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The Dai Gohonzon, a mandala inscribed with Sanskrit and Chinese characters on a plank of Japanese camphorwood, is the object of veneration for some Nichiren Buddhists; Dai means "great" or "supreme," whereas gohonzon means "object of devotion."[1]. The mandala chiefly comprises the names of numerous buddhas, bodhisattvas, Buddhist deities, and Buddhist teachers around the characters Nam-Myōhō-Renge-Kyō Nichiren written down the middle.[2]
Nichiren (日蓮) (February 16, 1222 – October 13, 1282), born Zennichimaro (善日麿), later Zeshō-bō Renchō (是聖房蓮長), and finally Nichiren (日蓮), was a Buddhist monk of 13th century Japan who inscribed the gohonzon[1]. A controversial figure during his lifetime, he is the founder of Nichiren Buddhism, a major Japanese Buddhist stream encompassing several schools of often widely conflicting doctrine.
In the autumn of 1279, a number of Nichiren's lay believers in the Fuji District came into the crosshairs of Gyōchi (行智), the chief priest of a temple where Nisshū (日秀), one of Nichiren's disciples, lived. The believers, uneducated peasant farmers from the village of Atsuhara, had come to help Nisshū with the harvest of his private rice crop. Gyōchi saw this as his chance to get rid of a thorn in his side and called some local warriors to arrest the peasants, accusing them of illegally harvesting the rice. The peasants decided to defend themselves when the warriors arrived but were no match, and several were wounded; twenty were arrested and hauled off to Kamakura for trial.
When they arrived, Hei no Saemon was waiting for them; but his true purpose seemed to lie more in persecuting than prosecuting, since he attempted to intimidate the peasants into renouncing their faith—on pain of death if they didn't but in exchange for their freedom if they did. Yet despite repeated threats and even torture, they remained steadfast. Hei no Saemon even had three beheaded, but the other 17 refused to back down and he eventually freed them. These events took place on October 15, 1279.
In the Nichiren Shoshu tradition (other schools vary in their interpretation of this event's significance or dispute the claim that it occurred)[3] Nichiren, observing from his disciples' reports that his followers were ready to sacrifice themselves in the name of their faith, decided that the time was ripe for him to "reveal" the Gohonzon that he intended to fulfill the purpose his advent in this world (出世の本懐: shusse no honkai). On October 12, 1279, he inscribed the Gohonzon known as the Dai-Gohonzon, which—in contrast to other Gohonzon inscribed in this period—was intended for worship by all his disciples and believers, contemporary and future, rather than just the specific individual named on it.
Nichiren inscribed Gohonzons for particular individual followers, and he also inscribed other general Gohonzons (dai-Honzon). The DaiGohonzon at Taisekiji temple, and The Honin Myou DaiHonzon, enshrined in Myohon-ji temple at Hota - are examples of Gohonzons dedicated to all people : http://honmonshoshu.fujimon.org/himdh.htm
Whether inscribing a mandala for individual recipients or a general Gohonzon for all people, Nichiren did not associate each Gohonzon he inscribed with a special letter of endorsment. Both dai-mandalas at Taisekiji and at Myohon Ji temple at Hota are not mentioned in any known letter of Nichiren. The authenticity of the Honin Myou daiHonzon is not disputed, and as such it can be regarded as a documentary proof of Nichiren's aim and intention of establishing a general Object of Devotion. Particulars of various Gohonzons may slightly differ, however, all these objects share the basic components of what constitutes the Object of Devotion. See Gohonzon.