Ogino Dokuon

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Ogino Dokuon
Information
Born: 1819
Place of birth: Bizen, Okayama prefecture, Japan
Died: 1895
Religion: Rinzai
Title(s): Roshi
Workplace: Shōkoku-ji
Predecessor(s): Daisetsu Shōen
Website

Portal:Buddhism

Ogino Dokuon (荻野 独園, 18191895) was a Rinzai roshi remembered for his daring resistance to religious oppression directed toward Buddhists during the late Tokugawa period and Meiji period of Japan. He received Dharma transmission from his teacher Daisetsu Shōen and later became abbot of Shōkoku-ji in 1879.[1] In 1872 he was appointed director of Daikyō-in, which was an institution of the Meiji government set up that same year in order to "promote the 'prompt modernization' of the nation."[2] Guised as an organization promoting the "Great Teaching"—comprised of Confucian ethics and Shintoismscholar Heinrich Dumoulin states that, "...one is hard put to find anything Buddhist there. It is no surprise, therefore, that the Buddhists were not very happy with this new decree, even though it did give them a participatory voice in policy matters and introduced a new organizational order."[2] As leader of Daikyō-in Dokuon protested these policies to the government, though with virtually no effect. Even still, he was one of the most outspoken of anyone of his time period in the Buddhist community.[1][2]

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  1. ^ a b Baroni, 248
  2. ^ a b c Dumoulin; 403, 410

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