The Monshu (門主), or keeper of the gate is a term sometimes used in Japanese Buddhism to denote the head of a monastery, as in the case of Jōdo-shū and Tendai Buddhism, but in the case of the Nishi Hongan-ji sub-sect of Jōdo Shinshū Buddhism, it refers to the spiritual leader of the sect, and direct descendant of its founder Shinran.
The Monshu in Jōdo Shinshū Buddhism was the guardian of Shinran's mausoleum, as well as the head of the sect. This position was started when the youngest daughter of Shinran, Kakushinni, installed her son as the custodian of the small shrine which held Shinran's image and ashes at Ōtani, in Kyoto. In time the small shrine grew into what is now the Hongan-ji temples (east and west). When the temple split into two temples, the West Temple, or Nishi Honganji continued to use the term Monshu, while the East Temple, or Higashi Hongan-ji gradually adopted the term "Hossu".
In the line of Monshu descendants, noteworthy Monshu include:
Solo voy con mi pena
sola va mi condena
correr es mi destino
para burlar la ley
Perdido en el corazon
de la grande Babilon,
me dicen el clandestino
por no llevar papel
Pa'una ciudad del Norte
yo me fui a trabajar,
mi vida la deje
entre Celta y Gibraltar
soy una raya en el mar
fantasma en la ciudad,
mi vida va prohibida
dice la autoridad
Solo voy con mi pena
sola va mi condena
correr es mi destino
por no llevar papel
Perdido en el corazon
de la grande Babilon,
me dicen el clandestino
yo soy el quiebra ley
Chorus
Mano Negra
clandestino
Peruano
clandestino
Africano
clandestino
Marihuana
Ilegal
Solo voy con mi pena
sola va mi condena
correr es mi destino
para burlar la ley
Perdido en el corazon
de la grande Babilon,
me dicen el clandestino
por no llevar papel
Nigeriano
clandestino
Argeliano
clandestino
Mano Negra