Japonya’nın Gizli Hristiyanları: Kakure Kirishitan Cemaati ve “Budist Kitabı Mukaddes”

It is generally accepted that East Asian societies have adopted a more flexible and syncretic approach to foreign religions than other societies in history. The communities in this region have generally transformed newly arrived religions to their own identities using soft power and adapted them to...

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Veröffentlicht in:Cumhuriyet ilahiyat dergisi 2024, Vol.28 (1), p.409-427
1. Verfasser: Susuz Aygül, Merve
Format: Artikel
Sprache:tur
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Zusammenfassung:It is generally accepted that East Asian societies have adopted a more flexible and syncretic approach to foreign religions than other societies in history. The communities in this region have generally transformed newly arrived religions to their own identities using soft power and adapted them to their own identity. The arrival of Buddhism to China, then to Japan, and the subsequent incorporation of the color of these cultures is an example of this flexible and syncrectic approach. In addition, the emergence of theories and practices aimed at the simultaneous application of Confucianist, Taoist and Buddhist religious traditions in China is another example. Similarly, the centuries-long coexistence of Shintoism and Buddhism in Japan, and the acceptance of Shinto kami and Buddhist Buddhas and bodhisattvas as the same supreme beings, are also primary examples encountered in the same context. However, there are also exceptions of this flexible and syncrectic approach to foreign religions. One of these exceptions is the approach and policies towards the foreign religion Christianity during the Tokugawa shogunate. The shogunate's aggressive policies, which gradually hardened and expanded in scope against Christian teaching and local and foreign Christians, led to the emergence of the phenomenon of "underground religion" or "hidden faith" which is rarely encountered in Japanese history. The shogunate's harsh policies and bans on Christianity forced Japanese Christians to live by hiding their faith, and Japanese Christians continued to exist for two and a half centuries until the end of the Tokugawa shogunate by keeping their faith secret. By the end of the Tokugawa period, the state policy towards Christianity changed, missionary movements were allowed, and Christian churches came to Japan again. But a group of Japanese Christians, who continued their faith in secret for two and a half centuries, refused to join Christian churches and formed the Kakure Kirishitan community, which has continued to exist as a separate group to this day. As an example of the tendency of Japanese society and culture to adapt and transform foreign and new elements it encounters, the Kakure Kirishitan community and its sacred texts Tenchi are the main subject of this study. The main source of the study is Tenchi, the sacred text of the Kakure Kirishitan community, which can also be called the Buddhist Bible. The main claim is that the basic factor that enabled the Kakure Kirishitan c
ISSN:2528-9861
2528-987X