Reviving Education:
The Brilliance of the Inner Spirit
Further Thoughts on Education in the Twenty-first Century
by Daisaku Ikeda
President, Soka Gakkai International
January 9, 2001
Summary
In September 2000, Daisaku Ikeda, president of the Soka Gakkai
International (SGI) and founder of the Soka education system,
presented a proposal entitled "Building a Society Serving
the Essential Needs of EducationSome Views on Education in the
Twenty-first Century." The current proposal builds on the
earlier suggestions to uproot the problems of bullying and other
violent behavior in the schools. Under consideration here are
further measures to rehabilitate the educational function of
schools and society.
Highlighting the widespread apathy and cynicism that underlie
the current educational crisis, the author argues for the necessity
of a social ethos that will not tolerate any form of violence.
Examining the differences between ego and self, he goes on to
discuss the dangers inherent in a mentality devoid of an awareness
of "other." There is therefore a vital need for education
to foster a universal sense of empathy with others.
The author warns that the solution to the current educational
crisis lies not in a reversion to the past but, rather, in the
forward movement of an education framed by living values that
draw forth children's natural potential. Firmly opposed to reviving
the religious education policies of World War II-era Japan,
he propounds humanistic education to inspire an inner-motivated
spirituality and enable human beings to lead more meaningful
and fulfilling lives. As one concrete example, he proposes increasing
opportunities for broader exposure to great works of literature,
thus making character building through reading a cornerstone
of education.
While some counseling services are provided by schools and the
government, establishing additional venues where people directly
and peripherally engaged in the education process can seek advice
is an essential need. The author suggests that community-based
efforts such as the Educational Counseling Program initiated
by the educators division of the Soka Gakkai can help alleviate
feelings of isolation suffered by troubled children or their
parents.
The twenty-first century is upon us at last.
Out of a desire to see this new century become a century of
education, I presented a paper on education in the autumn of
2000. My aim was twofold: to sound the alarm in Japan over the
continuing treatment of education as simply a means to an end,
and to call for a shift from viewing education as serving the
narrowly defined needs of society to a new paradigm which sees
society serving the lifelong process of education.
I believe it is vital that education be reoriented to its prime
objective, namely, the lifelong happiness of learners. In this
paper, I wish to delve further into the problems of education
against which schools and society must be vigilant if we are
to find a solution to the bullying and other acts of violence
that most immediately and directly affect children.
Incidents of bullying and other forms of physical and psychological
violence have been on the rise for some time in Japan, despite
the ideal of schools being havens of the joys of learning and
living. The Ministry of Education's 1999 survey of public schools
from elementary through high-school levels reported a record
thirty-six thousand incidents of violent behavior, the highest
to date. And although the numbers appear to be on a slightly
downward trend, there were well over thirty thousand cases of
physical and psychological bullying reported.
This suggests a deplorable situation. Since the numbers do not
hint at how many incidents go unreported, let alone how many
occur in private schools, some observers claim reported incidents
represent merely the tip of the iceberg.
Scrutiny of the numbers aside, the point here is that aberrant
conditions have become the norm. Children are the microcosm
of the times, and, as such, they mirror the future of society.
As long as these mirrors remain dark and clouded, we will not
see in them a hope-filled future.
While some remedial measures have been instituted by the Ministry
of Education and independent commissions, I feel that along
with structural deterrents to bullying there is an urgent need
to establish not only in schools but throughout society an ethos
of zero tolerance toward violence.
An earnest wish to end violence
Tsunesaburo Makiguchi (1871-1944), the Japanese educator and
first president of the Soka Gakkai, lamented the plight of the
children of his day whose education and very lives bore the
imprint of the march toward imperial expansion. This was a man
who cherished a deep desire to resolve the underlying problems
that were causing intense suffering to an entire generation
of ten million children and students exposed to the pressures
of a society in turmoil. He was determined that the burden of
these problems not be passed on to the next generation (5:8).
From this vow was born his key work on education, Soka kyoikugaku
taikei (The System of Value-Creating Pedagogy), published over
seventy years ago in 1930. Central to his formulation of Soka,
or value-creating, education is the tenet that all children
should be afforded the opportunity to limitlessly develop their
potential and lead fulfilling lives undeterred by the destructive
influences in society. This tenet continues to be the driving
force of the Soka schools today.
We must end the tragedy of school violence whereby the rich
seeds of future promise and potential are destroyed by the children
themselves. Every time I visit the Soka schools in Tokyo and
Kansai, I speak frankly with the students, stating that bullying
and violence are in all cases wrong and encouraging the students
that we should all work together to eliminate these evils from
society.
Of course, my appeal to the students is not particularly novel.
