Today’s Planet Earth: 
Our Loving Home 
will be presented 
in Japanese, 
with subtitles in Arabic, 
Aulacese (Vietnamese), 
Chinese, English, 
French, German, 
Indonesian, Japanese, 
Korean, Malay, 
Persian, Portuguese, 
Russian, Thai 
and Spanish.
Hallo, splendid viewers, 
and welcome to 
Planet Earth: 
Our Loving Home. 
Today we will explore 
a wonderful method 
of natural farming 
from Japan. 
Mr. Yoshikazu Kawaguchi 
has been practicing 
what he calls the 
“Natural Farming” method 
in Sakurai City, 
Nara Prefecture, Japan 
for 30 years.
This method is gentle 
to both the environment 
and our bodies, because 
it complements nature well. 
He developed 
this eco-friendly style 
of agriculture 
after falling ill from 
the chemical fertilizers 
he routinely applied 
to his crops. 
Mr. Kawaguchi 
also started the Akame
Natural Farming School
19 years ago for those 
who wished to be trained 
in Natural Farming. 
Students can learn 
the system
through actual practice 
in rice fields.
The Natural Farming 
method uses no fertilizers 
or chemicals, 
very little water and 
adheres to the philosophy 
that crops should be 
allowed to grow freely and 
thus human intervention 
is required only when 
absolutely necessary. 
Let us now meet the wise 
Mr. Yoshikazu Kawaguchi.
To begin Mr. Kawaguchi, 
would you please explain 
the Natural Farming 
method that you 
have been practicing? 
Well, the basic point 
of this specific practice 
is to never plow the fields. 
It is not necessary 
to plow at all.
Also, we don't need 
fertilizers at all. 
We don't need to 
bring in anything 
from other places. 
And weeds and insects 
are not enemies.
Moreover, the most 
important principle 
is that we grow crops 
according to 
the environment. 
In a warm place 
or climate, 
we grow plants that like 
warm temperatures, 
while in a cold place 
we grow plants 
that like the cold climate. 
In short, we grow 
according to the climate 
or the characteristics 
of the particular land.
Then, there is a property 
to each plant, so we should 
follow and accept it. 
We should leave the life 
of that particular plant 
alone. 
We leave it 
as untouched as possible, 
but we do lend our hand 
a little as needed so that 
the particular crops 
grow well. 
It is the way 
of natural cultivation.
I see. Then, you mean
that crops can grow 
healthy and vigorously 
without any fertilizer 
and pesticides, right?
Yes, exactly. 
Crops would grow 
very vigorously 
without those things. 
In agriculture today 
it is far from 
what the proper method 
of agriculture should be. 
It neglects 
the natural world, 
and is contrary to 
the law of nature, 
and puts a heavy load 
on our environment.
Therefore, 
this cultivation method 
never consumes 
the limited resources 
of the Earth, 
or contaminates water, 
Mother Earth, or the air, 
all of which are invaluable 
to our environment. 
This is how this method is.
I see. 
I understand 
there are both “useful” 
and “harmful” bugs 
for agriculture. 
But according to you, 
there is no difference 
between these, 
and even so-called 
“harmful” bugs exist 
because they should.  
Am I right?
Well, the entire balance 
would be upset 
if we humans 
for some reason define 
the different species as 
enemies or harmful insects 
according to 
our convenience 
and terminate them. 
It is best for them to be 
left alone in their place. 
If we follow agriculture 
that goes along with 
the natural way, 
then a rice insect doesn’t 
turn out to be harmful. 
By the way, there is 
in fact an occasion when 
rice is actually damaged 
by these rice insects. 
Since the number of 
rice insects has increased 
tremendously, rice 
has been totally eaten up. 
This is not because 
it is a harmful insect, but 
we have made a mistake 
in the cultivation method. 
We cultivate and apply 
large quantities 
of fertilizers; 
a lot of rice insects 
proliferate and 
the crops are damaged.
But regardless of 
the differences between 
harmful and useful insects, 
all life is left alone, and 
thus the entire balance 
is maintained. 
The Natural Farming 
method does not require 
any special technique. 
