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Title: Kõtoku Shüsui
Author: CIRA-Nippon
Date: January 1975
Language: en
Topics: Japan, biography
Source: https://libcom.org/library/k%C3%B5toku-sh%C3%BCsui-founder-modern-anarchism-japan

CIRA-Nippon

Kõtoku Shüsui

Kõtoku Shüsui, whose name has become a kind of legend since the war

(although in the country town where he was born, people still look

embarrassed if you mention his name), was Japan's first real anarchist

and the Japanese movement's first revolutionary martyr. At the time when

Japan was launching its imperialistic programme, Kõtoku opposed

nationalism and militarism despite the popular fervour aroused by the

way against Russia in 1904. In 1906 he predicted an eventual war with

the US.

He was born in a small country town in southern Japan, one with strong

traditionalistic tendencies, in 1871, At the age of ten (!) he began

publishing his first political newspaper; at 15 he ran away to Tokyo,

but was soon expelled under the new Peace Preservation Law. From the

beginning, Kõtoku was a warrior in the samurai tradition. Thus he

opposed Christianity at a time when the dominant trend in the Japanese

movement was Christian Socialism (his last work was titled 'Rubbing Out

Christ'), and never really trusted parliamentary socialism.

In 1893 he got a job translating cables from Europe, so he became

familiar with developments overseas. Soon after, his family provided him

with a submissive Japanese wife from his home district. Within two

months he sent her back and divorced her, saying that she did not match

his ideal of a wife.

By 1897 Kõtoku had announced his intention to "investigate socialism".

Since he had previously placed responsibility for checking Japan's moral

decline' in the hands of a few upright individuals, it was a big step to

take. In 1898 he began working for a radical scandal-sheet named Yorozu

Chõhõ; as a result of his editorials it became the most popular paper in

Japan. At the same time, following the railway workers'strike in 1897,

modern Japan's first big labour dispute, Kõtoku saw for the first time

the need for union organization and helped form the Rõdõ Kumiai

Kisei-kai (Association of Labour Unions), Japan's first body aimed at

promoting unionism. Shortly after this, he became a member of the

Society for the Study of Socialism along with many future socialist

leaders. It was a kind of Fabian Society. Meanwhile, Kõtoku had got

married again, this time to an intellectual; it was another disaster.

As a member of the Society Kõtoku grew closer to socialism, though he as

yet placed little importance upon the labour movement. Finally, in April

1901 he wrote a famous article under the heading "I am a Socialist and a

Member of the Socialist Party". Although there was no such party at the

time, a Social-Democratic Party was formed just one month later, only to

be banned within hours. Many large newspapers had already printed the

party's manifesto however, which, based upon that of the German SDP, had

called for Socialism, Pacifism and Democracy, to be achieved within the

limits of the law. Pacifism was the offending element: Japan had just

defeated China and was preparing a war with Russia. The

Social-Democratic, Party was the only one to oppose these trends, and

was thus regarded as unpatriotic.

Kõtoku's writings of this time included 'Imperialism: The Spectre of the

20th Century', in which he accused the Japanese government of shifting

the people's attention from their economic problems onto foreign

adventures. Shortly after, he published 'The Quintessence of Socialism',

the leading Japanese treatise on socialism before World War 1. However,

he had not yet read Marx, and retained a naive loyalist belief that

socialism could be established under the benevolent gaze of the Emperor.

In February 1904 the Japanese Navy launched a surprise attack on Russia.

Up to this time, the 'Yorozu Chõhõ' had given Kõtoku and its other

socialist writers a mouthpiece for their pacifist views. When

circulation began to drop however, the paper changed its line to one of

support for Japanese policy, Kõtoku and the others immediately resigned.

The result was the 'Heimin Shimbun' (Common People's Paper), which soon

became the leading radical paper in Tokyo, until its anti-war position

persuaded the government to crack down on the news stands which sold it.

In summer 1904, it carried a "letter to Russian Socialists" calling for

international socialists to fight a united struggle against militarism

and patriotism; 'Iskra' responded with a similar article. Subsequent

issues printed articles calling on teachers to strike and denouncing

religion. Although the line was predominantly parliamentarian and direct

action was rejected, the government grew more and more concerned.

Finally, when the paper announced that its anniversary issue would carry

a translation of the 'Communist Manifesto', the government acted. The

issue was banned, the Society for the Study of Socialism closed, and

Kõtoku and the others arrested. The last issue of 'Heimin Shimbun'

appeared in January 1905, and soon after Kõtoku began a five-month

prison spell.