For the vast majority of the adult population, there is a commonsense
assumption that the rejection of violence is a cornerstone of
civilized society. Unfortunately, of late it seems we can no
longer assume this to be the norm of social behavior. While
documented incidents of school violence and other acts of juvenile
crime and misconduct may not have dramatically increased in
recent years, the problem is not defined simply by the frequency
of its occurrence. Rather, we must examine closely the specific
nature of the problem. Unless we squarely face this reality,
any appeal to end bullying will fall short of reaching children's
hearts and, instead, have the hollow ring of a superficial slogan.
Above all, we need courage if we are to end violence in schoolsthe
kind of courage that will allow us neither to yield when confronted
by evil nor to remain idle witnesses in the face of evil. When
we muster up this kind of courage, bullying as well as all other
forms of violence will inevitably be rejected. The question
is whether we can indeed summon this courage. On the subject
of bullying, last year the Seikyo Shimbun published a series
of discussions between myself and several young people regularly
in contact with junior high school students. From these talks
I became acutely aware of how difficult it isfor parents and
teachers as well as for studentsto be truly courageous individuals.
Aversion to good, aversion to evil
The philosopher and religious writer Simone Weil (190943) astutely
observed that for writers of her day "words which contain
a reference to good and evil" had become "degraded,
especially those which refer to the good" (288). We see
this increasingly in our own time, when words related to goodnot
only courage but also effort, patience, love, and hopeare met
with cynicism and indifference. Ours is a social climate in
which people are perhaps fearful of being judged by others and
hesitate even to utter such words. Unless we boldly confront
cynicism and indifference, we will be unable to make fundamental
and effective responses.
This undercurrent of social and spiritual malaise has spread
rapidly in recent years. The question, "Why is it wrong
to kill people?" was asked recently on a popular Japanese
television program. It then became the title of a feature series
in a magazine and was later published as a book (Nagai). These
phenomena give us an indication of where the problem lies: When
even the time-honored tenets and virtues articulated in all
the major world religions, such as prohibitions against the
taking of human life, are called into question, one can easily
imagine the prevailing attitude toward coercive and violent
behavior such as bullying. I believe we must wake up to the
fact that cynicism and indifference erode society at its roots
and are potentially more dangerous than any individual act of
evil.
Two men with whom I copublished a series of dialogues, the renowned
Russian children's author Albert A. Likhanov and Norman Cousins,
known as the conscience of America, both shared this view. They
adamantly warned against the dangers of indifference and cynicism
in the face of evileven more than evil itselfbecause these attitudes
reveal a decisive lack of passionate engagement with life, an
isolation and withdrawal from reality.
Citing the paradoxical words of Bruno Jasienski, Likhanov warns
of the profound harm apathy inflicts on a young person's soul:
"Do not fear your enemies. The worst they can do is kill
you. Do not fear friends. At worst, they may betray you. Fear
those who do not care; they neither kill nor betray, but betrayal
and murder exists because of their silent consent" (Wakamonotachi,
161).
In other words, it is the act of averting our eyes from acts
of murder or betrayal that allows such evil to proliferate without
end. Similarly, Cousins makes reference to the following statement
by Robert Louis Stevenson:
"I hate cynicism a great deal more than I do the devil,
unless perhaps the two are the same thing" (4849).
He voices his own deep concern that the defeatism and self-doubt
characteristic of a pessimistic attitude will undermine and
destroy such values as idealism, hope, and trust.
A state of life controlled by apathy and cynicism grows immune
to emotions of love or hatred, suffering or joy, and retreats
into a barren, makeshift world of alienation. Indifference toward
evil implies an indifference toward good. It makes for a bleak
state of life and a semantic space estranged from the vital
drama of the struggle between good and evil.
Children's keen senses quickly detect the apathy and cynicism
rampant in an adult world bereft of values. It is perhaps for
this reason that adults become uneasy when they see in children's
hearts an eerie and familiar darkness.
Evil, like good, is an undeniable reality. Without evil there
is no good, and without good there is no evil: they coexist
and are defined by their complementarity. Depending on one's
response or reaction, evil can be transformed to good or good
to evil. In this sense, they are both relative and transmutable.
We must therefore recognize that both good and evil are defined
in relation to its opposite or "other," and that the
"self" is defined by this dynamic.
"Self" in absence of "other"
In Buddhism we find the concepts of "the oneness of good
and evil" (zen'aku funi) and "the fundamental neutrality
of life with regard to good and evil" (zen'aku muki) (Nichiren,
Writings). As an example, for the historical Buddha Shakyamuni
(representing good) to attain enlightenment and thereby fulfill
his purpose in life there had to exist an opposing, evil "other,"
in this case his cousin Devadatta who sought to undermine and
then destroy him. In contrast, the failure to acknowledge and
reconcile oneself with the existence of an opposing "other"
is the basic flaw in an apathetic, cynical approach to life,
in which only the isolated self exists.