When we can find something 
that nature needs, 
we simply give 
a helping hand. 
Then we can keep on 
receiving the blessings 
from nature.
You mean that animals, 
plants, and humans 
should live together as one 
through interdependence? 
Is that right?
It is how 
this natural world is made, 
so existing through 
co-reliance is the key. 
Many different kinds 
and species of life are 
now living or have lived.  
And also 
there are the to-be-born. 
So, birth and death 
are cycling, and this is 
what the world of life is like.
Life both in the future 
and in the past 
live together and 
carry on within the life 
existing here and now. 
This is how it works. 
We have to realize this. 
For instance, rice cannot 
live alone in a rice field. 
And it is the same 
that humans cannot 
exist alone on Earth. 
Thus, many lives, many 
kinds of flora and fauna 
exist in a rice field 
according to its season. 
It is best for us to let nature 
take care of things. 
And it is not ideal 
if anything is taken away 
for humans’ convenience 
because they are all one. 
But they are individual 
and different 
at the same time. 
To understand this point 
is important.
When we return, 
Mr. Yoshikazu Kawaguchi 
will further introduce us 
to the Natural Farming 
method. 
Please stay tuned 
to Supreme Master 
Television. 
Welcome back to 
Planet Earth: 
Our Loving Home where 
we are speaking with 
Mr. Yoshikazu Kawaguchi 
from Sakurai City, 
Nara Prefecture, Japan 
about the Natural 
Farming method. 
He now further discusses 
the issue of weeds that 
appear when growing rice. 
In contrast to those 
who use conventional 
farming techniques, 
Mr. Kawaguchi has quite 
a different perspective 
as to how weeds 
affect rice crops.
By the way, we consider 
weeds to be enemies, 
because we see 
our precious rice crops 
being overtaken by weeds 
beneath our feet. 
Rice crops are certainly 
overtaken by weeds. 
They grow stronger 
and more vigorously 
than rice crops. 
When we compare 
one rice plant with a weed, 
a weed is stronger, 
because 
it is a summer grass. 
Some weeds grow 
in a group and 
occupy a space to grow. 
If such is the case, 
rice crops are certainly 
overtaken by those weeds.
It is common 
among all plant life. 
Plants will be overtaken 
by weeds when they are 
small and young. 
And in such cases, 
farmers will take good care 
of young rice crops. 
Just as mothers and fathers 
will take good care of 
their children. 
Similarly, farmers 
will give young crops 
a helping hand 
to a certain extent until they 
can grow independently.
Farmers will remove weeds 
from below 
the rice seedlings, 
but only weeds growing 
in that area. 
You should not remove 
all the weeds 
in the rice field. 
Removing weeds 
only in that area 
will protect rice seedlings 
and support them so that 
they will be not overtaken 
by the weeds. 
The period of
planting rice seedlings 
is equivalent to childhood  
for humans. 
So rice seedlings will be 
planted in their youth, 
but we plant rice seedlings 
in a rice field. 
And it takes about
a month for the rice 
seedlings to grow
into young adulthood.
If summer grasses grow 
in this period, rice crops 
will be overtaken after all. 
In such a case, 
farmers will cut the weeds 
and line the rice field 
with the cut weeds. 
Then the rice crops 
will quickly grow 
into young adulthood 
after a month. 
Their life-span is 
half a year, 
so their growth is quick. 
They quickly 
build their bodies. 
Even after they have
built their bodies, 
there are weeds below. 
Various weeds are below. 
Various weeds allow 
various small insects 
to live. 
When various small insects 
exist there, they will 
help make plants thrive. 
So they will 
make rice crops thrive. 
This is the cycle of life.
According to 
Mr. Kawaguchi, 
nature alone provides 
all the nutrients 
needed by the rice crops, 
and weeds actually play 
an integral role 
in enriching the soil 
for all forms of life.
We tend to think 
that weeds may absorb 
the nutrients that are given 
for the rice crops, 
and thus 
crop yields may be less. 
However, it is not true 
in the natural world. 
When rice is growing 
and various weeds are 
growing within its area, 
the soil becomes rich. 
We can notice this when 
we look at things from 
a little wider perspective.
