Who is Daisaku Ikeda? At one level, he is the leader of a
religious movement--Soka Gakkai--which began in Japan, where it
still has its headquarters, but which now claims 12 million
adherents around the world. At another level, he is a globetrotting
figure whose formal conversations with diverse writers, thinkers
and diplomats--including Arnold Toynbee, Joseph Rotblat and Mikhail
Gorbachev--have garnered him an international profile, as well as
academic recognition. Perhaps above all else, Daisaku Ikeda is
viewed as a campaigner for peace. And it is Ikeda's specific
contribution to peacebuilding, notably through the central emphasis
he has placed on the significance of dialogue, that this book
explores: the first to do so in a concerted way. Olivier Urbain
shows that while Soka Gakkai (the "value society") may stem from
the medieval principles of Nichiren Buddhism, under Ikeda's
leadership it has taken these classic wisdoms and transformed them.
Now essentially classless and secularised, as well as adaptable and
sensitive to modern challenges like resource shortages and climate
change, this, argues the author, is a pragmatic approach to peace
which has proved both popular and eminently transportable.
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