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A Grassroots Movement

Peace is not some abstract concept far removed from our everyday lives. It is a question of how each one of us plants and cultivates the seeds of peace in the reality of daily living, in the depths of our being, throughout our lives. I am certain that herein lies the most reliable path to lasting peace.” [1]--Daisaku Ikeda

“Seeds of Change: The Earth Charter and Human Potential” created by the SGI and the Earth Charter International (India, September 2007)

Exhibitions such as “Seeds of Change: The Earth Charter and Human Potential” created by the SGI and the Earth Charter International seek to foster an ethos of responsibility for global and social issues. (India, September 2007)

In 1975, the Soka Gakkai International (SGI) was founded as a global association linking independent Soka Gakkai organizations around the world, with Daisaku Ikeda as its president.

In 1983, the SGI was accredited as a nongovernmental organization (NGO) in consultative status with the United Nations Economic and Social Council (ECOSOC). In this capacity, the SGI is active in awareness-raising and public education focusing on peace, disarmament, human rights education, and environment and sustainability, as well as gender equality and women’s empowerment. Humanitarian relief has also been an important area of activity.

Ikeda fostered among Soka Gakkai members a strong ethos of responsibility for global and social issues. This same spirit of global citizenship is a defining characteristic of the various educational institutions he founded. More than simply carrying out a particular religious practice, members see the mission of the Soka Gakkai as one of bringing Buddhist wisdom to bear on the task of resolving the problems confronting the world, and of building solidarity for social justice and peace. Such activism may be at odds with a popular image of Buddhism as a practice of placid withdrawal from the complexities of society.

The thrust of the organization’s approach to social engagement is distilled in the reply given by Ikeda during a trip to the Soviet Union in 1974, when he was challenged by Soviet Premier Aleksey Kosygin to define the ideology of his Buddhist movement. Ikeda’s answer was “Peace, culture and education, the underlying basis of which is humanism.” [2]

Promoting peace, culture and education, based on respect for the dignity of life, has become the standard of the Soka Gakkai and this formula continues to guide the broad range of activities that national organizations and individual members carry out in their respective societies. (In 2021, the Soka Gakkai Charter was announced to articulate the organization’s guiding principles in the realm of social engagement.)

Supporting the UN

As president of the SGI, Ikeda issued annual peace proposals beginning in 1983. This was the year the SGI was accredited as a nongovernmental organization with ties to the UN. These 40 proposals, together with other statements he issued, offer concrete approaches, grounded in Buddhist humanism, for resolving global challenges. A central and consistent focus was on ways of revitalizing and strengthening the UN.

Soka Gakkai volunteers, mainly youth, collected some 13 million signatures for the global antinuclear campaign, Abolition 2000.

Soka Gakkai volunteers, mainly youth, collected some 13 million signatures for the global antinuclear campaign, Abolition 2000.

“The United Nations must serve as the key venue and focus for our efforts,” Ikeda asserted. “Humanity faces a range of complex issues that show no regard for national borders,—threats such as terrorism, armed conflict, poverty, environmental degradation, hunger and disease. A reformed and strengthened UN is essential to mustering effective responses to the global challenges of the new era.” [3]

The proposals further define and provide a focus for the peace activities undertaken by Soka Gakkai and SGI organizations around the world. Examples of these activities include initiatives such as the youth-driven Victory Over Violence, a peer education program on nonviolence carried out in schools across the USA; a nuclear abolition campaign that gathered and presented 13 million signatures to the UN in 1997; and the collection and publication of individuals’ wartime experiences. Large-scale international exhibitions on themes such as nuclear disarmament, sustainability and human rights have been an important focus of these activities for many years.

Ikeda himself held dialogues with Secretaries General Kurt Waldheim, Javier Peréz de Cuellar and Boutros Boutros-Ghali, and received the United Nations Peace Medal and the UNHCR Humanitarian Award.

In August 2006, Ikeda met with UN Under-Secretary-General Anwarul K. Chowdhury and presented a proposal entitled “Fulfilling the Mission: Empowering the UN to live up to the world’s expectations.” [Read 2006 UN proposal]

He also founded peace, cultural and educational institutions to promote global collaboration and cooperation on those themes.

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