800 Years: The Protection of 10 Rākṣasas Daughters

With faith, practice and study we advance along the path to enlightenment, but faith alone launches us on this journey and that same faith becomes our armor, inviting protection along the way. In particular, the faithful benefit from the 10 rākṣasas daughters, who promise in Chapter 26, Dhārānis, that those who read, recite and keep the Lotus Sūtra will have no trouble. These demon daughters and the Mother of Devils, Kishimojin, are encouraged by the Buddha to protect even those who only recite the Daimoku.

Two Buddhas Seated Side by Side points out Nichiren’s emphasis in his letters on the participation of the 10 rākṣasas daughters in the protection and testing of adherents:

“Nichiren saw the workings of the ten rāksasis in the events surrounding him, both great and small. He saw their roles as protecting Lotus devotees, occasionally testing their faith, aiding their practice, relieving their sufferings, and chastising those who obstruct their devotion. To a follower, the lay monk Myōmitsu, he wrote: ‘The ten rāksasis in particular have vowed to protect those who embrace the daimoku of the Lotus Sūtra. Therefore they must think of you and your wife as a mother does her only child … and safeguard you day and night.’ To two new parents, the samurai Shijō Kingo and his wife, Nichiren wrote that the ten rāksasis would watch over their infant daughter, so that ‘wherever she may frolic or play, no harm will come to her; she will “travel fearlessly, like a lion king”.’ He saw the protection of the ten rāksasis in the kindness of an elderly lay monk on Sado Island who had come to his aid, helping him to survive in exile, and in the devotion of a woman who had made him a robe to shield him from the cold in the recesses of Mount Minobu. Their protection was further evident to him in the fact that he had been able to escape unscathed from an attack on his dwelling in Kamakura and survived other threats as well. To two brothers whose father had threatened to disinherit them on account of their faith in the Lotus Sūtra, he suggested: ‘Perhaps the ten rāksasis have possessed your parents and are tormenting you in order to test your resolve.’ He also asserted that the ten rāksasis, along with other deities, had induced the Mongol ruler to attack Japan to chastise its people for abandoning the Lotus Sūtra.”

Two Buddhas, p247

There is an important, deeper meaning to the presence of the 10 rākṣasas daughters in Chapter 26. As Nikkyō Niwano explains in Buddhism for Today:

“These female demons with one voice declared before the Buddha that if anyone harassed the preachers of the sutra, they would protect the preachers and rid them of such persecution. Their declaration bears witness to the fact that the Buddha-mind is found even in these demons. Conversely, the teachings of the Lotus Sutra can be said to have the power to enable even these demons to become buddhas.”

Buddhism for Today, p389

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