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    Applying Eugene Gendlin’s Focusing for Buddhist Community: Bridging Therapeutic and Contemplative Traditions

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    A Buddhist Analysis and Commentary on the 6 Steps of Focusing Using the Buddha’s Teachings of the Five Aggregates (khanda) & Dependent Co-origination (paticca samuppada)

    A Buddhist Analysis and Commentary on the 6 Steps of Focusing Using the Buddha’s Teachings of the Five Aggregates (khanda) & Dependent Co-origination (paticca samuppada)

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    The Institute for Buddhist Counseling & Chaplaincy (IBCC)

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    Laughing and Crying while Facing Death

    Laughing and Crying while Facing Death

    Trans-Regional

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    South Asia

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    Applying Eugene Gendlin’s Focusing for Buddhist Community: Bridging Therapeutic and Contemplative Traditions

    Applying Eugene Gendlin’s Focusing for Buddhist Community: Bridging Therapeutic and Contemplative Traditions

    A Buddhist Analysis and Commentary on the 6 Steps of Focusing Using the Buddha’s Teachings of the Five Aggregates (khanda) & Dependent Co-origination (paticca samuppada)

    A Buddhist Analysis and Commentary on the 6 Steps of Focusing Using the Buddha’s Teachings of the Five Aggregates (khanda) & Dependent Co-origination (paticca samuppada)

    Suicide Prevention in Japan

    Suicide Prevention in Japan

    Buddhist Chaplaincy in Japan

    Buddhist Chaplaincy in Japan

    Pushing Beyond Boundaries: The Korea-Japan Cooperative on Suicide and Self-Death

    Pushing Beyond Boundaries: The Korea-Japan Cooperative on Suicide and Self-Death

    Zen Breathing and its Effect on the Mind

    Zen Breathing and its Effect on the Mind

    Wellbeing and Social Movement Building: A Conversation with Ouyporn Khuankaew

    Wellbeing and Social Movement Building: A Conversation with Ouyporn Khuankaew

    “Wise Hope”: A Conversation with Roshi Joan Halifax

    “Wise Hope”: A Conversation with Roshi Joan Halifax

    Teaching Meditation

    Teaching Meditation

    Suicide Prevention in South Korea

    Suicide Prevention in South Korea

    3rd Round: International Conference on Buddhist Psychotherapy and Suicide Prevention

    Maitri Space Awareness with Prof. Elaine Yuen

    Maitri Space Awareness with Prof. Elaine Yuen

    Buddhist Chaplaincy in North America, Japan, and Beyond

    Buddhist Chaplaincy in North America, Japan, and Beyond

    2nd Round: International Roundtable on Buddhist Psychology, Psycho-Spiritual Counseling, and Chaplaincy Training

    2nd Round: International Roundtable on Buddhist Psychology, Psycho-Spiritual Counseling, and Chaplaincy Training

    1st Round: International Conference on Buddhism, Suicide Prevention, and Psycho-Spiritual Counseling

    1st Round: International Conference on Buddhism, Suicide Prevention, and Psycho-Spiritual Counseling

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Home Seminars & Resources Suicide Prevention

Suicide Prevention in Japan

by Jonathan S. Watts
January 25, 2025
in Suicide Prevention
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Suicide Prevention in Japan
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On the verge of the new millennium, Japanese society began to experience noticeable fissures and discontinuities that belied its image as a cohesive and universally middle-class nation. The Spring of 1998 witnessed a sudden jump in suicides that remained unabated until some fifteen years later and marks what is called the “Era of 30,000 suicides”. In the early years of this pandemic, Buddhist priests from a variety of regions and backgrounds began taking on the problem from their own individual standpoints. By 2008, the first cooperative, trans-sectarian body called the Association of Priests Grappling with the Suicide Problem (jisatsu taisaku-ni torikumu soryo-no-kai 自殺対策に取り組む僧侶の会) formed in the Tokyo area, followed by similar groups throughout the rest of the country. And so a movement began to form in the critical shift of individual activists working in isolation to a coordinated effort in group form to confront this issue. The priests and nuns in this movement have not only caught the sympathetic attention of domestic press but have drawn interest from those overseas, leading to the 1st 1st International Conference on Buddhism, Suicide Prevention, and Psycho-Spiritual Counseling called Re-Awakening to Our Inter-connected World. It is from these origins that IBCC has grown into an international network. 

  • Zen in the Mettaverse: How a 400-Year-Old Buddhist Temple is Evolving in Response to Modern Japanese Suffering by Dexter Cohen Bohn July 27, 2023
  • Suicide Prevention in South Korea: The 2nd Life Respect Day Celebration and Policy Seminar March 25, 2022
  • The Warmth of Connection: A Buddhist Path to the Realization of Healing 2nd Stage: International Roundtable on Buddhist Psychology, Psycho-Spiritual Counseling, and Chaplaincy Training (Bangkok, Thailand March 12-15, 2019)
  • Re-Awakening to Our Inter-connected World: 1st Stage: International Conference on Buddhism, Suicide Prevention, and Psycho-Spiritual Counseling (Yokohama & Kyoto, Japan November 6-10, 2017; Conference report August, 2018)
  • This Man Can Rescue You From “Death by Overwork” : short film about Rev. Jotetsu Nemoto on use of meditation and Buddhism to confront suicide and to face death  (Unlimited powered by UBS Sep 12, 2017) contact us for a copy
  • The Departure : full length documentary on the life and work of Rev. Jotetsu Nemoto by Lana Wilson (May 2017)
  • Journey Through Dukkha: The Suicide Prevention Priests of Japan Enter into Structural Violence and Connect to Social Change (April 15, 2014)
  • LAST CALL: A Buddhist monk confronts Japan’s suicide culture (Profile of Rev. Jotetsu Nemoto in The New Yorker Magazine June 24, 2013)
  • From a Disconnected Society to an Interconnected Society Rev. Toshihide Shun’ei Hakamata published in The Eastern Buddhist 44/2: 77–94 (2013)
  • 2013 Outlook: The Present Situation and the Coming Future of the Suicide Problem by Rev. Yukan Ogawa (Bukkyo Times January 31, 2013)
  • Reconstructing Priestly Identity and Roles in Contemporary Japan and the Development of Socially Engaged Buddhism by Jonathan Watts & Rev. Masazumi Okano (2012)
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