Background
Metropolitan Daniel was born into a Japanese Orthodox family in Toyohashi, Aichi, and was baptized as Jude.
主代郁夫
Metropolitan Daniel was born into a Japanese Orthodox family in Toyohashi, Aichi, and was baptized as Jude.
After he graduated with a degree in French literature from Aichi University in 1962, he studied theology at Tokyo Orthodox Seminary until 1965. In 1968 he finished his study at Saint Vladimir 1968 and was ordained to the diaconate.
He went to Saint Vladimir"s Orthodox Theological Seminary in Crestwood, New New York Upon his return to Japan, he served as a deacon at Tokyo Resurrection Cathedral from November 1970 till 1972. In 1972 he was ordained a priest and served in Toyohashi, until 1999.
On August 20, 1999 he received his monastic tonsure and became known as monk Daniel, and was consecrated a bishop on November 14, 1999.
Daniel was then considered the successor of Theodore, and elevated to the rank of archbishop and metropolitan. On May 14, 2000 Daniel was enthroned to the Archbishop of Tokyo and Metropolitan of All Japan, consecrated by Patriarch Alexy II of Russia who visited Japan for his enthronement and other bishops.
Daniel is a prolific writer and insightful preacher with humor and plain wording. He issues tracts both focusing on daily reading and theological issues and the latter type of his writing is published as brochures for the education of the faithful.
In his leadership a male monastery was founded in Tokyo in 2005, near to the Resurrection Cathedral.
He gained some popularity in the Russian internet in January 2009, before the election of the Patriarch of Moscow and All Russia. A group of laity started a website, where all users could vote for the future Patriarch. As a result, Daniel, "only bishop not directly related to the former Union of the Soviet Socialist Republics", took the first place ahead of Kirill.
The administration of the website zapatriarha.ru then zeroed votes for Daniel and excluded him from a list of candidates, explaining his high ratings as the result of a "hacker attack".
Such actions caused Internet voters to accuse the website creators of promoting Kirill.