Yasukuni Shrine
by
Mike (in Tokyo) Rogers
by Mike (in Tokyo) Rogers
Circumstances
rule men and not men rule circumstances.
~ Euripides
Every
year, since 1979, Japan has been subjected to criticism from China,
North and South Korea, and the West for its past Asian aggression.
The focal point of these attacks have centered on the Japanese Prime
Minister visiting Yasukuni Shrine. Yasukuni Shrine is the place
where 14 Class A war criminals (including war-time Prime Minister
Hideki Tojo) were enshrined after the war’s end. One thing must
be made perfectly clear here: Yasukuni Shrine is not run by the
State and it is not a cemetery. There are no bodies buried there.
So what is the problem? The questions that need to be asked when
discussing Yasukuni Shrine are: Is Yasukuni Shrine a symbol and
glorification of Japanese militarism? Are the visits to Yasukuni
Shrine by a Japanese Prime Minister a further glorification of Japan’s
militaristic past? Are these visits against the law requiring separation
of church and state? Do these visits constitute a denial of Japan’s
past war crimes and deeds? Would Yasukuni Shrine be at the center
of a resurgent Japanese militarism if one were to come about? I
would answer an emphatic "No" to all these questions.
But for anyone to understand more about the controversy concerning
Yasukuni Shrine, one must look at the history of the shrine to come
up with an educated and objective opinion. Here, I have attempted
to make this complicated issue easy to understand in the shortest
amount of space possible.

The
History of Yasukuni Shrine
Between
1868 and 1869, the Boshin
War was fought in Japan between forces loyal to the Imperial
family and a feudal military dictatorship known as the Tokugawa
Shogunate. Despite having a 3:1 numerical advantage in military
forces – as well as training by French military advisors – the forces
of the Tokugawa Shogunate were routed in a battle near Kyoto which
led to the unconditional surrender of the Shogunate’s forces in
1869. This sealed the accession to the Imperial throne for Emperor
Meiji in an event called "The
Meiji Restoration."
Yasukuni
Shrine (which literally translates into "peaceful nation shrine")
was constructed in June 1869 to commemorate all victims of the Boshin
war – as well as those who died in earlier wars since 1853. This
beginning is an important point in understanding what Yasukuni Shrine
is all about. Yasukuni Shrine was built to respect all of Japan’s
war dead – not just the war dead from the Second World War – all
of Japan’s war dead regardless of circumstances.

Samurai soldiers
from the Boshin War
After
Japan’s defeat in World War II, the US Occupational Authorities
ordered Yasukuni Shrine to become a secular institution or a religious
institution wholly separate from the Japanese government. Yasukuni
Shrine, of course, stayed with being known as a religious institution
that is privately funded.
Japanese
Religious Practices
If
you were to ask most Japanese people today if they were religious,
they would tell you, "No." That being said, the Buddhist
church in Japan – namely the Soka
Gakkai claims to have a higher percentage of followers than
any other church in the country.
Even
though most Japanese would tell you that they are not religious,
today’s Japanese follow a decidedly strange religious ritual – especially
from a Westerner’s point of view: They annually visit a Shinto shrine
on New Year; have weddings in Christian or Buddhist churches; and
practice a sort of Shinto/Buddhist ritual at funerals. The ashes
of the dead are entombed at Buddhist or Christian cemeteries. Shinto
religion, although a minor one, is a purely Japanese religion. And,
as they are famous for, the Japanese family unit is still strong
to this day and most Japanese have a small temple even in their
homes to pray for the souls of their loved ones who have passed
away.
Shinto
religious beliefs say that when a person dies, they become Kami
(a spirit or god). From ancient times, the Japanese believed that
the spirits of the dead remained upon the land to be worshipped
by their ancestors. In a book called Senzo no Hanashi (Talk
of Ancestors) published in 1946 and written by Kunio Yanagita, he
states:
"After
death, the soul remains eternally upon this land. It is believed
that the soul does not travel to a distant world. This faith has
endured for centuries until the present day… Upon leaving the
body, the soul is in a more peaceful a pure state far from the
hustle and bustle of this world."