A truer, fuller sense of self is found in the totality of the
psyche that is inextricably linked to "other." Carl
Jung (18751961) distinguished between "Ego," which
knows only the outer content of the psyche, and "Self,"
which knows its inner content as well and unifies the conscious
and the unconscious. In the world of apathy and cynicism we
find only an isolated sense of self roaming the superficies
of the conscious mindwhat Jung refers to as ego.
The "self" lacking identification with the "other"
is insensitive to the pain, anguish, and suffering of the "other."
It tends to confine itself to its own world, either sensing
threat in the slightest provocation and triggering violent behavior,
or nonresponsively turning away in detachment.
I would venture to say this mentality provided the nesting ground
of the fanatical ideologies, such as fascism and bolshevism,
which swept through the twentieth century. We have more recently
witnessed the birth of virtual reality which can also, I believe,
further obscure the "other." Viewed in this light,
it is clear that none of us can remain a mere spectator or view
the problematic behavior of children as someone else's responsibility.
In the course of our discussion, peace scholar Johan Galtung
mentioned that the prerequisite for an "outer dialogue"
is an "inner dialogue" (64). If the concept of "other"
is absent from "self," true dialogue cannot take place.
Exchanges between two individuals both lacking a sense of "other"
might appear to be dialogue but are in fact simply the trading
of one-sided statements. Communication inevitably fails. Most
distressing in this kind of semantic spaceat once voluble and
emptyis that words lose their resonance and are eventually stifled
and expire. The demise of words naturally means the demise of
an essential aspect of our humanitythe capacity for language
that earned us the name Homo loquens.
Reality can be revealed only through genuine dialogue, where
"self" and "other" transcend the narrow
limits of ego and fully interact. This inclusive sense of reality
expresses a human spirituality abounding in vitality and empathy.
In a lecture I gave at Harvard University in 1991, I stated
that the times require an ethos of "soft power." I
suggested that an inner-motivated spirituality constitutes the
essence of soft power and that this derives from inner-directed
processes. It becomes manifest when the soul has struggled through
phases of suffering, conflict, ambivalence, mature deliberation,
and, finally, resolution.
It is only in the burning furnace of intense, soul-baring exchangesthe
ceaseless and mutually supporting processes of inner and outer
dialogue between one's "self" and a profoundly internalized
"other"that our being is tempered and refined. Only
then can we begin to grasp and fully affirm the reality of being
alive. Only then can we bring forth the brilliance of a universal
spirituality that embraces all humankind.
The inner realm of the soul and religious sentiment
I believe that the spiritual heritage of humanity can be found
in its great works of literature, which may be considered the
quintessential representation of the inner self. Here, I would
like to draw on The House of the Dead, a work said to have marked
a turning point in Dostoyevsky's career as a writer.
The young Dostoyevsky was sentenced, for allegedly harboring
revolutionary ideas, to four years of hard labor in the bitter
cold of Siberia. The House of the Dead is unparalleled in documenting
the common virtues of humankind revealed to him through this
terrible ordeal.
[T]he common people . . . never reproach a criminal with the
crime that he has committed, whatever it may be. They forgive
him in consideration of the sentence passed upon him.
It is well known that the common people throughout Russia call
crime a "misfortune," and the criminal an "unfortunate."
This definition is expressive and profound, though unconscious
and instinctive. (5556)
The "unfortunate"an unusual choice of words yet one
rich in significance. Perhaps it shows Dostoyevsky's somewhat
romantic view of the Russian people. Be that as it may, I trust
the insight of a great writer who goes beyond the superficial
to speak of the inner realm of the soul.
To call a crime a "misfortune" and a criminal an "unfortunate"
reflects a breadth of perception inclusive of "other."
No distinction is made between oneself and the criminal; the
expression exudes a sense of empathetic connection.
When in the midst of adversity empathy remains high, a healthy
flow of communication prevails. On the other hand, the loss
of a sense of connection between people signals the breakdown
of communication in a society. Unable to communicate, to recognize
the worth of a single person's life, people find themselves
endlessly debatingand incapable of answeringthe straightforward
question: "Why is it wrong to kill?"
Thoughtless arrogance, the root of all ideological evil, presupposes
oneself is good and the "other" is evil. By contrast,
the kind of attitude described by Dostoyevsky enables one to
see that a person compelled by circumstances toward evil can
also be inspired toward good. From this view emanates the expansive
"inner impulse of compassion"(7) that Rousseau deemed
the primordial foundation of society.
