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Title: Against the God Emperor
Author: Stefan Anarkowic
Date: 1994
Language: en
Topics: Japan; Japanese anarchism; history
Source: Kate Sharpley Library

Stefan Anarkowic

Against the God Emperor

Author’s Introduction

The methods of State repression are universal... all use exactly the

same methods to repress, to kill, to suppress discontent, using any and

all dirty tricks possible to maintain themselves in power. Sometimes to

understand what is happening around us very clearly, it is necessary to

step outside the situation, to see the wood for the trees, so to speak.

By using the example of Japan which is, both geographically and

culturally, so different from Europe and North America, we can see what

is happening to us who live inside these countries.

If we can recognize the methods of repression in Japan as being the same

as those which we have to suffer, then we have the possibility of

understanding them, so as to combat them both physically, mentally and

spiritually. To know the enemy and to know the rules of the game are

important; not only to survive, but also to stand some chance of

defeating the enemy. Hence this pamphlet is designed to show some of the

methods or dirty tricks of the Japanese state.

However, it is also our intention to show the less well known history of

an Anarchist movement: the characters involved, their actions and their

ideas. This movement deserves to be better known than it is, and clearly

stands as one of the finest in Anarchist and Revolutionary history. The

parallels between what these Japanese Anarchists did (their actions),

such as the creation of organizations, printing presses, publications,

centers etc., and our own actions, so very similar, if not identical

today, should not go unnoticed. Neither should their motives for doing

so, their ideals, along with their integrity for maintaining them,

especially against such unfair opponents, the state and capitalism. By

concentrating on a handful of individuals we keep alive the spirits of

these people, and thereby the movement of which they are the symbolic

representatives. To show that they as individuals confronted the same

basic problems as us today indicates that we too are part of the same

tradition: Anarchist and thereby anti-capitalist and anti-statist. This

shows too that we are not just individuals, but form part of a

“wider-we,” a collective. Despite being separated by time (80 years),

space (a different continent) and culture (language), the recognition

that their lives and struggles are the same as ours is sufficient to

demonstrate that we do form part of the same struggle and movement.

If their struggle is the same as our struggle today, then this also

indicates that what we are struggling against is still the same:

injustice and tyranny. That the State and capitalism, despite undergoing

important structural changes are fundamentally the same, and that we are

the present representatives of a movement that has no frontier, or

cultural limits. That our contribution to this movement, no matter how

great or small, is still an important contribution, and that this

movement can only continue as long as the causes for its existence are

still in existence. Namely, injustice and tyranny, the state and

capitalism.

Taigyaku Jiken: “High Treason Case”

On 18^(th) January 1911 the cry of “Museifu Shugi Banzai!” (Long Live

Anarchy!) was heard in a Japanese courtroom. It was shouted by Kanno

Suga, one of the twenty six defendants, in response to a verdict of

death by hanging for twenty four of them, and jail terms of eight and

eleven years for the other two. The defendants were charged with

conspiring to assassinate the emperor of Japan in what has become known

as the “High Treason Case” (Taigyaku Jiken).

A series of preliminary hearings for the trial began on 10^(th)

December: the defendants were allowed one chance to present their views,

and all defense witnesses were rejected by the judge. When the trial

began it was held in camera (secretly) which was to stop the defendants

using the dock as a platform for their ideas; to prevent them from

becoming martyrs by becoming public figures; and, for Yamagats Arimoto,

the mastermind of the State’s conspiracy theory, the very idea of a

public trial was an insult to the throne. The procurator, Hiranuma

Kiichiro, (of whom we shall hear much of later, along with Yamagata) got

through reams of evidence and called for the death penalty by 25^(th)

December 1910. The defense lawyers had just three days to present a case

for all the defendants, 27^(th)-29^(th) December. The decision of the

judges was unanimous.

The international outcry and demonstrations that took place in Europe

and America[1] were such that on 19^(th) January twelve of the condemned

defendants had their sentences commuted to life imprisonment, by

imperial decree. However, at 8 a.m. on 24^(th) January 1911, eleven were

hanged; Kanno Suga shouting “Banzai!” from the gallows was hanged the

following day. A brutal discipline was meted out to those serving prison

sentences: Takagi Kennei died in Chiba prison in 1914, and Okabayashi

Toramatsu in Nagasaki prison was driven insane; others tried to commit

suicide.

