26th Annual Bloom-Futaba Memorial Lecture with Paula Arai, PhD (Hawaii Betsuin)

When:
November 8, 2025 @ 6:00 pm – 9:00 pm
2025-11-08T18:00:00-10:00
2025-11-08T21:00:00-10:00
Where:
Hawaii Betsuin Annex Temple
1727 Pali Hwy
Honolulu, HI 96813
USA
Cost:
Free
Contact:
Hawaii Betsuin office
(808) 536-7044
Dr. Paula Arai

Guest Lecturer: Paula Arai, PhD

26th Annual Bloom-Futaba Memorial Lecture
A Gift from Rev. Dr. Alfred Bloom

“Stories of Women Liberating Dharma”
 

Saturday, November 8, 2025 | 6–9 PM
Honpa Hongwanji Hawaii Betsuin, Annex Temple & on Zoom

Guest Lecturer: Paula Arai, PhD
(Dr. Arai will be in person at Hawaii Betsuin)

 

Schedule

Dr. George Tanabe

Respondent: Dr. George Tanabe

  • 6:00 pm  Welcome and Introduction
  • 6:10 pm  Lecture One: Personal Writings from the Heart
  • 7:00 pm  Discussion & Questions
  • 7:15 pm  Break
  • 7:30 pm  Lecture Two: Suffering and the Healing Power of Domestic Dharma
  • 8:30 pm  Discussion & Questions
  • 9:00 pm  Closing

A brochure is available.

Registration

Free Registration Advised – visit this Google form or the associated QR code to register.2025 Bloom-Futaba Memorial Lectures

Lectures will be held in-person at Hongwanji Betsuin and livestreamed on Zoom.

Lecturer’s Statement

With the intention to see the Buddhist tradition from a woman’s perspective and illuminate how women, or anyone, can wield liberating power, I explore the creative expedient of storytelling, a favored method in sutras.

To do so, I followed principles I developed to help me navigate this rich terrain. I began with breathing space for not knowing. That involved assuming what evidence I did have was incomplete.

It also involved doing as much rigorous research into socio-historical materials and Buddhist teachings as I could muster and turning to experts to assess the plausibility of my findings.

Approaching my findings from an embodied perspective opened up insights into what women might have seen, tasted, smelled, heard, touched, and thought. It helped me humanize them.

As Buddhist women, they likely lived with a sense of our interdependence and sought ways to respond to suffering with compassion.

I deliberately sought out Buddhist sutras, teachings, and practices that are not heralded for the way they might support women or are known to have generated suffering for women. I wanted to probe possibilities for engaging in a liberating interpretation of such material.

The first part will focus on Eshinni and the “Blood Pond Sutra.” In the second part, I will focus on domestic Dharma in World War II, Japan and a Japanese American woman. They are part of my larger book project, tentatively titled “Of Lotuses and Mud: Women Liberating Dharma.”

About the Speakers

Professor Paula Arai (Ph.D. in Buddhist Studies, Harvard University) holds the Eshinni & Kakushinni Professor of Women and Buddhist Studies chair at the Institute of Buddhist Studies in Berkeley, California.

"Of Mud and Lotuses" book coverShe is author of:

  • Women Living Zen; Bringing Zen Home
  • Painting Enlightenment
  • The Little Book of Zen Healing
  • [In press] Of Mud & Lotuses: Dreaming the Lives of Buddhist Women

Under the tutelage of Aoyama Shundō Rōshi, Professor Arai did Zen training at the Aichi Senmon Nisōdō nunnery in Nagoya, Japan. Steeped in ethnographic research, she takes an embodied approach to her work and finds poetic immersive storytelling a potent medium for conveying the experiences of transformative healing she researches. An active public speaker, Arai also leads workshops on healing rituals. Website: Zenhealing.org

Professor Arai was a 2009 10th Anniversary Futaba-Bloom speaker, on the topic of “Grateful Heart: A Buddhist Way of Healing.”

About the Lecture Series

The Futaba Lecture Series is endowed by Dr. Alfred & Ms. Dorothy N. Bloom to honor the memory of friend and mentor, Professor Kenko Futaba. Dr. Futaba, a noted Shin Buddhist scholar, served as President of Kyoto’s Ryukoku University from 1983 to 1995 and then became Chancellor of Kyoto Women’s University.

Al fervently hoped that this lecture series would be a continuing inspiration for the nurturing of American Buddhism and for the social participation of Buddhists in the quest of social justice and peace. His website continues to serve as a resource for students today: https://bschawaii.org/shindharmanet/

Comments are closed.