|
Memorial Service During the Equinox - Higan-e The Higan-e Ceremony is widely practiced in all forms of Buddhism in Japan and is usually conducted on March 21 and September 22, the days of the vernal and autumnal equinoxes. On these two days, the length of daylight and darkness in a day is exactly the same, and the sun rises due east and sets directly in the west. The memorial service conducted on these days for our departed ancestors is called the Higan-e Ceremony. The word "higan" is a translation of the Sanskrit word "paramita" (Japanese: haramitsu), and it means "arriving on the other shore," or "to extend." In other words, it signifies "getting across." Buddhism teaches that the world in which we live, called the impure world or saha realm (literally "realm of endurance"), is a place of suffering and troubles. In this world view, the saha world is located on this side of the shore. The source of all suffering - the three paths of earthly desires, karma and suffering - is likened to a great river. And the life condition of enlightenment is likened to the other shore. In order to cross from this impure world, over the life and death sufferings of the great river, and reach the pure land on the other shore, people must embark upon the boat of the Buddha's teachings. In His writing, "The Glory of the Yakuo Chapter," Nichiren Daishonin states the following:
In the great sea of sufferings of life and death, the pre-Lotus Sutra teachings are but a raft or, at best, a small boat. Even if the pre-Lotus Sutra teachings can transport us from this shore of life and death to another shore of life and death, it cannot take us across the great sea of life and death to the shore of great happiness. (Shinpen, p. 350) Thus, He teaches us that the only way to truly arrive at the other shore is by means of the "great ship," of the Daishonin's Buddhism - faith in the Dai-Gohonzon. Provisional Mahanyana Buddhism, prescribed the practice of the six paramitas to arrive at the other shore. These represent six methods of practice: almsgiving, keeping the precepts, forbearance, assiduousness, meditation and the obtaining of wisdom. The Daishonin, however, in "The True Object of Worship" quotes the following passage from the Muryogi Sutra: Even if we do not accomplish the practice of the six paramitas, they will naturally appear before us. (Shinpen, p. 652; ref., M.W., Vol. 1, p. 64)
Through this, He
teaches us that we can naturally attain the benefit of the practice of the six paramitas, arrive at the "other
shore" while living in this world and attain enlightenment in our present form. Thus, the fundamental
significance of arriving at the "other shore," or higan, is that it is extremely important for us, as living human
beings, to attain enlightenment in our present form through the Daishonin's Buddhism. And in a spirit of
appreciation, to present memorial offerings on behalf of our ancestors. In other words, the Buddhist practice
of Nichiren Shoshu lies in the spirit of a perpetual bond with the deceased and
conducts higan memorials for them, accomplished through our
daily practice for ourselves and others. |