In prison he translated works by Engels, and then came across

Kropotkin's "Fields, Factories and Workshops', his first encounter with

anarchism. Under this influence he began to criticise the Emperor for

the first time. When he left prison, he decided to travel to America to

improve his failing health. In San Francisco he was welcomed by the

local branch of the 'Heiminsha', the group which had put out 'Heimin

Shimbun', and made contacts with many local anarchists, many of whom

were émigré Russian revolutionaries. Later he became a member of the

American Socialist Party, and addressed meetings of the IWW. This was

his first introduction to the theory of direct action.

His experiences in California convinced Kõtoku that the new trend of

world revolution was anarchism; he thus began to advocate direct action

and the General Strike. The primitive socialism which briefly followed

the great earthquake of April 1906 strengthened his belief; reaction

against the radicalism of the Wobblies persuaded him that "there is no

country... that pretends to be as liberal, but is in fact as illiberal,

as America".

That summer Japanese socialists asked Kõtoku to return to help form a

new party, the Japan Socialist Party. Before he left he organized the

Japanese radicals of California into the Social Revolutionary Party of

Oakland in June. When he got back he announced that his ideas had

changed; in the future parliamentary politics were irrelevant to the

social revolution - only strikes, leading up to the General Strike would

have the necessary effect. Despite the immediate split which this caused

in the Japan Socialist Party, in January 1907 the new (daily) 'Heimin

Shimbun' began to appear. At the party convention in February, the two

sides fought it out; while not strong enough to carry the whole party,

Kõtoku's influence was sufficient to prevent inclusion of the phrase

"within the limits of the law" in the party platform. A few days later

the party was banned, and the 'Heimin Shimbun' voluntarily dissolved in

April. Kõtoku left for the country to translate Arnold Roller's 'The

Social General Strike', and Kropotkin's 'The Conquest ofBread'.

In November 1907, on the Emperor's birthday, an 'Open Letter to the

Emperor of Japan from Anarchist Terrorists' appeared on the door of the

Japanese Consulate in San Francisco. The result was the chain of events

which led to Kõtoku's execution three years later. While Kõtoku denied

responsibility, he was probably influential at the very least. From this

point on, the Japanese government decided to have his head. He was

placed under constant surveillance and his family was harassed by the

police.

In the 'Red Flag Incident' of June 1908 and the repression which

followed, almost all the known socialist leaders were arrested. Kõtoku,

who had been living in the south for his health, was almost alone and

seems to have begun talking about bombs and things. While there is no

evidence of a plan on his part, the people he talked to took him

seriously and began gathering materials and testing explosives in the

mountains in preparation for an attack on the Emperor's life. Two things

suggest that Kõtoku was actively involved: one, he was suffering from

advanced TB and had only a few years to live anyway; two, the continuing

police repression made it impossible to organize constructive

revolutionary activities. He seems to have approved the plan, even if he

took no active part in the preparations.

The planning continued through 1909 and the date was set for August

1910. In May 1910, in a routine investigation, the police discovered

explosive chemicals at the home of one of the conspirators. Within a few

days all were arrested, Kõtoku himself being the last, although the

evidence suggests that he was more interested in publishing at that

stage. The trial, which began in December, was a mystery. It was held in

camera and the records have never been made public. Some compared it to

the Chicago Anarchists' trial in 1886. Despite the seriousness and

complexity of the case, the trial lasted less than three weeks. When

Kõtoku arrived at the courtroom, in a dramatic scene, the socialists in

the room for the trial judgment unfurled the red flags for him to see.

On January 18, 1911, Kõtoku and 23 others were found guilty of all the

charges against them, most of which were "crimes against the throne",

and sentenced to death. Before the court was cleared by guards, it rang

with shouts of "Long Live Anarchists!" and "Long Live Anarchy!" While

twelve of the convicted later had their charges commuted to life

imprisonment, those for Kõtoku and the others stuck, and he was hung in

the morning of January 24, 1911 after smoking a final cigarette.

Notehelfer's 'Kõtoku Shusui' is a detailed, academic study which, in its

attempts to be objective, succeeds in totally destroying the atmosphere

which surrounded the early20th century Japanese radical movement. Since

it is the only full-length study of a Japanese anarchist in English, it

is a very important source. Yet comrades reading it will come away with

the feeling that they have learned a lot about Kõtoku's personal

hang-ups but very little about the movement itself. Partly this is

because most of Kõtoku's activities predated the radical phase of the

movement. Much of the book is thus spent trying to relate him to other

Meiji intellectuals rather than to other trends in the revolutionary

movement. Hence developments in his radicalisation process are dotted

here and there amongst a stream of socio-psychological theorising and

long quotations. It would be nice if someone from the movement could

start from the other end and write a history of the movement which puts

Kõtoku in his proper place. At the moment, however, we have to rely on

the offerings of academics.