This natural compassion resonates closely with what Mahayana
Buddhism terms the Bodhisattva Way, the epitome of which may
be found in the words of Bodhisattva Vimalakirti"Because
all living beings are sick, therefore I am sick" (65)and
in the example of Jesus of Nazareth who focused more love and
compassion on the one "stray sheep" than all the rest.
The running theme in Dostoyevsky's later works is theodicy,
a defense of God's justice in creating a world in which both
good and evil exist. Central to Rousseau's thoughts on education
is a religious sentiment independent of, and unbounded by, church
dogma and authority. It would seem that at the heart of universal
feelings of empathy and spirituality thrives some form of religious
sentiment and that this is inherent in human beings.
In the twentieth century, a century of war and violence, we
find also the bright light of spirituality emanating from the
nonviolent struggles of Mahatma Gandhi and Martin Luther King,
Jr. One might ask how their struggles became mass movements
and why many people today embrace nonviolence. Like Gandhi,
who asserted that religion "provides a moral basis to all
other activities which they otherwise lack" (63), I believe
the answer is in what lay beneath the words and actions of these
leaders. They each based themselves on a strong religious conviction,
which enabled them to remain unswayed by any adversity.
An absence of values
American psychologist Abraham H. Maslow offered an important
insight into education from the perspective of spirituality.
According to Maslow, the primary consideration of education
is to "help [the student] to become the best he is capable
of becoming, to become actually what he deeply is potentially"
(49). His view closely parallels Makiguchi's view that consistently
placed the happiness of learners at the center of education.
Maslow insisted that we must never take our eyes off the "far
goals" and "ultimate values" of education, lest
we lose sight of the "highest potential" attainable
by human beings and end up confusing our priorities (5052).
Arguably Japan, with its current educational crisis, should
find his warning disquieting. After all, it is a crisis brought
on by decades of educational policies shaped by the perceived
immediate needs of either the military or the economy.
To my view, the long-term values Maslow approached from philosophical,
religious, humanistic, and ethical angles equate with the cultivation
of spirituality and broad religious sentiment.
In November 2000, I had the opportunity to meet with Victor
Kazanjian, Dean of Religious and Spiritual Life at Wellesley
College, U.S.A, and one of the cofounders of the Education as
Transformation Project. With some 350 participating colleges
and universities across the United States, the project seeks
to redress the current state of education in which ties between
individuals and between individuals and society have eroded.
It aims for the embrace of wholeness and spirituality in education.
Dean Kazanjian has noted the increasing dissociation between
intellectual training and spiritual values, along with the growing
trend that views education simply as a means or instrumentality.
Consequently, he has expressed high hopes for Soka University
of America's humanistic approach to education, which aims to
nurture the whole individual. In fact, this aim is the heart
and guiding ethic of Soka education that has been painstakingly
developed since Makiguchi's time.
The turmoil in education and the consequent darkness enveloping
the lives of children point to an eroded ability to educate
on the part of society as a whole and its constituent elementsnot
only those institutions with formal responsibility for educational
and religious matters but including the family and the community.
We cannot continue merely treating the symptoms of this malaise.
I am not alone in believing we have reached the point at which
we must opt for a comprehensive strategy. Maslow aptly raised
the question of whether a "value-free education" is
at all desirable. Perhaps it is time to choose a response that
resonates with the spirituality and faith in the depths of the
human heart.
Against compulsory religious education in Japan
Here I wish to be very clear about this point. In no way am
I proposing a return to formal, state-sanctioned religious education
in Japan. To do so would be to ignore the painful lessons of
pre-World War II Japan's enshrinement of State Shinto as the
official religion of the nation. This had, of course, an overwhelming
impact on schools at the time, turning them into a delivery
system for force-feeding the population with militarism and
nationalism. Both the postwar Japanese Constitution and the
Fundamental Law of Education expressly prohibit religious education
in public schools, and for good reason.
Lately we hear from certain quarters in Japanese society the
resurgent strains of ultranationalism. These voices call for
the reinstatement of religious education in public schools as
a means to restore social discipline. I am adamantly opposed
to repeating the tragic manipulation of young minds that took
place in prewar Japan. I am absolutely against compulsory religious
education that would trample on the freedoms of thought and
religion.
The Soka Gakkai's commitment to human rights can be traced to
the spiritual struggles waged by its first president, Tsunesaburo
Makiguchi, and its second president, Josei Toda. Both men gave
their all to combat the totalitarianism that robbed citizens
of their spiritual freedom and mobilized the Japanese nation
into war.
