The Words of the Burton Family

Japanese Buddhist Leader Denounces Religious Intolerance in Japan

Douglas Burton
May 5, 2010

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

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Yoshio Mitoma

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Unification Church Japan

Wednesday, May 05, 2010

Japanese Buddhist Leader Denounces Religious Intolerance in Japan

Calls for Prosecution of Forced-Conversion Professionals

New York, NY -- A respected Buddhist priest in Japan has called for Japanese authorities to prosecute those responsible for kidnapping and imprisoning members of the Unification Church.

In an official letter to a Committee for the Inquest of Prosecution assisting the state prosecutor dated March 14, Rev. Dohki Mihara, a Sotoshu Buddhist priest, wrote: "Getting to know about Mr. Toru Goto's case of religious kidnapping and confinement that lasted for 12 years and 5 months, a case which was clearly based on a purpose to break his faith in the Unification Church, I felt deep despair and grief to find out that Japan, although calling itself a cultured nation, has not acquired human decency, common sense in respect for human rights, or the basic attitude of democratic nation."

Mr. Goto's case was dismissed by Tokyo prosecutors with no indictments but will now be considered by a citizens' panel empowered to re-open the case." The letter continued: "I strongly ask the police and the prosecutor's office to courageously act against such illegal crimes according to the law. For this, I ask the people who have been chosen as the members of the committee for this case to indict this case so it may be judged righteously in court."

Rev. Mihara is the former president of the Religionists' Forum, an ecumenical association of Buddhist, Christian, and Shinto religious leaders in Miyazaki Prefecture on the island of Kyushu. He was speaking to the fact that since 1969 more than 4,300 members of the Unification Church have been kidnapped and confined by misguided relatives and opponents of the church. As has been reported, some of the victims have been beaten, sexually assaulted or tortured while in captivity.

Rev. Mihara's letter defended his call for action by the following: "If we cannot stand up for justice and give punishments to those who committed crimes, that nation cannot be called a law-abiding nation based on the spirit of democracy, because democracy fundamentally builds on the security of the freedom of thought, creed, and speech."

The priest's letter also explained that he had reconciled with his own daughter after initially opposing her decision to join the Unification Church. He wrote: "Back then, I was not able to forgive my daughter who was attracted to another religion when her father is a Buddhist priest, so I faced her directly with no intervention of a third person and had long and straight-forward conversations and arguments. After these frank discussions with my daughter, I was able to understand her true faith and peace of mind. Today, my daughter and I have not only recovered our trustful relationship of parent and child but have built a stronger relationship where we can rely on each other more than ever."

Demonstrations of Unificationists protesting the lack of police protection in Japan have been noticed by Reuters and the Associated Press in Korea. The New York Post.com on April 27 published a photo gallery illustrating a press conference in Seoul in on April 21. www.nypost.com/t/Unification_Church!1#topic_photo_div#ixzz0mcUlGDx4

The caption of the first photo had the following text: "Japanese members of the Unification Church who are married to South Korean men take part in a news conference in Seoul April 21, 2010. The Unification Church members want the South Korean and Japanese governments to ensure they are safe to return to Japan as they fear their relatives might forcibly detain them and make them renounce their religion. The Korean characters on the yellow sash read, "Please free us from fears of detention and kidnapping".

On April 28 the Becket Fund for Religious Liberty, a Washington, D.C.-based public interest law firm focused on issues of religious liberty, began tracking the coverage in the New York Post and the Examiner.com becketinternational.wordpress.com/2010/04/28/japan-unification-church-members-speak-out-against-forced-conversions/ 

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