Nagatomi Masatoshi
Nagatomi Masatoshi (1926-2000) was
Harvard’s first fulltime Professor of Buddhist Studies. While earlier faculty
has lectured on Buddhist subjects in various temporary capacities, Nagatomi was the first to teach an ongoing series of graduate
and undergraduate courses on Buddhist subjects.
Nagatomi began his study of
Buddhism at a young age when, as the eldest son born into a Buddhist family in
Yamaguchi Prefecture,
Japan, he was groomed to inherit
the abbacy of the family temple from his father. His first exposure to
America
came
when his father shifted course and became a Buddhist missionary. In a path
mirroring that of the missionary parents of Edwin Reischauer, Nagatomi’s father took his family to the
United States
in an effort to spread the Buddhist faith. Shortly before World War II,
Masatoshi was sent back to
Japan
to receive a college education. He studied first at Ryukuko and then
Kyoto
University,
surviving an extended period of wartime conscription in the shipyards of
Kobe and eventually
earning his B.A. in Indian Philosophy and Buddhism. His parents meanwhile lived
out the war as prisoners of the Manzanar internment
camp in
California.
After the war, Nagatomi returned to the
United States
and entered graduate school at Harvard, studying under the Sanskritist Daniel Ingalls. He completed his Ph.D. degree in 1957, with a dissertation
entitled An English Translation and
Annotation of the Pramânasiddhi Chapter of Dharmakîrti's Pramânavârttika.
After graduation he remained at Harvard, initially as Instructor of Sanskrit,
until his 1969 appointment as Harvard’s first Professor of Buddhist Studies.
Although primarily affiliated with the Department of Sanskrit and Indian
Studies, Nagatomi held a concurrent appointment and
taught courses in the Department of Far Eastern Languages. He remained in this
position until his retirement in 1996.
Although not a Buddhist proselytizer per se, one could make
the argument that Nagatomi was a missionary for the
field of Buddhist studies. He published very little in the course of his long
career, instead devoting the majority of his time to the development of his
students. Many of the current generation of Buddhist scholars in
America
studied under him, and he oversaw dissertations and fielded questions on
subjects spanning Buddhist ecumene – from matters of
classical Buddhist epistemology to the spread of Buddhism in the modern West. In
1986, Nagatomi also founded the Harvard Buddhist
Studies Forum, which continues to this day as a venue for lectures and
conversations on all manner of Buddhist subjects.
Perhaps the most fitting illustration of Nagatomi’s range as a scholar and teacher of Buddhism, and the degree to which he nurtured
the field, is the fact that, upon his retirement, no fewer than three faculty
appointments in Buddhist studies (in the Department of East Asian Languages and
Civilizations, the Divinity School, and the Committee on the Study of Religion)
were required to fill his shoes.