Shūmei Ōkawa Explained

Shūmei Ōkawa
Native Name Lang:ja
Birth Date:6 December 1886
Birth Place:Sakata, Yamagata, Japan
Death Place:Tokyo, Japan
Known For:
  • Founder of the nationalist organisation Yūzonsha, alongside Kita Ikki
  • Founder of the nationalist magazine Nippon
  • Involvement in two failed military coups against the Japanese government (March 1931 and October 1931)
  • Prominent broadcaster of Japanese government propaganda during World War II
Occupation:Educator, political philosopher, Islamic scholar, historian
Parents:Shūkei Ōkawa (d. 1914)
Education:Tokyo Imperial University, 1911, Ph.D. 1926
Employer:
Footnotes:[1]

was a Japanese nationalist and Pan-Asianist writer, known for his publications on Japanese history, philosophy of religion, Indian philosophy, and colonialism.

Ōkawa advocated a form of Pan-Asianism which promoted Asian solidarity as a cover for Japanese imperialism and beliefs in Japanese racial supremacy. He co-founded the Japanese radical nationalist group Yūzonsha, and in 1926 he published his most influential work:, which was so popular that it would be reprinted 46 times by the end of World War II. Ōkawa was also involved in a number of attempted coups d'état by the Japanese military, including the March Incident. After his arrest following the March incident, Ōkawa was protected by the intervention of General Kazushige Ugaki, and received a sentence of five years in prison, of which he served two years. He continued to publish numerous books and articles, helping popularize the idea that a "clash of civilizations" between the East and West was inevitable, and that Japan was destined to be the liberator and protector of Asia against the United States and other Western nations.

In the Tokyo tribunal after the end of World War II, Ōkawa was prosecuted as a class-A war criminal based on his role as an ideologue. The Allies described him as the "Japanese Goebbels", and of the twenty-eight people indicted with this charge, he was the only one not a military officer or government official. The case against him was dropped when he was found mentally unfit to stand trial. Ōkawa's writings were used in the final verdict as part of the evidence for the crime of conspiracy to commit aggression.

Background

Ōkawa was born in Sakata, Yamagata, Japan in 1886. He graduated from Tokyo Imperial University in 1911, where he had studied Vedic literature and classical Indian philosophy. After graduation, Ōkawa worked for the Imperial Japanese Army General Staff doing translation work. He had a sound knowledge of German, French, English, Sanskrit and Pali.[2]

He briefly flirted with socialism in his college years, but in the summer of 1913 he read a copy of Sir Henry Cotton's New India, or India in transition (1886, revised 1905) which dealt with the contemporary political situation. After reading this book, Ōkawa abandoned "complete cosmopolitanism" (sekaijin) for Pan-Asianism. Later that year articles by Anagarika Dharmapala and Maulavi Barkatullah appeared in the magazine Michi, published by Dōkai, a religious organization in which Ōkawa was later to play a prominent part. While he studied, he briefly housed the Indian independence leader Rash Behari Bose.

After years of study of foreign philosophies, he became increasingly convinced that the solution to Japan's social and political problems lay in an alliance with Asian independence movements, a revival of pre-modern Japanese philosophy, and a renewed emphasis on the kokutai principles.[3]

In 1918, Ōkawa went to work for the South Manchurian Railway Company, under its East Asian Research Bureau. Together with Ikki Kita he founded the nationalist discussion group and political club Yūzonsha. In the 1920s, he became an instructor of history and colonial policy at Takushoku University, where he was also active in the creation of anti-capitalist and nationalist student groups.[4] Meanwhile, he introduced Rudolf Steiner's theory of social threefolding to Japan. He developed a friendship with Aikido founder Morihei Ueshiba during this time period.

In 1922, he published Fukkô Ajia no Shomondai in 1922. Ōkawa hailed the movements started by Mahatma Gandhi in India and Mustafa Kemal in Turkey as new types of Asian revival.[5]

Ōkawa believed in a narrative of history based on a dichotomy between Eastern and Western civilizations, writing that "world history, in its true sense of the word, is nothing but a chronicle of antagonism, struggle and unification between the Orient and the Occident". Ōkawa advocated a form of Pan-Asianism which promoted Asian solidarity as a cover for Japanese imperialism and beliefs in Japanese racial supremacy. He wrote that there would be a war "for the establishment of a new world" between Japan and the United States. In 1926, Ōkawa published his most influential work:, which was so popular that it was reprinted 46 times by the end of World War II. He continued to publish numerous books and articles, helping popularize the idea that a "clash of civilizations" between the East and West was inevitable, and that Japan was destined to be the liberator and protector of Asia against the United States and other Western nations.[6]

Involvement in attempted coups

In the early 1930s, Ōkawa was involved in a number of attempted coups d'état by the Japanese military.