As heir to their spiritual legacy, I believe standing up for
religious freedom to be an important role of the Soka Gakkai
in society. This has also been my personal commitment. Twenty-seven
years ago, in 1974, addressing the organization's annual headquarters
general meeting, I gave voice to this credo:
Obviously, we must do all we can to ensure our own freedom of
religion and faith. But in addition, should it ever become apparent
that the authorities are trying to use violence to rob others
of their spiritual freedom, even if the philosophies and faiths
of those people differ from ours, we must offer them all the
protection we can in the name of the dignity of man. Because
this is the unaltering Buddhist view of humanity, I insist that
we must afford our protection to those whose religions are different
from our own and even to those who reject religion altogether.
(A Lasting Peace, 80)
The freedom of religion, though guaranteed by the Japanese Constitution,
cannot be taken for granted. For this reason I have made it
a point to speak out in protest against religious education
in public schools. The proposition infringes basic rights and
runs counter to the Fundamental Law of Education, Article IX,
which reads: "The schools established by the state and
local public bodies shall refrain from religious education or
activities for a specified religion."
Of course, private schools can provide religious education as
it accords with their educational philosophies, goals, and religious
values. This is not a cause for concern as long as the children's
personal freedom of religion is not infringed.
On this point, the Soka schools form part of a private educational
system ranging from kindergarten to the university level, and
they focus on value-creating education. Religious doctrine is
not taught, nor is it incorporated into any class. With the
aim of developing students' abilities to ponder meaning and
purpose, the schools' mission is to foster a rich humanism and
spirituality that will enable students to enjoy personal growth
and contribute to society.
The cultivation of religious sentiment
How to inspire spirituality and religious sentiment is a challenge
that has exercised humanity throughout history. I maintain that
if we are to revive in education its ability to foster spirituality
and broad religious sentiment, every individual, every family,
every organization, and every sector of society must pool their
energies and resources. Naturally the Soka Gakkai, which plays
an active role in Japanese society, shares in this challenge.
Likewise the Soka Gakkai International, an association of national
organizations and members throughout the world, is at once a
Buddhist-based movement and a movement for human transformation
and engagement with society.
In other words, the role of religion is inseparable from the
individual and society: Religion must enable individuals to
achieve their personal goals as well as contribute positively
to society. Were these intertwining paths to diverge, religious
sentiment would be reduced to sectarianism; religion would degenerate
into something antihumanistic and antisocial. Any religious
movement that considers its role and mission as separate from
society is, in my view, making a fundamental error. There is
a sharp distinction between the broad religious sentiment I
describe here and narrow sectarianism.
Any religious sentiment that does not enable individuals to
create value or take constructive action in their personal lives
and in society is deceptive and does not deserve to be called
religious at all. I once described the mission of the Soka Gakkai
as follows:
Various powers in the worldauthority, money, brutalityattempt
to violate human dignity. The role of Soka Gakkai in society
is to employ the spirit that wells from the very depths of life
to do battle with such powers. (A Lasting Peace, 218)
When the Kobe area of Japan was struck by a devastating earthquake
in 1995, the local Soka Gakkai members, spearheaded by the youth,
contributed significantly and immediately by providing voluntary
assistance to those affected. Local Soka Gakkai community centers
served as emergency shelters, and hot cooked meals were provided.
These actions were deeply appreciated. In September 2000, Soka
Gakkai members participated in relief efforts to distribute
welcome aid when torrential rains hit the eastern coastal regions
of Japan. I believe that such actions, sharing in both the sorrows
and joys of other people, are the natural expression of spirituality
and religious sentiment.
Whether a religion can move beyond sectarianism and whether
the spirituality and religious sentiment it inspires can garner
universal understanding will be the test of that faith tradition's
ability to contribute to civilization in the twenty-first century.
This is the reason I must state once more my grave concerns
regarding the dangers of reintroducing sectarian religious education
into public schools.
Building character through reading
I believe that the means to encourage a flowering in the neglected
inner life of children will always be exposure to literature
and the arts. In short, I believe the key is to be found in
reading books.
The first step in reviving dialogue where human bonds and communication
have broken down is to revitalize and infuse the written and
spoken word with the light of spirituality. Literary masterpieces
are the ideal vehicle for this endeavor, which should not be
limited to schools. From my own experience, I can say that the
experience of immersing oneself in the world's greatest literature
at a young age is an invaluable, lifelong asset.
In Japan, the school system affords children various opportunities
to read literature. In many cases, however, these works are
delivered in the form of Japanese-language textbooks designed
mainly to improve reading skills. More reading programs are
now being instituted in schools across Japan, but perhaps the
aim should be higher: Serious consideration should also be given
to making world literature a core subject in the school curriculum.
In the Swedish school system, the educational curriculum is
designed to reflect no bias in favor of any specific religion.