The names of those legally murdered are: Kotoku Shusui; Kanno Suga;

Morichika Umpei, former editor of the Osaka Heimin Shimbun; Niimura

Tadoa, peasant -turned journal ist; Myashita Takichi, factory worker;

Furakawa Rikisaku, gardener, Okumiya Tateyuki, veteran people’s Rights

Move ment activist; Oishi Seinosuke, Kotuku’s doctor; Naruishi Heishiro,

shopkeeper; Matsuo Uita, journalist; Niimi Uichiro, journalist; and

Uchiyama Gudo, Zen priest. Their ages ranged from Okumiya, who was 55,

through Olshi (45) and Kotoku (41) to Niimura (25) and Furukawa (28).

It has been claimed that: what the government “had in fact done in order

to concoct its conspiracy was to throw together three completely

separate cases, hoping thus to deal a blow to the movement that would

not be forgotten. These three were the actual ‘assassination group’, com

posed of four people; Uchiyama Gudo’s secret printing activities; and

the personal and medical relationship be tween Kotoku and the doctor

Oishi Seinosuku, who had once met with Morichika Umpei to discuss the

nature of the Japanese revolution’. None of the protagonists in these

three affairs knew of the doings of the others, and there was no

conspiracy except in the minds of certain reactionary politicians.”[2]

So, what were the events of the time?

On 25^(th) May 1910, Miyashita Takichi, Niimura Tadao, Nitta Toru and

Furukawa Rikisaka were arrested after the police had found a stockpile

of bomb-making materials, which Miyashita had obtained. Kanno Suga had

already entered prison on 18^(th) May instead of paying a hefty

censorship fine, so had no need to be re-arrested. Kotoku was arrested

on 1^(st) June and sent to Ichigaya prison in Tokyo. This sparked off

the arrests, interrogations and torture of literally hundreds of

Anarchist and Socialists. From the pre trial interrogations and trial

testimony it is clear that the government could have made the arrests

earlier than they did, but deliberately delayed, in order to

“incriminate” as many people as possible.[3]

It is generally agreed that Kanno, Miyashita, Niimura and possibly two

or three others were involved in an assassination plot. In fact, these

three had drawn lots on 17^(th) May to see who would throw the first

bomb; Kanno had won and would make the attempt in August after her re

lease from prison. Kotoku himself became the “connecting link between

all the defendants. It was part of the prosecution’s case that Kotoku

had provided information on how to make bombs to Miyashita, information

he had received from Okumiya Kenshi and his friends, all of whom had

been active in the “People’s Rights Movement of the 1880’s.[4] Kotoku

had commented upon an article by Oishi in the Shakai Shimbun (Social

News) in July 1907, and afterwards they had become friends. On his way

to Tokyo from Nakamura, in July 1908, just after finishing his

translation of Kropotkin’s “The Conquest of Bread” (which was secretly

published in January 1909) he called in to see Oishi, Oishi was so

alarmed by Kotoku’s physical condition, that as a doctor, he recommended

a month’s complete rest. Kotoku refused and continued, visiting Uchiyama

in Hakone. The latter ran one of the many underground presses and had

published clandestinely, amongst other things, the German Anarchist

Arnold Roller’s pamphlet “The Social General Strike” in 1907. This

pamphlet[5] Kotoku had acquired when visiting San Francisco in 1906,

where he was fully converted to Anarchism by the personal influence of

Albert Johnson, and the writings of Kropotkin. This pamphlet, along with

Kotoku’s notion of direct action stemming from his Anarchism, paved the

way for Anarcho Syndicalism in Japan. It was published in Shorai no

Keizan Shoshiki (“The Economic System of the Future”).

