This May, eleven IARF members from the US, UK, Netherlands, Switzerland and Germany undertook a spiritual and religious journey of two weeks to Japan. Kathy Matsui, member of IARF’s Japan Chapter and one of our UN representatives, accompanied us on the trip, supported for parts of it by Yayoi Kimura of Ittoen and Ritsuko Ushio of the Konko Church.
In Tokyo we were received on the first day by the Buddhist organisation Rissho Kosei-kai, in whose pilgrimage resort we stayed in Tokyo, the Japan Chapter and the Japanese section of the International Association of Liberal Religious Women (IALRW), with a tour of the premises, a tea ceremony, traditional garments, and several presentations.
In Hiroshima, local Chapter members had lunch with us following an impressive visit to the Peace memorial and memorial museum. We spent considerable time in Kyoto and Osaka, visiting amongst others our member organisations Ittoen and the Konko Church, the Aoi Matsuri procession, and having lunch with IARF’s Japan Liaison Committee, alongside visits to several Buddhist temples and shrines. Our thanks also go to our member organisations Mutsumi-kai and Shitenno-ji for their warm welcome and their kind hospitality.
The Ittoen community, due to its location in the hills and its philosophy of humility and servitude, made a lasting impression. Our day at Tsubaki Grand Shrine, in the mountains east of Osaka, taught us about the nature of Shintoism, explained to us in a prayer as adapting to the natural order of things and seeking harmony, and in a way complementary to Buddhism. Koyasan offered two days of meditation and contemplation, with many Buddhist temples, in a beautiful mountainous setting south of Kyoto, where women, until far in the twentieth century, were not supposed to disturb the monks. We stayed in a Buddhist monastery, with vegetarian meals, sober, but delicious.
All participants were united by their sincere interest in classic and modern Japan and their openness to its spiritual traditions, which showed not only during the various encounters with our hosts but also in the talks amongst ourselves. We extend our thanks to all in Japan who made this visit possible. It has shown that enabling personal growth through exchange and common celebration is one of the most valuable aspects of IARF, and that we should undertake more such exchanges.
Here you can read the article that the Rev. Dr. Esther Suter wrote for the World Council of Churches, in which she offers more details on our various visits.
Here you can read the June issue of the Japan Chapter newsletter, in English and Japanese, which includes a piece on the Chapter’s participation in the tour.