Student motivation and initiative to read are central to the
educational program, in that students are given the freedom
to select topics of interest from a broad range of texts. Encouraging
the children in this way hones their powers of insight and reasoning,
so they are equipped to grapple with the fundamental and ethical
issues facing modern civilization. Surely as Japan reexamines
educational methods and their implementation, it can benefit
greatly from the examples of other countries.
In a sense, reading presents a summation of the author's life
experiences. In Nagai saka (The Long Slope), popular novelist
Shugoro Yamamoto notes:
Life is long. Whether one reaches the summit in one bound or
steadily scales the mountain step by step, the destination is
the same. Rather than accomplishing the journey in one bound,
scaling the mountain step by step affords one the opportunity
to enjoy the scenery along the way. The trees. The plants. The
springs. Moreover, one can have confidence in knowing that each
step has been taken carefully and securely. This becomes the
source of greater strength. (17)
His imaginative and profound words can be applied easily to
the experience of reading. Reading the classics is challenging.
Even when they are not lengthy, grasping their essence is not
as easy as it is for, say, comic books. A complex passage may
require rereading two or three times before it makes some kind
of sense. Some passages may defy immediate comprehension, requiring
instead the light of time.
Certainly, these arduous efforts are much like those of a mountain
climber who carefully checks for secure footing and remains
alert to his surroundings as he makes his way to the summit.
Reading digests or synopses of great works does them no justice.
Only when we have painstakingly struggled to grasp the full
meaning of a book does it become part of our flesh and blood.
While reading alone at one's desk has its merits, the value
of the reading experience is augmented when shared with friends
or teachers. It is heightened by the exchange of ideas, especially
when one considers reading a lifelong habit. My own teenage
years, spent amidst the burnt rubble of the postwar period,
were enriched immeasurably by a reading circle formed with the
youth in my neighborhood. Also forever etched in my life are
precious memories of reading sessions with my mentor, Josei
Toda.
My mentor never tired of encouraging us to be active, never
passive, readers; to strive to absorb but not be overwhelmed
by books. A master of life, he taught me through his attitude
and words this invaluable lesson: The way we relate to books
is the way we relate to people, and encountering a good book
is the same as encountering a good mentor or a good friend.
The dangers of virtual reality
I have a second reason for insisting on the importance of reading.
An accumulation of experience of reading can act as a buffer
to shield one's inner life from the adverse influences of what
is popularly termed virtual reality.
Clearly, the projection of images in virtual reality has some
utilitarian value. But it is also true that it distorts as well
as simulates real-life experiences in which people share an
empathic resonance through direct contact with each other and
with nature. On the purely harmful side, the overpowering stimulation
and excitement virtual reality produces can lull the imagination
and numb sympathetic feelings for real pain and suffering.
Once inured to the conditioning of virtual reality, people may
turn into mere passive receptors of programmed images. Active
faculties, components of an inner-motivated spiritualitythe
powers, for example, to think critically, to make decisions,
to love and sympathize, to stand against evil, to believetend
to atrophy.
Scientist and philosopher Albert Jacquard has made the following
observation:
Information science, inasmuch as it provides information, is
valuable. However, it supplies only communication canned or
frozen. It is incapable of evoking the bursts of creativity
that come naturally in the course of a dialogue comprising moments
of silence as well as words. (Petite philosophie, 18)
His way of describing dehumanized communication is very apt.
Reading, on the other hand, generates a restorative breeze of
inspiration in the depths of one's soula capacity well beyond
that of such "frozen" communication. After all, the
experience of reading comes down to a tenacious, intimate dialogue
between author and reader. This is the reason I refer to the
world of reading as a rich summation of life experiences.
Yet another reason to value reading is that it affords youth
and adults alike the opportunity to rise above the routine experiences
of everyday life and ponder their past and future prospects.
Be it from a book previously read or one pored over for the
first time, we feel something genuine, we are moved as every
fiber of our being grapples with its content. Without such full
engagement, it would be nearly impossible to share our impressions
of books with children. The truth resonates with the listener
not through empty words but through the richness and depth of
one's own character.
Above all else, the experience of reading nurtures the spontaneity
of children's curiosity. It encourages their self-discipline
to take time for reflection and develops their capacity to seek
solutions from within.
Tolstoy's portrait of spiritual transformation
World literature is a treasure house of questions, of reflection
and wonderment.
Let us draw from a scene in the final chapter of Tolstoy's Anna
Karenina, where the protagonist Levin asks himself, "What
am I? And where am I? And why am I here?" (792).
Levin, said to portray Tolstoy himself, is seeking the reason
for his existence when he encounters a peasant whose words transform
him. Tolstoy deftly and poignantly captures this transformation,
the opening of new horizons and the subsequent opening and flowering
of Levin's emotions.
