Toyokawa Inari
Myōgon-ji, also known as Toyokawa Inari, is a Sōtō Zen Buddhist temple located in the city of Toyokawa in eastern Aichi Prefecture, Japan.
Although the temple's main image is that of the thousand-armed form of the bodhisattva Avalokiteśvara, it is more well-known for its guardian deity Toyokawa Dakini Shinten, a syncretic goddess who assumed characteristics of Inari, the Shinto kami of fertility, rice, agriculture, industry and worldly success. Despite the presence of a torii gate at the entrance, the institution is a Buddhist temple and has no overt association with the Shinto religion.
Background
is a Japanese Buddhist deity who originated from the ḍākinī, a type of female spirit in Hinduism and Buddhism. Said in Buddhist belief to have once been a race of malevolent demonesses who preyed on humans, they were eventually subjugated by the buddha Vairocana, who took the form of the wrathful deity Mahākāla to wean them away from their human-eating habits and lead them to the Buddhist path.In contrast to Nepalese and Tibetan Buddhism, where 'ḍākinī
Although Dakiniten was commonly depicted as a woman riding a white fox, bearing a sword in one hand and a wish-granting jewel on the other, the Dakiniten of Toyokawa Inari is shown bearing bundles of rice stalks on a carrying-pole over her right shoulder instead of a sword.
History
Myōgon-ji was founded in 1441 by the Buddhist priest Tōkai Gieki, a sixth generation disciple of Kangan Giin, who was a disciple of Dōgen, the founder of the Japanese Sōtō school.In 1264, Giin traveled to Song China in order to present Dōgen's recorded sayings, the Eihei Kōroku, to monks in the Caodong lineage of Dōgen's teacher Tiantong Rujing. Legend claims that as Giin was about to leave China in 1267, he experienced a vision of a goddess riding on a white fox, bearing a jewel on one hand and a shoulder pole laden with sheaves of rice on the other. The goddess identified herself as Dakiniten and vowed to become Giin's protector. Upon his return to Japan, Giin made a statue of Dakiniten based on this vision, which eventually ended up years later in Gieki's possession. Gieki enshrined both it and an image of the bodhisattva Avalokiteśvara at the temple he established, designating Dakiniten as the guardian of the temple complex. Since then, the goddess was widely revered as a patron against calamity and a bringer of relief and prosperity.
The temple was patronized in the Sengoku period by Imagawa Yoshimoto, Oda Nobunaga, Toyotomi Hideyoshi and Tokugawa Ieyasu, and by pilgrims from the merchant classes in the Edo period through the modern period. Other notable devotees of Toyokawa Dakiniten include the Edo period magistrate and daimyō Ōoka Tadasuke, whose residence in Akasaka, Tokyo eventually became Toyokawa Inari's Tokyo branch temple, the painter Watanabe Kazan, and Prince Arisugawa Taruhito, who donated a framed sign in his own calligraphy of the words "Toyokawa Temple".
The Toyokawa Mantra
Tradition claims that Dakiniten taught Kangan Giin the mantra On shira batta niri un sowaka, which is traditionally explained as meaning: "When this spell is chanted, the faith in me reaches everywhere, and by the true power of the Buddhist precepts, evil and misfortune will be abolished and luck and wisdom attained; suffering removed and comfort achieved, and pain transformed into delight." Another possible interpretation is: "I vow to destroy all my sufferings and overcome temptations with the power of monastic discipline."This mantra features prominently in services conducted in the temple and in Toyokawa Dakiniten worship in general.
Tōkai Gieki and Heihachirō
The temple was also known as 'Heihachirō Inari' due to a story involving its founder Tōkai Gieki.It is said that when Gieki had was about to establish what would become Myōgon-ji, an old man carrying a small pot or cauldron appeared before him and offered his services. The old man went on to work at Gieki's temple, using his pot to cook meals for the monks. To the surprise of many, the pot was seemingly magical, in that it continually provided an endless supply of food enough to satisfy tens and even hundreds of people. When asked how he was capable of performing such miraculous feats, the man replied that he had three hundred and one servants at his bidding. The old man stayed by Gieki's side until the latter's death, at which he vanished without a trace, leaving only his pot behind. People then came to revere the old man, dubbed 'Heihachirō', as a servant or avatar of Dakiniten, a fox spirit who assumed human form.