The police themselves were well aware that not more than five

individuals were involved in the plot : Kanno, Kotoku, Miyashita,

Niimura and Furakawa.[6] Furukawa had pulled out a few months before

May, and even according to Kanno’s testimony at the trial, Kotoku had

not only rejected the plot the preceding January (1910), but later that

spring, they didn’t even dare mention it in front of him because he

would have given a “disapproving lecture.”[7] However, the death penalty

was mandatory even for the intent for those wishing to cause harm to the

emperor of Japan. Technically, then, these five could have been found

guilty as charged; but this does not apply to the other twenty-one

defendants, and certainly excludes all those others (hundreds) arrested,

imprisoned and tortured. Part of Kanno’s prison diary, which was

discovered in the 1950’s, written after the trial and before her legal

murder absolves all the others: “...Oh, my poor friends and comrades!

The most of them have been unhappily entangled into a scheme contrived

by 5 or 6 persons. Merely because of our acquaintanceship they have been

forced to be martyrs...”[8]

The records of the trial were not made publicly available until half a

century later, until 1963, and even then they were incomplete. They

proved quite conclusively that a State conspiracy had taken place. Thus:

“The implications behind the trial were taken to heart by all those that

still nursed radical sympathies. Kotoku and the others had been hanged

for ‘intent’ to harm the emperor. In other words, it was for their ideas

that they had been put on trial, and radical intellectuals were

simultaneously stunned and chastened. Only half a decade later would the

Japanese Anarchist and socialist movements completely recover from this

bitter blow. In the meantime, during a period known as the ‘winter of

socialism’, the socialist movement disappeared completely.”[9]

The Emperor Myth

To know why this handful of people should adopt this course of action we

have to know what the social and political conditions were, and in doing

that we can reveal the cowardly and barbaric methods the Japanese ruling

class (and all rulers) use to suppress discontent. For up to now we have

shown how the Japanese State deliberately used the Taigyaku jiken for

certain purposes — arrest, torture, murder and intimidation — based on

evidence now provided by the Japanese State itself: its own trial

records. However, this does not explain why a few individuals would

adopt a policy of killing one person (an emperor); of why such a policy

was considered necessary; and whether any other courses of action was

open to them.

Miyashita Takichi was a machine operator in a saw mill at Akeshina,

Nagano prefecture, three hours by train ride from Tokyo. After

completing a primary school course he obtained a knowledge of machinery

whilst working in various plants. In January 1907 he became acquainted

with the Heimin Shubun (Common Peoples Newspaper) and visited Kotoku,

who was editor. In 1908 Uchyama Gudo published Nyugoku Kinen, Museifu

Kyosan (“In commemoration of their Imprisonment for Anarcho-Communism”)

when the sentences were passed on the defendants in the Akahata Jiken

(“The Red Flag Incident”) — which will be discussed later. In it

Uchiyama expressed his contempt for the emperor, amongst others: “There

are blood-sucking ticks — the emperor, the rich, the big landlords.”

Myashita had become converted to Anarchism after reading the clandestine

publications of Uchiyama, Heimin Shimbun, Kemuriyama Sentaro’s Kinsei

Museifushugi (“Modern Anarchism”) Published in 1902, and hearing

Morichika Umpei talk about the bloody origins of the imperial family.

Miyashita had made several attempts at organizing his workmates, but

grew disillusioned when every strike was viciously suppressed by the

police. Also, whilst he could obtain agreement from his workmates about

government injustices, there was an impenetrable superstitious brick

wall concerning the emperor himself. This became obvious to him on

10^(th) November 1908, when the emperor was about to pass by train

through Obu station. He began by giving out Uchiyama’s pamphlet and

discussing it, only to realize that not only was criticism of the

emperor rejected out of hand, but that when the police instructed that

there could be no work done in adjacent fields the peasant-workers

willingly complied. From this moment on he resolved to kill the emperor,

to dispel the myth of imperial divinity. : On 13^(th) November 1908

Miyashita wrote to Morichika expressing his conviction that the emperor

had to be killed in order for socialism to progress in Japan. Morichika

showed this letter to Kotoku. On 13^(th) February 1909 Miyashita visited

Kotoku, staying at the Heiminsha office and expressed again his belief

that the emperor had to be killed, the best way being to: “...make

bombs..(and)... throw them at the Imperial carriage.”[10] Kotoku agreed

with Miyashita’s reasoning concerning the emperor and said that:

“...such measures will no doubt be necessary; hereafter there will arise

individuals who will see that such measures are carried out.”[11]

Miyashita wrote to Kotoku on 25^(th) May 1909 stating how far his

bomb-making activities had progressed, as well as confirming his

willingness to “die for the cause.” In early June he visited the

Heiminsha again and discussed his ideas on assassination with both

Kotoku and Kanno Suga. Kotoku recommended Niimura and Furakawa to

Miyashita as persons who could be thoroughly trusted as well as having

“firm ideas.” The latter had first met Niimura in the preceding

February, when visiting the Heiminsha, and Miyashita voiced his

assassination ideas to Niimura who readily agreed.