"Well, that's how it ispeople are different. One man just
lives for his own needs, take Mityukha even, just stuffs his
belly, but Fokanychhe's an upright old man. He lives for the
soul. He remembers God" (794).
To live for one's soulthese simple words, spoken nonchalantly
by a peasant, pierce Levin's heart. Walking along the road,
he continues his soliloquy as he savors this novel sensation.
He felt something new in his soul and delightedly probed this
new thing, not yet knowing what it was. (795)
As he finally becomes satisfied that he has gleaned the answer,
Levin turns into the woods to lie down on the grass and thinks
to himself:
"I haven't discovered anything. I've only found out what
I know. I've understood that power which not only gave me life
in the past but is giving me life now. I am freed from deception,
I have found the master" (796).
Images of transformation from darkness to light appear frequently
in Tolstoy's works: typically from questioning to effusive inspiration
from the contact of two souls; then through self-examination
to the discovery and formation of a new self. These processes
truly capture the workings of the spirit.
By virtue of his vital spirituality regained, Levin sees through
the deception of war to its harsh and simple realityhuman beings
killing each other. The dawning truth seeps into his interjection:
"'But it's not just to sacrifice themselves, it's also
to kill Turks'" (809). His observation casts doubt on the
legitimacy of the nationalistic fervor that made self-sacrifice
in the Serbian War a noble undertaking. The eternal commandment
"Thou shalt not kill" gains new meaning and is imbued
with a sense of immediacy when invoked by one like Levin who
has lived through spiritual agony and torment.
What I regard as the climactic point of the story appears in
the closing scene, where Levin bares his doubts:
As he was going into the nursery, he remembered what he had
hidden from himself. It was that if the main proof of the Deity
is His revelation of what is good, then why was this revelation
limited to the Christian Church alone? (81314)
"Well, but the Jews, the Mohammedans, the Confucians, the
Buddhistswhat are they? . . . Can these hundreds of millions
of people be deprived of the highest good, without which life
has no meaning?" (815).
I regard Tolstoy's Anna Karenina as unparalleled in its portrayal
of the spirituality and religious sentiment residing in every
human soul.
Enrichment through reading
The extent to which serious reading and appreciation of literature
can enrich and create substance in our inner world defies description.
Allowing our common spiritual heritage to go to waste would
be a source of deep regret.
This is true not only of Tolstoy's works. The same can be said
of books by Dostoyevsky, Hugo, and Goethe, among many others.
For decades, even centuries, these classics have ranked highly
among a myriad of works. Surely they are replete with substance.
For anyone who finds world literature daunting, there are modern
classics in one's own language and children's books such as
those recommended by the Jungian psychologist Hayao Kawai in
Japan. The choices are endless.
There are those who would say we have become distant from the
printed word. I share this concern, and it is for just this
reason that I wish to extol the value of reading in one's youth.
It is truly sad to find young people who have not experienced
the thrilling challenge of mastering even one literary classic.
It is my abiding hope that preschoolers and schoolchildren be
afforded every opportunity to be exposed to reading at home
as well as in school. While there is much children gain from
reading on their own, the experience is further enriched when
parents and teachers read aloud to them.
Children sense the warmth of words in the voices of their parents
and teachers, and their imagination is challenged to capture
a story's landscapes and dramatic scenes. The modulations of
the reader's voice help children experience and develop a range
of emotions, from sadness to joy. As parents and teachers read
aloud, they can watch the children's facial expressions and
choose to change their tone or pause to hear a child's thoughts.
Through these encounters, a relationship of mutual trust steadily
begins to take shape.
Just as a farmer sows seeds and prays for a bountiful crop,
it is important for adults to read to children in the hope that
they will grow up healthy and strong, limitlessly develop their
potential, and realize every dream. Every facet of a child's
development depends on that child's reassurance and confidence
that someone believes in him or her, that someone cares.
Education and the future
On a final note, I believe some programs sponsored by the educators
division of the Soka Gakkai offer one example of reinforcing
society's ability to educate.
By way of introduction, in 1968, members of the educators division,
determined to contribute to their local community, launched
an Educational Counseling Program. In the thirty-two years of
its existence, this program has provided volunteer educational
counseling services to some 280,000 people. At present, eight
hundred members of the educators division are active as counselors
in twenty-eight communities throughout Japan. All are current
or retired teachers who have acquired a background in educational
counseling. On a weekly basis, they provide counseling to those
who are experiencing difficulties within the educational system,
reinforcing their skills through peer review of case studies.
The program is open to all members of the community, without
regard to religious affiliation, and all advice and counseling
are given purely from a secular educational perspective.
