Prima facie tranquil |
You’ve heard of Soka, right? It’s an impressive campus hidden behind gates in South County. It’s prominent, and it’s not. It’s pretty hard to get info about Soka.
But Woo shed’s some nasty light on the university:
Gaye Christoffersen, a worldly academic with a pages-long list of works on Asia-Pacific international relations to her name, felt an instant connection with Soka when she interviewed for a teaching position in 2005 after seeing a job posting in The Chronicle of Higher Education. Contracts were signed, and the 65-year-old relocated from Northern California to become a professor of political science at the school.
"Who wouldn't want to be at a university with a Buddhist peace movement?" she asks from outside a coffee shop in Santa Ana, near Orange County Superior Court. "I thought, 'This is a beautiful campus in Orange County, in America.' How could things be so weird and terrible?"
She makes reference to an e-mail sent in 2002 by Alfred Balitzer, then-dean of Soka University, to a colleague, "SUA will always have two faces and two kinds of faculty," he wrote, "and that is why we as SUA top administrators have to carefully care for the Gakkai members as they are being swamped by non-Gakkai faculty."
The document and others are tucked in Christoffersen's court files, submitted as evidence to a judge. The former Soka professor is suing the university for religious discrimination, claiming she was denied tenure because she refused to abandon her Lutheran faith to join the Soka Gakkai Buddhist sect that founded the university.
"It was a constant pressure," Christoffersen says, staring austerely through rectangular, rimless sunglasses while describing the aggressive proselytizing she says was practiced by both faculty members and students in her classes affiliated with Soka Gakkai on campus. "They're constantly after you, constantly trying to get you. You can't escape."….
Discrimination against the non-Soka Gakkai Buddhist? |
2 comments:
My cousin joined Soka Gakkai (a/k/a Nichiren Shoshu) in the early 1980s and immediately started prosyletizing me to come to her meetings. It was truly a cult, and an ugly one at that. It seems that, despite my cousin's protestations that the "good" American Soka Gakkai has been split from the "bad" Japanese Soka Gakkai, the group is still up to its old tricks.
Yes, I have heard from several reliable people who corroborate the portrait of Soka offered by this article. It is, they say, a weird place.
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