All life breathes, and 
collects what is necessary 
from the air 
to construct the body. 
Rice also 
constructs its body. 
And a certain grass 
constructs its body. 
And grass B also 
constructs its body 
for its own life. 
All plants photosynthesize 
utilizing solar energy. 
They grow themselves 
and let the lives 
transform into new plants 
after a half year, so 
the soil may become fertile. 
This is how 
the natural world works.
In the uncultivated 
rice field,
bodies of once-living 
organisms pile up 
on and on every half year, 
constructing layers 
of dead organisms. 
It is same with natural 
forests and mountains. 
The layers 
of dead organisms 
become the base 
to nurture the lives 
of the next generation. 
But once 
we cultivate the soil, 
this will not happen. 
If we don’t cultivate 
and leave it to nature, 
the soil becomes 
richer and richer 
year after year, and 
it becomes the foundation 
to nurture the lives 
of future generations.
How does the crop output 
using the Natural 
Farming method compare
with conventional 
farming techniques?
Roughly speaking, 
crop yields harvested 
under the Natural 
Farming method 
are neither more 
nor less productive. 
By the way, 
“tan” is an area used
to measure rice fields. 
When I was using 
chemical fertilizers, 
I got the output 
of about 60 kilograms 
of brown rice per a tan, 
which means 
600 kilograms 
or 10 straw bags of rice 
at the very most and about
eight straw bags of rice 
at the very least. 
So I used to get between 
600 kilograms and about 
500 kilograms a year.
When we adopt the 
Natural Farming method, 
the output would be 
about 20 % less 
or almost equal,
according to my estimation. 
If we fail to take
good care of the crops, 
we could receive 
a little less than that. 
We thank 
Mr. Kawaguchi for 
sharing his knowledge 
of the Natural Farming 
method. 
Please be sure to join us 
next Wednesday 
for Part 2 of our interview 
with Mr. Kawaguchi 
where he will discuss 
other aspects of the method 
such as growing crops 
using a minimal amount 
of water.
For more details on 
Yoshikazu Kawaguchi, 
please visit
Iwazumi2000.cool.ne.jp 
Thank you 
for your kind company 
on today’s edition of 
Planet Earth: 
Our Loving Home. 
Up next is 
Enlightening Entertainment, 
following 
Noteworthy News. 
May we all treasure the 
splendid flora and fauna 
around us. 
Today’s Planet Earth: 
Our Loving Home 
will be presented 
in Japanese, 
with subtitles in Arabic, 
Aulacese (Vietnamese), 
Chinese, English, 
French, German, 
Indonesian, Japanese, 
Korean, Malay, 
Persian, Portuguese, 
Russian, Thai 
and Spanish.
Hallo, eco-wise viewers 
and welcome 
to another edition of 
Planet Earth: 
Our Loving Home. 
Today we will continue 
with an introduction to 
the “Natural Farming” 
method that was created 
by Japanese farmer 
Mr. Yoshikazu Kawaguchi 
of Sakurai City, 
Nara Prefecture, Japan.
This method is gentle 
to both the environment 
and our bodies, because 
it complements nature well. 
He developed 
this eco-friendly style 
of agriculture 
after falling ill from 
the chemical fertilizers 
he routinely applied 
to his crops. 
Under this system 
crops are to grown 
with very little 
human intervention 
and thus nearly everything 
is left to nature. 
The land is not tilled and 
no fertilizers or pesticides 
are used. 
Compared to 
conventional agricultural, 
water usage is minimal.
Mr. Kawaguchi 
also started the Akame
Natural Farming School 
19 years ago for those 
who wished to be trained 
in Natural Farming. 
Students can learn 
the system
through actual practice 
in rice fields.
Let us now join 
Mr. Kawaguchi in his fields.
This is the rice field 
that we haven’t tilled 
for 30 years. 
Here we have used 
no fertilizers or 
agricultural chemicals, 
and we have grown 
mainly rice crops, with 
oat and wheat grains 
as secondary crops, all 
as naturally as possible. 
Winter grasses, especially 
meadow grasses, 
are flourishing now. 
