JJRS > Volume 31 Issue 2 Fukudenkai: Sewing the Buddha's Robe in Contemporary Japanese Buddhist Practice
Riggs, Diane E.
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This paper discusses twentieth-century Buddhist robe study and sewing groups called fukudenkai that were established after World War 11 by the Soto Zen priest and scholar Sawaki Kodo (1898-1965) and his disciples. The term fukudenkai refers to a metaphor of spiritual efficacy (a field of merit) that the robe embodies, and many participants believe that the act of sewing the robe in a context of meditation and formal Zen practice produces merit. Sawaki’s promotion of faith in the Buddhist robe as equivalent to faith in the Buddhist teaching is based on two essays by Dōgen (1200-1253), who is revered as the founder of the Japanese Soto Zen lineage. In addition to Soto commentaries on Dōgen’s essays, Sawaki also made use of the texts and practical robe sewing techniques developed by the pioneering Shingon scholar, Jiun Onko (1718-1804). The form and materials of fukudenkai robes are quite different from the modern forms established by the Soto administrative office, whose regulations guide commercial robe makers. Fukudenkai groups thus provide an alternative to the centrally controlled commercial culture of robe making in contemporary Japan.