Niimura had decided to visit Kotoku in February, just after he was

released from Maebashi prison for violation of the press laws in regard

to the socialist journal Tohoku Hyoron. Out of work, he stayed at the

Heiminsha, until Kotoku managed to secure him a job with Oishi’s

pharmacy in Shingu. Miyashita wrote to him there in June 1909, saying

that he had begun experimenting with the construction of bombs. He had

obtained 2lbs of sandarac from a friend under the pretext of refining

steel from iron ore. After consulting an encyclopedia as well as talking

to a friend who worked in a fireworks plant, he realized that ten parts

of potassium chlorate with five parts of relagar (arsenic monosulfide)

could cause a powerful explosion. However, these chemicals were

difficult to get, and believing that he had exhausted the limit of a

safe purchasable supply he wrote to Niimura requesting further

materials.

In July or August. 1 lb of chlorate of potash was procured from a

pharmacy; and in September a muller for crushing sandarac was borrowed

from a friend of Niimura’s (Niimura’s elder brother, who knew nothing of

this, but who had stood security for Miyashita at the saw mill, received

eight years imprisonment because of this). Miyashita’s workmate, Milita

Yasura, helped make five zinc-coated cans of approximately 2.38 in

length by 1.19 in diameter for which Militia received 10 years

imprisonment.

During the first couple of weeks of September 1909, Kanno, Kotoku and

Niimura discussed the best way of assassinating the emperor. Niimura,

enthused, immediately visited Miyashita to relate this, only to find

that the latter’s experiments were unsuccessful. He needed more

chemicals and, if possible, to consult with someone who had successfully

made a bomb. Niimura related this to Kotoku; but it wasn’t until Okumiya

Tateyuki, by chance, visited Kanno at the Heiminsha in the middle of

October that Kotoku thought seriously about Miyashita’s request...

Okumiya had been involved in the People’s Rights Movement as a young

man, where explosives were used on several occasions, and so Kotoku

guessed that he must know something about them. He didn’t, but he did

know the per son who had made the bombs used in the Osaka Incident and

would ask that person. A new chemical formula along with details for its

use was provided by Okumiya, which Kotoku duly passed on to Miyashita

via Niimura. Using that formula a successful explosion was caused in the

mountains not far from the city of Matsumoto on 3^(rd) November 1909.

Ironically, the noise of Miyashita’s explosion was concealed by the

fireworks being set off to commemorate the emperor’s birthday.

It was very apparent then that the emperor-deity system was universally

accepted in Japan. The hardships endured by the peasant-workers were

seen to add to the greater glory of the imperial god in his palace. The

analogy with Christianity, where the suffering in this life will be

rewarded in the next, should not go unnoticed here. Later, we shall

elaborate upon this ideological con-trick, but Miyashita, who had been

influenced by the Russian populists commitment to regicide, was

certainly not conned. He had read about them in Sentaro’s book, and

similarities between the two countries’ autocratic-feudalism must have

been very clear.

Additionally, there seemed to be a general acceptance that Japanese

Anarchism ( and socialism) would also go through a phase of “terrorism”

(individual acts), mainly brought on by the severity of State

(terrorist) repression. Arahata Kanson in Yanaka Mura Metsubo Shi (“A

History of the Destruction of Yanaka Village”) published in August 1907,

which deals with the polluted Yanaka village by waste from the Ashio

copper mine, and the villagers fight for compensation which was met with

continual deception and repression states: “Let us look to the day which

will surely come when we will revenge ourselves on them, using exactly

the same methods as they used on the people of Yanaka village.”[12]