During the March Incident, Ōkawa was a leader in attempting to foment a riot outside the Diet Building in Tokyo, which was intended to initiate the coup. When the riot failed to occur, Ōkawa wrote a letter to General Kazushige Ugaki explaining the plot and asking for his cooperation. Ugaki declined, but when the plotters were arrested after making another attempt at the riot, he intervened to hush up the whole collapsed affair and ensured that the plotters received very mild punishments.[7] [8] For his role in the March incident, Ōkawa was sentenced to five years in prison in 1935.[9] Released after only two years, he briefly re-joined the South Manchurian Railway Company before accepting a post as a professor at Hosei University in 1939.

Tokyo War Crimes Tribunal

In the Tokyo tribunal after the end of World War II, Ōkawa was prosecuted as a class-A war criminal based on his role as an ideologue.[10] Of the twenty-eight people indicted with this charge, he was the only one not a military officer or government official. The Allies described him as the "Japanese Goebbels"[11] and said he had long agitated for a war between Japan and the West. For example, in his 1924 book Asia, Europe, and Japan, he had predicted an inevitable war to be fought between Eastern and Western civilizations, with Japan and the United States as the respective leaders, and discussed what he later described as "the sublime mission of Japan in the coming world war". In pre-trial hearings, Ōkawa said that his 1924 writings were merely a translation and commentary on Vladimir Solovyov's geopolitical philosophy, and "did not necessarily constitute a plan for a Japanese attack".[12]

During the trial, Ōkawa behaved erratically, including dressing in pajamas, sitting barefoot, and slapping the head of former prime minister Hideki Tōjō while shouting in German "Inder! Kommen Sie!" (Come, Indian!). Ōkawa said that the court was a farce and not even worthy of being called a legal court. He also at one point shouted "This is act one of the comedy!". U.S. Army psychiatrist Daniel Jaffe examined him and reported that he was unfit to stand trial. The presiding judge Sir William Webb concluded that he was mentally ill and dropped the case against him. Some thought he was feigning madness. Because of the diagnosis, he was able to avoid potentially sharing the fate of the other defendants, of whom seven were hanged and the rest imprisoned.[13] [14] Ōkawa's writings were used by the prosecution and the final verdict as evidence for the crime of conspiracy to commit aggression.[12]

After the war

Ōkawa was transferred from jail to a US Army hospital in Japan, which confirmed his mental illness caused by syphilis. Later, he was transferred to Tokyo Metropolitan Matsuzawa Hospital, a mental hospital, where he completed the third Japanese translation of the Quran.[15] He was released from hospital in 1948, shortly after the end of the trial. He spent the final years of his life writing a memoir, Anraku no Mon.

In October 1957, Prime Minister of India Jawaharlal Nehru requested to meet with him during a brief visit to Japan. The invitation was delivered to Ōkawa's house by an Indian Embassy official, who found that Ōkawa was already on his deathbed and was unable to leave the house. He died on 24 December 1957.[16]

Major publications

References

Further reading

External links

Notes and References

  1. Book: Okawa Shumei . Merriam Webster's Biographical Dictionary . . . 1995 . . GALEK1681157864 . . 20 January 2014. Biography in Context.
  2. Wakabayashi, Modern Japanese Thought, p. 226
  3. Samuels, Securing Japan: Tokyo's Grand Strategy and the Future of East Asia, p. 18
  4. Calvocoressi, The Penguin History of the Second World War p. 657
  5. Book: Aydin, C. . The Politics of Anti-Westernism in Asia: Visions of World Order in Pan-Islamic and Pan-Asian Thought . Columbia University Press . Columbia studies in international and global history . 2007 . 978-0-231-13778-2 . 2023-07-23 . 150.
  6. Wakabayashi, Modern Japanese Thought, pp. 226–227
  7. Harries, Soldiers of the Sun: The Rise and Fall of the Imperial Japanese Army, page 147
  8. Samuels, Machiavelli's Children: Leaders And Their Legacies In Italy And Japan, page 155
  9. Jansen, The Making of Modern Japan, p. 572
  10. https://imtfe.law.virginia.edu/collections/tavenner/8/10/brief-outline-acts-career-dr-shumei-okawa 15 March 1946 Tavenner Papers & IMTFE Official Records Files on Defendants; Okawa, Oshima 1946 University of Virginia Law Library
  11. When Anticolonialism Masks Authoritarianism. Hofnung T. TIME. 30 January 2024. 7 February 2024.
  12. Aydin . Cemil . 3 March 2008 . Japan’s Pan-Asianism And The Legitimacy Of Imperial World Order, 1931-1945 . The Asia-Pacific Journal: Japan Focus . 6 . 3.
  13. Maga, Judgment at Tokyo: The Japanese War Crimes Trials
  14. News: Sarah . Halzack . A Curious Madness: An American Combat Psychiatrist, a Japanese War Crimes Suspect, and an Unsolved Mystery from World War II . 17 January 2014 . B7 . . 30 January 2014. (review of book by Eric Jaffe)
  15. While Ōkawa made reference to the Arabic original, he made his translation from about ten language editions, including English, Chinese, German, and French, as his knowledge of Arabic was only basic. See Krämer, "Pan-Asianism's Religious Undercurrents," pp. 627–630.
  16. Sekioka Hideyuki. Ōkawa Shūmei no Dai-Ajia-Shugi. Tokyo: Kodansha, 2007. p. 203.