A further program was launched in 1999 in an effort to support
education in the family and the community. A designated senior
educational counselor serves as a liaison with the local community,
organizing informal discussions on educational issues. Eventually
this system will be expanded to reach communities throughout
Japan.
Due to the steady efforts of the committed individuals involved
in this counseling, there are numerous stories of children who
have regained their confidence and made a fresh start. To help
a suffering child or parent who is feeling isolated because
of various difficulties, I believe it is necessary to supplement
the counseling provided by schools and by the government. Educational
counseling incorporated into community services would make access
to professional help easier and less intimidating. In other
words, society must draw on collective efforts to help overcome
the current problems in education.
According to their records, absenteeism or refusal to attend
school now accounts for seventy percent of the cases brought
to the Educational Counseling Program. In almost half of these
cases, fear of bullying is the reason children feel unable or
unwilling to go to school.
In the face of these realities, we cannot remain idle. Our whole
society must show a greater concern if we are to counter the
problems of bullying and other acts of violence. We are in urgent
need of a social ethos that will not accept or condone violence
in any form. We must reverse the tide of indifference and cynicism
now permeating society. The Soka Gakkai is deeply committed
to raising awareness of these problems and to seeking solutions.
Its efforts in this area fulfill one dimension of an overall
challenge to create a society that serves the needs of education.
More broadly, we are confident that these efforts are helping
nurture the roots of a culture of peace.
A strengthened capacity to educate, the weaving of education
into every thread of our social fabric, the permeation of a
sense of commitment and a responsibility to educatesuch concrete
developments, and not simply politics or the economy, are what
will determine the future. Our children's happiness rests in
the balance. Qualified only by an overarching commitment to
establish this century as the century of education, it is my
earnest desire to work together with like-minded people around
the world to continually swell the tide of humanistic education.
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Galtung, Johan, and Daisaku Ikeda. Choose Peace: A Dialogue
Between Johan Galtung and Daisaku Ikeda. London: Pluto Press,
1995.
Gandhi, Mahatma. All Men Are Brothers: Autobiographical Reflections.
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Jacquard, Albert. Petite philosophie à l'usage des non-philosophes
[A Modest Philosophy for Non-Philosophers]. n.p.: Calmann-Lévy,
1997.
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Japan. Ministry of Education. 1999 Survey of Public Schools.
Jung, Carl G. The Essential Jung. Princeton: Princeton University
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. The Undiscovered Self. Trans. by R. F. C. Hull. Boston: Little,
Brown and Company, 1958.
Likhanov, Albert A. Wakamonotachi no kokuhaku [The Confessions
of Youth]. Trans. by Ayako Iwahara. Tokyo: Shindokushoshinsha,
1988.
Makiguchi, Tsunesaburo. Soka kyoikugaku taikei [The System of
Value-Creating Pedagogy]. Vol. 5 of Makiguchi Tsunesaburo zenshu
[The Complete Works of Tsunesaburo Makiguchi]. 10 vols. Tokyo:
Daisan Bunmeisha, 198196. The Soka kyoikugaku taikei was originally
published as 2 vols. in Tokyo: Soka Kyoiku Gakkai, 193031.
Maslow, Abraham H. Religions, Values, and Peak-Experiences.
New York: The Viking Press, 1970.
Nagai, Hitoshi, and Yoshiyuki Koizumi. Naze hito o koroshite
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Nichiren. The Writings of Nichiren Daishonin. Ed. and trans.
by The Gosho Translation Committee. Tokyo: Soka Gakkai, 1999.
Rousseau, Jean Jacques. "Discourse on the Origin and Foundations
of Inequality Among Men." Rousseau's Political Writings.
Ed. by Alan Ritter and Julia Conaway Bondanella. Trans. by Julia
Conaway Bondanella. New York: W. W. Norton & Company, 1988.
58-83.
Soka Gakkai. "Educational Counseling: Soka Gakkai's Educational
Counseling Program Serves 260,000 during Last Thirty Years."
See <http://www.en.sokagakkai.or.jp/html1/education1/ed_activities1/counseling1.html>.
February 1999.
. Press Releases about Kobe and Sept. 2000 eastern Japan relief
efforts.
Tolstoy, Leo. Anna Karenina: A Novel in Eight Parts. Trans.
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The Vimalakirti Sutra. Trans. by Burton Watson from the Chinese
version by Kumarajiva. New York: Columbia University Press,
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Weil, Simone. "The Responsibility of Writers." The
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York: Moyer Bell Limited, 1977.
Yamamoto, Shugoro. Nagai saka [The Long Slope]. Tokyo: Shinchosha,
1971.
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