Kotoku in a letter to Albert Johnson also believed that a “terrorist”

phase was likely: “...Japan, which has already produced Social-Democrats

and Anarchist-Communists, shall now produce many Direct-Actionists,

Anti-Militarists, General Strikers and even Terrorists.”[13] However,

this belief — or prediction — certainly doesn’t prove his guilt; and,

neither does it prove his complicity in an assassination plot. The

prosecution case made Kotoku the center of activity, the “connecting

links,” which really means guilt by association. It was certainly true

that Kotoku knew Miyashita personally, since February 1908; Oishi from

July 1907, who was his physician; Uchiyama Gudo, who was his friend as

well as operating one of the underground presses that had printed

Kotoku’s labors; Niimura Tadao and Furukawa Rikisaku, both Haiminsha

members; and, Kanno Suga, who had worked with Kotoku on publication

ventures, as well as living together as lovers. Certainly, discussions

of the plot were made in the Heiminsha offices in the Sendagaya district

of Tokyo, and Kotoku, who had re-established the old Heiminsha, had

become a rallying point because he was one of the few radicals not in

prison and was still prepared to make a public stand. So, Kotoku was

often perceived as a mentor in the eyes of Anarchists and socialists;

but, as a ringleader in the eyes of the State. It was this difference in

perception that was to cost Kotoku, and many others, their lives; and it

was also due to the Japanese State’s repressive policies of fines and

imprisonment, for any kind of outspokenness, that made Kotoku and the

others the “remaining few.” It was also due in part, to the reaction of

some Anarchists to this repression and the emperor system.

Why Kotoku?

Japan’s rulers also had their own reasons for singling out Kotoku, as

well as maintaining a vendetta to silence him. Six years before they

murdered him, the Heimin Shimbun was finally banned for “offending

public morality,” because it had printed a translation of “The Commu

nist Manifesto” by Marx and Engels. The paper was part of the anti-war

movement, whilst the Russo-Japanese war was needlessly destroying

thousands of lives. Kotoku and Nishikawa Kojiro, who were the editors,

received jail sentences of five years and seven months respectively, and

the printing presses were confiscated, Kotoku spent February to July

1905 in Sugamo prison where he read Kropotkin’s “Fields Factories and

Workshops,” along with other Anarchist literature and anti-religious

works. On 10^(th) August 1905 in a letter to Albert Johnson he claimed:

“In deed I had gone as a Marxian Socialist and returned a radical

Anarchist.”[14] Although his immediate claim can be doubted,[15] it is

certainly true that his ideas were in a state of flux and that very

shortly a full conversion was to take place.

It was while he was in this prison that the beginnings of intestinal

tuberculosis were to appear, and because the Heiminsha was in serious

financial difficulties, and his latest publication Chokugen (“Straight

Talking”) was banned that he declared his intention to carry on abroad.

On 14^(th) November 1905 he embarked for Seattle, where he was met by

Iwasa Sakutaro — later on an influential Anarchist — who took him to San

Francisco. There he met Albert Johnson, local members of the I.W.W., and

the staff of “Mother Earth” and branch members of a local Heiminsha. In

the radical community of Oakland where he became well known, he met

socialists of all varieties and helped to organize students and

immigrants into the Shakai Kakumeito (Social Revolutionary Party). Soon

afterwards a dual-language magazine Kakumei (“The Revolution”) was

produced

His exposure to direct action leading to the General Strike, police

brutality and disillusionment with American parliamentary “democracy,”

as well as witnessing mutual aid and a moneyless economy during the San

Francisco earthquake in 1906, all convinced him of the viability of

Anarcho-Communism. On 5^(th) June of that year he agreed to return to

Japan to help work on a paper that the newly formed Nihon Shakaito

(Japan Socialist Party) wished to publish.

That party had been legally recognized in February and the outbreak of

social unrest following the war was an added incentive to return. The

programme, however, was an acceptance of parliamentarism: “Socialism

within the limits of the law.” Invited to speak at the meeting on

28^(th) June, his talk was on “The Tide of the World Revolutionary

Movement where he denounced the ballot- box, ‘toothless reformers’ and

advocated direct action culminating in the General Strike and a Social

Revolution. This led to a schism, but Kotoku’s ill-health forced him to

retire to Nakamure. Exactly what Japan’s rulers had always feared would

happen, had happened: “dangerous” Western ideas had landed in Japan.