No crops are growing, 
but below, the soil is 
very rich and fertile, 
and is becoming 
a good environment 
for growing. 
I would like you 
to observe what the soil, 
which we haven’t tilled 
for 30 years, looks like. 
You can easily enter here. 
Nothing grows here now, 
but please watch your step 
because there are holes 
from place to place. 
This is rice straw that 
we produced last year. 
You see, under 
the summer grasses the 
decomposing organic life 
that used to live here 
has piled up 
with the passing 
of every six months. 
The lower the layer, 
the more it is decayed. 
And you can see 
that the deeper layers 
have turned into humus 
already, like soil.
What were you sowing 
in the seed beds?
I was taking care of 
rice seed beds. 
In the case of rice, 
we nurture seedlings 
in seed beds 
for one-third of six months,
and then we replant it 
during the young 
seedling period. 
We clear away weeds and 
prepare the seedling bed 
so that it is occupied 
only by rice seeds. 
Therefore, the power of 
the soil becomes weak.
We never do this 
when we plant rice seeds 
in a field full of grass though.
When we scrape
other plants away and 
take other seeds of weeds 
away from the seedling bed, 
some holes are made 
in the seedling bed. 
Because the power of 
the soil has become weak 
we refill them 
with rice bran that 
we harvested a year ago. 
We sprinkle and refill them 
with the empty rice husks 
or we refill it 
with rapeseed meal 
or wheat bran 
grown in the field. 
Wheat bran is called 
“fusuma.” 
Or we sprinkle husks 
of various grains. 
When those things decay, 
they nurture the life 
of rice vibrantly.
Some crops need 
a lot of this, and 
some do not need much, 
and it is different 
according to the crops.
We dig every four meters 
to make ditches, 
and let water drop below 
when we produce wheat, 
because wheat dislikes 
water being near it. 
When we make rice, 
an entrance is closed 
and water is stored. 
Rice likes dampness. 
Their characters 
are just opposite.
So, in order to 
make two opposite things 
in a rice field, 
we first make ditches and 
make ridges in preparation, 
and raise the seedlings 
and plant here 
in the rice field, 
and keep sowing and 
harvesting in repetition. 
The characteristic 
of a rice field is just that. 
In this rice field, 
rice is just in the middle 
of the young seedling 
period, and is 
showing growth like this. 
We let the rice seedling 
grow here for 
one-third of the period, 
or about two months. 
Then we plant 
the seedlings in this field. 
These grasses are 
at the end of their lives 
and are about to die. 
They are still alive though. 
The rice seedlings 
are nicely planted there 
one by one. 
In Japan, rice is grown 
in a flooded rice field and 
harvested after six months. 
By experience, 
Mr. Kawaguchi has found 
that rice crops actually 
need much less water 
during the growing season 
than is believed 
by most farmers.
Of course, 
dampness is necessary.
So for the first two months 
of the six months, 
there is no water, and 
only for three months in 
the following four months 
the rice is in the water. 
So for one month 
in the latter period 
rice does not need 
much water. 
We all assume that when
growing vegetables, 
we need to give them 
plenty of water 
on a daily basis. 
However according to 
Mr. Kawaguchi, 
this is not the case. 
If there is grass in the field, 
sufficient moisture 
will be retained for
the vegetables to thrive.
Once we start 
to water them, 
vegetables won't grow well 
without water. 
However, the ground 
won't be dry, because 
there are grasses below. 
And since we don’t till, 
the soil won't be dry. 
Or dry grasses or 
once-living organisms 
are piled up below, 
so the soil won’t be dry. 
Therefore, 
it is not necessary 
for us to water 
even after we sow seeds, 
because it would 
rain sufficiently 
and the ground 
would get damp anyway. 
So, it is not fundamental 
to water. 
 
However, 
when we sow seeds 
later than usual 
and we want them 
to germinate early, 
or when sunny weather 
has been continuing 
for many days, we would 
give water only once, 
or before we transplant 
seedlings, we would 
give them enough water. 
We give water according
to the weather and
how dry the ground is. 
But basically, 
there is no need to water. 
This is much better. 
