ^ "Could a Xenophobic and Homophobic Religious 'Cult' Be Behind CPAC's Expansion in Japan?". HOPE not hate. 2019-11-14. Retrieved 2023-09-21.
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- ^ a b "Master Ryuho Okawa, Founder and President of the Happiness Realization Party (HRP), Delivered the Lecture, The World of Freedom, Democracy and Faith, Celebrating the 10th Anniversary of the Founding of HRP". Happiness Realization Party. 14 May 2019. Retrieved 2023-09-21.
Notes
edit- ^ This is an adopted name, and is now known as Okawa's holy name. The name is derived from replacing the character
中 (middle, naka) in Okawa's birth family name中川 with大 (great, ō), and from adding法 (dharma, hō) to the on'yomi of his birth given name隆 .[1] The name was adopted with the founding of Happy Science in 1986.[2] - ^ Yoshikawa was known as "Honorable Adviser" (
名誉 顧問 , Meiyo Komon). In January 2003, a memorial shrine for him opened.[14] - ^ The identity of Okawa's father and older brother were hidden; they were initially described as Okawa's friends under the names Yoshikawa Saburō (
善 川 三 朗 , Yoshikawa Saburō) and Tomiyama Makoto (富山 誠 , Tomiyama Makoto) respectively. Their true identities were revealed through investigation by Japanese sources in 1991.[10] - ^ Originally Nichiren Shōnin no reigen (
日蓮 聖人 の霊 言 , Nichiren Shōnin-no-reigen)[23] - ^ According to Happy Science's doctrine, a person has six souls. Each one is alternately reincarnated throughout time. Each soul's experience can be shared with the other five. For example, Gautama Buddha, Hermes, and Okawa are believed to be three different incarnations of the same person. Because of this, both Hermes and Gautama, who are past incarnations of Okawa, have different personalities and can individually talk to Okawa. Thus the Buddha can communicate with his reincarnation Okawa.[14]
- ^ Astley (1995) says Okawa studied at New York University.[18]
- ^ The name refers to the day that the "Wheel of Law" (hōrin (
法輪 , hōrin)) started to "turn for the first time" (shoten (初 転 , shoten)). It is a Buddhist expression, where the "Law" refers to teachings, in this case those of Okawa. The "turn" refers to the introduction of the teachings to the world.[31] - ^ Okawa may have thought of God as "High Divine Spirits" as well as the Creator God. Fukui (2004) says this is so because Okawa mentions Archangel Gabriel, who sent messages to Prophet Mohammed, and the spirit of Nichiren who spoke to him, both of which are known as high divine spirits.[32]
- ^ Originally Buddha Saitan (
仏陀 再 誕, Budda saitan)[38] - ^ An alternative name Shūkyō Hōjin Kofuku no Kagaku (
宗教 法人 幸福 の科学 , Shūkyō Hōjin Kōfuku no Kagaku) ("Religious Corporation – Kofuku-no-Kagaku") was also used.[31] - ^ His 1991 books The Great Warning of Allah and The Terrifying Revelations of Nostradamus became best-sellers in that same year.[20] His 1999 books The Laws of Prosperity (
繁栄 の法 , Han-ei no hō) and The Syndrome of the Unhappy (幸福 になれない症候群 , Kōfuku-ni-Narenai Shōkō-gun) reached fourth and twelfth respectively in that year's best-seller list.[51] The release of the film The Laws of the Sun in 2000, based on the book with the same name, caused the book version to become a best-seller that same year.[48] In 2001, The Laws of Miracles (奇蹟 の法 , Kiseki no Hō) and The Origin of Love (愛 の原点 , Ai no Genten) became the top ten best-sellers. In 2002, The Laws of Triumph (常勝 の法 , Jōshō no Hō) was also a top ten best-seller.[51] - ^ This discrepancy may be because many, if not most Happy Science members, are only loosely connected to the party.[67]
- ^ Okawa said that Kyoko lived in Atlantis, the Inca Empires and Ancient Greece in her past lives. Kyoko was the mythological figure Aphrodite in Greece, who was saved from captivity by Hermes, an incarnation of Okawa.[32][73] Okawa said, in contrast to the original story, they married and had a son named Eros. Kyoko's other incarnations included Manjushri in India and Florence Nightingale in England, who is believed to be the most recent of Kyoko's previous incarnations.[32][74]
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