In his absence, pro-parliamentarians tried to hold sway, but an attempt

at increasing Tokyo tramway fares in April, at a time of recession, had

led to a thousand people spontaneously marching on company offices and

attacking government buildings and smashing street-car windows. In

September the increases were quietly introduced and a boycott was

organized. Kotoku was asked to return to To kyo to dovetail the paper

with this discontent. 5^(th) January 1907 saw the publication of the

Heimin Shimbun which sold 30,000 copies on its first issue. The police,

alarmed, called a conference of local police chiefs, who were also

concerned by the Oakland paper Kakumei (December, 1906), which had

promised to overthrow “Mikados, Kings and Presidents.” This had caused

an uproar in California and consternation in Japan. The connecting link

was Kokotu,

On 4^(th) February, 3,600 farmers attacked the Ashio copper mine for

polluting the area, nearly destroying the mine and its equipment. It was

only crushed when 6,00 rifle and saber-carrying troops arrived. The

following day Kokotu had published in the Heimin Shimbun ,on the front

page, Yoga Shiso no Henka; “The Change in My Thought (on Universal

Suffrage).” It was a clear statement of direct action, Anarcho-Communism

and Social Revolution, basing itself on Kropotkin’s “The Conquest of

Bread.” The party conference convened on 17^(th) February 1907 and

Kokotu’s fiery speeches attacking parliamentarism drew 22 votes, with 2

against. A “legalist” motion was passed with a 6 vote majority, but

because it proposed “raising the class consciousness of the workers and

helping them achieve solidarity* an emphasis on militancy was retained.

Over a third of the delegates had accepted Anarcho-Syndicalism, and

Kokotu had managed to remove the clause “within the limits of the law”

from the party programme. This repudiation of legality at a time of

labor unrest provoked Yaamagata Aritomo to outlaw the Nihon Shakaito

(J.S.P.) on 22^(nd) February, and take legal action against the paper

for printing Kokotu’s article, as well as a conference report. The paper

finally dissolved after 75 issues on 14^(th) April, because many of its

staff were in prison with a split amongst the rest. Within two months

the Osaka (later Nihon) Heimin Shimbun became the voice of the

direct-actionists, edited by Morichika Umpei until it was closed in. My

1908.

The factionalism degenerated into mutual slander and even rival

associations: the Kinyo Kai (“Friday Society”) direct actionists and the

Doshi Kai (“Comrades Society”) reformist. Kotoku had returned to Tokyo

from the hot springs of Yugawara that autumn and helped form the Kinyo

Kai. In September he moved to Tosa to finish the translation work

started in Yugawara (Roller, Kropotkin) but mainly to do a tour of local

villages resurrecting the spirit of rebellion of forty years before

which brought about revolutionary change: a change in emperors and eras,

Tokugawa to Meiji, and which opened Japan to Western influences.

The Open Letter

In California, on 3^(rd) November 1907, the emperor’s birth day, an

“Open Letter to Mutsuhito, the Japanese Emperor, from

Anarchists-Terrorists,” written in Japanese, was nailed to the doorway

of the Consulate in San Francisco. This leaflet Ansatshugi (“The

Terrorism”) was said to have been translated into English, French and

German and widely dis tributed.

It was an open attack on the emperor in just about every sense. The

emperor was referred to throughout as sokka, a neutral and therefore

highly disrespectful form of “you* as well as being referred to by name,

which convention demanded he should never be addressed. It rejected the

official dogma that he was ‘descended from the gods, and like everyone

else was descended from apes. Like his an cestors, he had come to power

by “evil” methods, was a “premeditated murderer and a “butcher and had

enslaved the Japanese people. It asserted the necessity of change, from

propaganda to assassination, such as had happened in France and Russia

(at that time) and that this was not a mere empty threat:

“Matsuhito, poor Matsuhito! Your life is almost at an end. The bombs are

all around you and are on the point of exploding It is goodbye for you.

