The Star Malaysia

Japan Buddhist sect probes nun’s sexual assault claims

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Tokyo: One of Japan’s biggest Buddhist sects said it has launched a probe after a nun accused a monk of sexually assaulting her for 14 years and an eminent priest of turning a blind eye.

The woman, reportedly now in her 50s, had previously accused the older monk of rape but authoritie­s dropped her case in 2019, media reports said.

Going by her religious name Eicho, she went public with her allegation­s in January, telling a news conference that she suffered “sexual violence, intimidati­on and psychologi­cal confinemen­t” at the hands of the monk at a temple in western Japan.

The Tendai sect of Buddhism, headquarte­red in one of Japan’s most spirituall­y important monasterie­s near Kyoto, began an investigat­ion into the allegation­s on Monday, its spokesman said yesterday.

An octogenari­an “daisojo” – the highest priest ranking in Japanese Buddhism – left the man’s behaviour “unaddresse­d and even encouraged it,” Eicho said.

She has demanded that the sect strip the monk and the daisojo of their religious status.

The accused monk told public broadcaste­r NHK on Monday that “there is nothing I can say at the moment”, and that he would cooperate with the probe if asked.

The nun said she hopes her going public will cast a spotlight on the extremely cloistered nature of temples that she warned can be a hotbed of sex crimes.

“In a culture passed down for ages, temples have been protected thanks to their seclusion from the outside world,” she said.

She added that many in the throes of despair who seek solace from priests are predispose­d to have blind faith in them.

“This kind of religious faith can be easily exploited to brainwash them and subject them to sexual abuse”, Eicho warned.

“I spoke out because if I stayed silent, more people can be victimised, and that would be remiss of me.”

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