Shinto and the
Sacred Dimension of Nature
Dr.Carmen Blacker, University of
Cambridge
Excerpted from the international symposium, "Shinto
and Japanese Culture" organised by International Shinto Foundation in
association with Japan Research Center, SOAS, University of London
From 30 years of study of Shinto and of respect for its
divinities I am convinced that it can guide us to a new way of looking
at the world around us. It can remind us that there is a holy dimension
in natural objects and that space is not homogeneous, that there are
indeed places imbued with the presence of something "wholly other."
First then, the Shinto which the new Foundation seeks to make better
known throughout the world is not State Shinto, which was a recent and
disastrous aberration of the traditional beliefs. What exactly was this
warped creed, and how did it rise to such power?
You will all remember that in 1868 a great historical
change occurred in Japan known as the Meiji Restoration. The feudal
system under the Tokugawa Shogunate was abolished and the country was
united as never before in its history under the rule of the Emperor in
Tokyo, and an oligarchy of the enterprising men who had brought about
this great change.
This change was not only a political and institutional
one. It was also a mental and spiritual one. In 1868 the Meiji
oligarchs found a loose federation of feudal domains, each fiercely
loyal to its own feudal lord, ruled by a defunct Shogunate and a
mysterious, invisible Emperor secluded within his palace in Kyoto. For
such a dispersed people a new myth, a new ideology was essential, a
myth which would make them of "one mind and one spirit," with a sense
of their own unified identity and destiny. This new myth must clearly
be backed up, legitimised, by religious sanctions.
--
Meiji oligarchs turned to Shinto. --
The religion which the Meiji oligarchs turned to for
support was not Buddhism, though there had been notable Buddhist
emperors and kings in other Asian countries. They turned to the older
religion in Japan for their inspiration, Shinto.
But at first sight it would seem that they could
scarcely have found less promising material for their purpose than the
Shinto which existed before 1868; no religion less likely to form the
basis of a new myth of a unified and specially chosen people.
In the first place, the very term Shinto covered an
immensely wide field of religious cult and beIief. It covered first the
phenomenon of thousands, not to say tens of thousands of small
independent shrines scattered throughout Japan and dedicated to an
immense number of the divinities called 'kami'. These kami were
extremely many and various, deriving from many different spiritual
origins: from deified ancestors, from pacified angry ghosts, from holy
trees and pools, from phallic stones, and from the forces that bestow
supernatural skill, what we call genius, on certain arts and crafts.
Some such divinities often dated back to remote periods of prehistory.
Others were more recent. But they were all called by the same general
name of kami.
The next step was to demonstrate that the Japanese
people were uniquely special, given a special act of creation different
from other nations, and bound together by ties of a common divine
origin and destiny. To this end the oligarchs made clever use of the
old myths of the Kojiki, recorded in the 8th century. Thus the Sun
Goddess Amaterasu Omikami, whose cult before 1868 was unknown in many
parts of Japan, was raised to a paramomt glory she had never enjoyed
before. She was proclaimed to be the divine Ancestor of the Imperial
house from whom in an unbroken line had sprung the succession of
Emperors to the present day, and whose heritage bestowed on Japan a
uniquely sacred quality denied to other nations. Her cult site at Ise
was given supreme importance and prominence, and the mythology
surrounding her was proclaimed to be the "immemorial heritage of the
entire Japanese people."
Most important of all, the Emperor was translated from
his shadowy seclusion in Kyoto, where for more than 200 years he had
never left the precincts of his palace, to the new capital of Tokyo.
There he was promoted to a religious and symbolic role of extraordinary
potency. He was the direct descendant of the Sun Goddess, a living link
in the golden chain that attached Japan to her divine origins; he was
high priest of Shinto and the focus of all emotions of loyalty and
devotion, for whom it was a supreme honour to die.
The cult of this divinised figure, scarcely related to
the human being who was its vessel and vehicle, was promoted by
inexorable indoctrination in schools and colleges. The portrait of the
Emperor was worshipped as a holy icon. The words of his Rescript of
1890 were revered as holy scripture. Those who had died for him in the
various wars since 1868 were devoutly worshipped as heroes in the
Yasukuni Shrine. And the indoctrination in schools was backed up by the
activities of the police in suppressing any cult considered remotely
inimical to State Shinto, on the charge of lese majeste.
--
State Shinto collapsed in 1945. --
These policies had their terrible culmination in the
Second World War, and it was only in l945 that this strange, illusory
structure of State Shinto collapsed. The Occupation lost no time in
disestablishing all that pertained to the cult, and in offering the
Japanese people complete freedom to worship any religion they liked,
and to form any new religious groups that they liked. It lost no time
also in seeing that the Emperor declared himself to be a human being,
with no pretensions to divinity in any form.
So Shinto as a religion was thus reduced to much the
same status that it had held before 1868. The small independent shrines
proliferated, the bigger ones with their ramified branches flourished,
while literally scores of new groups, founded by a charismatic leader
claiming special connection with a certain kami, appeared a1l over the
country to fill the vacuum left by the collapse of the state cult
hitherto held to be invincible and absolute.

So here is my first point. State Shinto was a recent
aberration of the beliefs that had peaceably existed in Japan for
centuries, and animated Japanese culture, literature and folklore in a
unique and natural manner. Its story rams home to us the salutary
lesson of the terrifying way in which the powerful symbols of myth and
religion can be manipulated, and how from the most unlikely beginnings
they can be used, not only to weld together a new nation state, but
also to create one in which a totalitarian fanaticism utterly alien to
the real tradition of the culture can drive that nation to disaster. It
is a salutary reminder also of what ravages can be perpetrated by what
a historian Hugh Trevor-Roper called "the invention of tradition."
So I repeat, for I have heard doubts expressed on this
point in various quarters, that it is not State Shinto which the
organisers of this new International Shinto Foundation are seeking to
promote abroad. How anyway could such creed possibly have any
international appeal? We need not fear any revival of the Emperor cult
or the special destiny of Japan. It is something older and more
universal which we hope will be explored and presented. Something which
has always been part of Japanese culture, but which can be understood
elsewhere.
--
Return to the origin of Japanese culture. --
Shinto can remind us that the natural world is not a
machine put there for our sole enjoyment. It does contain a dimension
which induces reverence, respect and the intuition that we are part of
this subtle fabric, not its exploiter. Shinto can help us look again
with new eyes at the world about us, and see that what our grandfathers
may have dismissed as superstition, and the missionaries sought to
deride as idolatry, is in fact a fundamental if hidden truth which we
have neglected for too long.
So I welcome the promotion of this kind of Shinto, which
has always been an integral part of Japanese culture, but which now has
wider implication for the world than for Japan alone. Hence I further
welcome this 'international', the 'kokusai', in the title, and hope
that we can be open enough ourselves to relearn this ancient though
forgotten dimension of experience. Thank you.
|