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・ Myōhōshō-ji
・ Myōhō–ji
・ Myōji Station
・ Myōjin Station
・ Myōjin Yahiko
・ Myōjin-shō
・ Myōjinyama
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・ Myōkaku Station
・ Myōken
・ Myōkenbashi Station
・ Myōkenguchi Station
・ Myōkoku-ji
・ Myōkō (train)
Myōkō Naganuma
・ Myōkō, Niigata
・ Myōkō, Niigata (village)
・ Myōkō-class cruiser
・ Myōkō-Kōgen Station
・ Myōkō-Togakushi Renzan National Park
・ Myōkōji Station
・ Myōkōkōgen, Niigata
・ Myōon-dōri Station
・ Myōrenji Station
・ Myōryū-ji
・ Myōshin-ji
・ Myōtsū-ji
・ Myōzai District, Tokushima
・ Myōō-in


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Myōkō Naganuma : ウィキペディア英語版
Myōkō Naganuma

was the co-founder and first vice-president of the Buddhist religious sect Risshō Kōsei Kai.
==Early life==
She was born as Masa Naganuma on December 25, 1889 in Saitama Prefecture, Japan.〔http://rk-world.org/cofounder.aspx〕 At the age of sixteen she was adopted by her older sister, but soon left for Tokyo. In Tokyo she found work as a maid, but later worked in an army munitions factory.〔Lifetime Beginner: An Autobiography, Nikkyō Niwano, Pages 89-90〕 Soon she fell ill and went to live with her uncle in the country.
She later married and had a daughter, but the child died at age two. Myoko divorced her husband because he mishandled their money and moved back to Tokyo. In Tokyo she married again and opened a food stand to make money, selling ice and sweet baked potatoes. She fell ill very often and hemorrhaged many times. It was at this time she encountered Mr. Nikkyō Niwano and he began to give religious guidance to her. Her second husband however, was unable to deal with her new beliefs and soon left her. He would later marry a member of Risshō Kōsei Kai and receive guidance from Ms. Naganuma.〔Lifetime Beginner: An Autobiography, Nikkyo Niwano, Page 90〕

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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