Who
Is Buried at Yasukuni Shrine?
No one. There
are no bones, ashes, graves, graveyard, or headstones at Yasukuni
Shrine. Only the souls of the dead are "placed" there.
As of 2004, in Yasukuni Shrine’s Book of Souls, there are the names
of 2,466,532 Japanese and former colonial soldiers (mostly Korean
and Taiwanese) listed as being honored among the dead. The priests
merely perform purification rituals for the souls of the deceased.
After the war ended, Japan and the United States signed the San
Francisco Treaty in 1953. In that treaty – Article 11 states:
Japan accepts
the judgments of the International Military Tribunal for the Far
East and of other Allied War Crimes Courts both within and outside
Japan, and will carry out the sentences imposed thereby upon Japanese
nationals imprisoned in Japan. The power to grant clemency, to
reduce sentences and to parole with respect to such prisoners
may not be exercised except on the decision of the Government
or Governments which imposed the sentence in each instance, and
on recommendation of Japan. In the case of persons sentenced by
the International Military Tribunal for the Far East, such power
may not be exercised except on the decision of a majority of the
Governments represented on the Tribunal, and on the recommendation
of Japan.
Thus,
since all convicted Japanese war criminals were either executed
or sentenced to life in prison, they paid their penalty – as prescribed
by the Allied victors of the war – and then the souls of the dead
were "cleansed" by ritual at Yasukuni Shrine as was the
case with all who died in Japan’s wars – whether they be Japanese,
Chinese, Korean, women, children, and animals.
Hate the
crime but not the person. ~ Ancient Japanese Proverb
The
Class A war criminals had already paid for their crimes on this
earth through their deaths and executions. The Japanese point of
view on this matter means that these people had paid their debt
to society. This type of thinking should be very easy to understand
for people coming from a Christian background. If these people are
not to be redeemed after their death, then when will they be? Only
God can answer this question and not man. This is why the Japanese
war dead – regardless of their circumstances while living on this
earth – are enshrined at Yasukuni Shrine.
After
signing the San Francisco Treaty, the post-war Japanese government
asked all the Allied powers to exempt all war criminals from past
deeds. By this time, only 5 Japanese war-time leaders were left
alive. Four had their lifetime imprisonments pardoned and one had
his 20-year imprisonment forgiven. Seven others, including Prime
Minister Hideki Tojo, who were sentenced to death by hanging were
already dead. Upon receiving this request for pardons, the Allied
Powers agreed. The Nationalist government of China signed an agreement
with Japan called, The
Treaty of Taipei that recognized the San Francisco Treaty and
its articles.
Since
the Japanese lost World War II, there were only Japanese war criminals.
If you believe, as I do, that all war is a crime, then the leaders
of the US government and some Allied military leaders were war criminals
also. That is not lessening the severity of Japanese war crimes,
it is merely to point out that only losers are convicted of war
crimes. It would be ridiculous to claim that Allied leaders who
ordered the bombings of civilian cities in Japan are not guilty
of murdering civilians; and therefore guilty of war crimes. It also
stands to reason that the current US leadership is guilty of war
crimes in Iraq. But that is not my point here. Keep in mind that
no one complains when a US president visits Arlington National Cemetery;
or when former US President Ronald Reagan visited the World War
II military cemetery in Bitburg, Germany, only some Jewish groups
protested. Nevertheless, Yasukuni Shrine cannot be directly compared
to these military cemeteries as Yasukuni Shrine is not a cemetery;
it is a shrine commemorating the souls of people who died in war.
Why
Do Asian Countries Complain About Visits to Yasukuni Shrine?