When we return, 
we will meet 
some of the students 
who are learning 
the Natural Farming 
method from 
Mr. Yoshikazu Kawaguchi. 
Please stay tuned 
to Supreme Master 
Television. 
Welcome back to 
Planet Earth: 
Our Loving Home where 
we are speaking with 
Mr. Yoshikazu Kawaguchi 
from Sakurai City, 
Nara Prefecture, Japan 
about the 
Natural Farming method.
Mr. Kawaguchi raises 
a diverse number 
of crops in his fields. 
He now introduces us 
to some of them.
Around here we mix crops. 
According to 
their relationship 
with the rain, sunlight, 
temperature and so on 
some crops 
are appropriate here 
and others aren’t. 
Here are chrysanthemums 
and green onions 
and here are tomatoes. 
Santo greens or 
Chinese cabbages are here. 
Or, these are radishes. 
These are carrots. 
A variety of vegetables 
are planted 
in a mixed fashion. 
We call it “konshoku.”
When we plant 
many kinds of plants in 
a mixed fashion like this, 
the ground below 
will make the crops 
bring various blessings 
owing to the condition of 
the soil and the grasses 
growing there 
and damage from 
continuously planting 
may disappear. 
That’s why 
we plant different crops 
at the same time. 
In short, we can plant 
various crops we want 
according to the climate 
without worrying so much.
Mr. Kawaguchi founded 
the Akame 
Natural Farming School 
so that others may learn 
his farming techniques. 
The school is free 
and he has taught 
more than 5600 students 
over the past 19 years. 
We asked him about 
the typical background 
of his students.
Let me see, 
most live in big cities: 
they were born and 
brought up in big cities.
So, some are office workers 
doing desk jobs in 
a very ordinary company, 
both men and women. 
But there are 
more women in number. 
And some are self-employed. 
And some are teachers. 
And unexpectedly 
many are working 
in the medical field.
And, some are housewives. 
So, they have various jobs. 
Maybe they cover almost 
all the jobs in the world.
Of course, each is here 
for his or her own reason, 
but what is 
the major reason 
for them to be here?
I think that 
the fundamental reason 
is to take good care 
of their lives. 
To gain satisfaction in life, 
and to take good care 
of this given body 
which is given for 
a hundred years or so. 
To take good care 
of this physical body 
and to ensure 
the safety of food.
Let us now meet some 
of his splendid students.
What made you come here 
to the Akame 
Natural Farming School?
I have been interested 
in environmental issues, 
and have decided 
to learn here in order to 
practice the best method.
Are you already 
practicing this method 
at home?
No, not yet. 
But I think I will do that 
in future.
What made you come here 
and study 
the Natural Farming?
Basically, because of 
the same reason 
Mr. Kawaguchi 
has changed to the 
Natural Farming method. 
I used to engage 
in agriculture with 
agricultural chemicals. 
But I didn’t like it 
because I didn’t feel well 
afterwards. 
I am very happy when 
I work with many people 
with various ideas 
who are gathering here. 
I have become very joyful 
both mentally 
and physically.
When you come here, 
you are embraced 
by very warm-hearted 
and gentle people. 
So I look forward to 
visiting here every month.
How long have you been 
learning here?
About eight years. 
I have been renting 
a little field to practice 
this method of agriculture.
Really?
What is your impression 
of this school?
While I am working 
alone or all of us are 
working together under 
the blessed environment 
here in nature, I am very 
thrilled with excitement. 
Whenever I come here 
my heart dances with joy.
We deeply thank 
Mr. Yoshikazu Kawaguchi 
for sharing his 
Natural Farming method 
with others 
and for practicing 
a form of agriculture that 
respects our environment 
and all the beings 
that reside within it. 
May many more people 
soon practice 
this wonderful style 
of natural farming.
For more details on 
Yoshikazu Kawaguchi, 
please visit
Iwazumi2000.cool.ne.jp 
Thank you 
for your kind company 
on today’s edition of 
Planet Earth: 
Our Loving Home. 
Up next is 
Enlightening Entertainment, 
following 
Noteworthy News. 
May we all be embraced 
by Divine Love 
and Light from Heaven.