06 August,2010 06:43 AM IST | | Fiona Fernandez
Today, on Hiroshima Day, the 65th Anniversary of the world's worst nuclear attacks, one of Mumbai's 350-odd Japanese residents for 34 years, Bhikshuu00a0T Morita votes for the glue of peace
"12 noon. Please be on time, Japanese come 45 minutes early," he gently insisted in his clipped, accented Hindi, while fixing our meeting. Bhikshu T Morita's peaceful, disarming self complements the air inside Worli's Nipponzan Myohoji Japanese Buddhist Temple.
The chaos of a rainy morning at this busy traffic junction, almost miraculously, fades once you step in. In 1976, Bhikshu Morita reached Orissa as a 28 year-old disciple accompanying renowned peace messenger Nichidatsu Fujii, popularly known as Fujii Guruji. Those days, few took the India route.
For most of us, Hiroshima and Nagasaki Day (August 9) means an annual flashback to History class. But to Bhikshu Morita, it remains the core of his existence.
"The lay man wants peace," his voice rises as he recounts his bold step in 1993, when he defied fundamentalist-fuelled hatred enveloping Mumbai during the Babri Masjid controversy.
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"Mumbai was tense; the military had taken over. I walked the deserted streets of Byculla chanting for peace. The locals found strength in that gesture. When peace is top of your mind, fearing for life doesn't quite figure."
Years before in 1987, he accompanied late MP and actor Sunil Dutt on his shanti padyatra from Mumbai to Amritsar.
"On January 25, a day before Duttsaab's departure, late Gandhian Usha Mehta requested me to join in. I thought as with most actors, this would be reduced to a publicity stunt.
What really happened was a slow discovery of the man's simplicity and optimism; his face was bright with no trace of exhaustion usme shanti ka josh tha," the Bhikshu recounts, flipping through an album packed with black and white frames, each with a story to tell.
Like the time when they were at Guna, Madhya Pradesh. "We received death threats; a bomb was to be hurled at the procession to stall our progress to Amritsar.
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Bhikshu T Morita has made the Nipponzan Myohoji Temple his home and office since 1976. |