Actually,
the only complaints come from the governments of only three countries:
China, South Korea, and North Korea; you won’t hear any complaints
from any of the other South East Asian nations. The average Japanese
on the street doesn’t understand why these countries get upset.
Common sense dictates that what a person does in one’s own country
is none of anyone else’s business. Let’s go back to the example
of Arlington National Cemetery: do the Japanese, Germans, Vietnamese,
Cambodians, etc, etc, complain when a US president visits there?
No. So, then, why should anyone care whether or not a Japanese Prime
Minister visits a church?
The
fact of the matter is that Japanese Prime Ministers had been visiting
Yasukuni Shrine every year – as is custom – since the end of the
war. Whether it be the Japanese leaders after World War II or the
leaders of the defeated south after the so-called "Civil War" in
the United States, what kind of a leader would a man be considered
if he were not to honor the dead, regardless of circumstances?
The
complaints about Prime Ministerial visits to Yasukuni Shrine started
after Japan’s economic boom of the 1960’s and 1970’s. Until 1985,
Japanese Prime Ministers had been visiting Yasukuni Shrine to pay
respects to the war dead – to all the war dead over the history
of post-Meiji Restoration Japan – 57 times (nearly every year since
the war ended) and there were never any complaints from Japan’s
neighbors. Of course, honoring a countries war dead has religious
implications, but in 1979 and 1980, Japan’s Prime Minister, Masayuki
Ohira, visited Yasukuni Shrine 3 times. Former Prime Minister Ohira
is a devout Catholic. So to claim that politicians visiting a church
constitutes a revival of Japanese militarism or denial of past war
crimes is just absurd.
This
is an important part of the misunderstanding about Yasukuni Shrine.
The shrine is in no way financed by the State. It is illegal for
the State to make any financial donations to Yasukuni Shrine. The
Prime Minister – as an individual – and just like the President
of the United States – has the right to visit any church of his
choice.
The
Japanese thinking on this matter goes like this: the current constitution
of Japan, written by the US Occupation Authority, requires a separation
of religion and politics, but the United States itself does not
follow those rules. Doesn’t the US President put his hand on the
bible to take an oath of office at inauguration? Is it not impossible
to rid any country of some form of religious rites in public and
private ceremonies? This is why the Japanese don’t understand why
China, South Korea, and North Korea make such a big deal out of
some elected official visiting a shrine.
So,
then why do China, South Korea, and North Korea make such
a fuss about Yasukuni Shrine? If you were to ask a Japanese nationalist
about it, I’m sure they’d say because those countries just want
money from Japan. I suppose something might be said for that. Actually,
I suspect that the average person on the street in China or Korea
couldn’t care less about what some politician is doing in another
country. I do strongly suspect that the government’s of China and
the two Koreas are using Yasukuni Shrine as a method to whip up
nationalism and as a way to blame Japan for their economic problems;
Japan is a handy tool to take people’s eyes off of the problems
at home. This seems to be especially true in North Korea. The evidence
for this assumption is that until the 1990’s, Taiwan was a very
strong anti-Japanese country; today they are pro-Japan.
Regardless,
until the day comes when war is abolished, Yasukuni Shrine will
probably always be a sticking point in the relations between Japan
and its neighbors. The point that must be remembered is that Yasukuni
Shrine is not a shrine glorifying Japanese militarism, it is a shrine
to pray for the forgiveness and rest of the souls who died in war.
For whatever reason, showing respect to the dead should be a sign
of basic human compassion. Anyone, in any country, should be able
to respect that. For when it comes to war, everyone is a victim
of the State in some way.
Thanks to Robert Klassen.
December
8, 2005
Mike
(in Tokyo) Rogers [send
him mail] was born and raised in the USA and moved to Japan
in 1984. He has the distinction of being fired from every FM radio
station in Tokyo – one of them three times. His first book, Schizophrenic
in Japan, is now on sale.
Copyright
© 2005 LewRockwell.com
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(in Tokyo) Rogers Archives
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