3^(rd) November, 1907

your birthday.’[16]

The origins of the letter were traced to the Social Revolutionary Party,

which Kotoku had helped to form the previous year. Although he denied

any involvement, and there is no evidence to show he was involved, the

wording and sentiment was unmistakably his. Kotoku couldn’t be held

(directly) responsible; and neither could Iwasa Sakutaro and Takemouchi

Tetsugoro (the authors) be deported, because they claimed that they had

been radicalized in the U.S.A., under the influence of Jack London (the

novelist), and therefore were not “undesirable” when they entered the

U.S.A. Whatever dislike Japan’s rulers had for Kotoku now changed into

total hatred. Yamagata Aritomo took the letter personally to the emperor

to show him, and it should be pointed out that in Japan, resignations or

suicides for “failing in one’s duty” (to the emperor) was commonplace.

For this personal attack, a person would be held responsible. That

person was Kotoku.

This affair brought a change of policy towards both Anarchists and

Socialists by the Saionji cabinet: stiffer penalties and increased

police harassment. At a Kinyo Kai (“Fri day Society Group”) meeting on

17^(th) January 1908, the police observers ordered the meeting closed

because of the topic, “Thomas More’s Utopia.” Osugi Sakai, Sakai

Toshihiko and Yamakawa Hitoshi ignored this and carried on. The police

shut down the meeting. Those that remained argued with the police, the

lights went out and a struggle occurred. Osugi climbed on the roof and

shouted protests to passers-by until he was thrown off by the police.

Others took his place and the police response was the same: more

brutality. Six were taken by about 30 police officers to the police

station, but, unexpectedly, the local crowd attempted to free them as

they objected to the police’s unwarranted behavior. Osugi received 45

days imprisonment and the others between 30 and 60 days. This event is

known as Okuju Enzetsu Jiken (“Roof Speeches Incident”).

For Yamagata and his military clique these sentences were too lenient

and they engineered Saionji’s downfall. Their opportunity came when the

police provoked the Akahata Jiken (“Red Flag Incident”) of 22^(nd) June

1908. A reception was held in Tokyo’s Kanda district for the release

from prison of Yamaguchi Gizo (or Koken). Ishikawa Sanshiro called for

the reception in the hope of reconciling the split in the socialist

movement. On the 19^(th) June, however, when Yamaguchi arrived in Tokyo,

the Doshi Kai faction met him holding flags with “socialism” and

“revolution” written on them. As the 22^(nd) June meetings closed,

Osugi, Arahata Kanson and others unfurled flags with “Anarchism,”

“Anarcho-Communism” and “Revolution” written on them. They began singing

revolutionary songs and when the moderates refused to join in, as was

anticipated, they burst out of the hall into the street where the

police, waiting for them, pounced. For an hour the struggles and

confusion went on, and Sakai Toshihiko and Yamakowa Hitoshi, who were

not originally involved, were arrested for acting as intermediaries,

along with Osugi, Arahata and others. Kanno Suga and Kamikawa Matsuko

crossed the street from the meeting hall to the police station to see

what was happening to Osugi and Arahata, where they were detained. When

Kamikawa protested, they were threatened and pushed around by the

police. Kanno was knocked to the ground and was prevented from getting

up by the police, who were twisting her arm to pin her down. They were

then dragged into police headquarters where they were reunited with

Osuga Satoka, Kokurai Rei and all the others who had been arrested. They

were all put into police carriages and taken to the central police

station; en route they were shouting, “Long Live Anarchism!” and singing

revolutionary songs.

On arrival, looking at the high walled compound, Kanno said: “So this is

where they shackle the freedom of those of us who have not committed any

crime.”[17] The men and women were separated but not before an emotional

farewell, along with shouts of advice on how to survive in prison from

jailed veterans. They were all imprisoned for two months waiting for a

hearing, and the Kumamoto Hyoron (Kumamoto Review), who visited the

women, reported that all of them were:” ‘Angry about things that had

been done to them’ in jail, and hoped they could repay some of the

people responsible after their release”[18] In the men’s cells they all

immediately demanded to be released, and soon started shouting catcalls

to the police. When the police tried to quieten them they were welcomed

by being spat upon. Osugi and Arahata were taken from their cells,

stripped naked, dragged by their feet on stone flooring and kicked and

beaten. The police relented when Arahata was beaten into unconsciousness

and because the noise from the cells was so loud. They were then

returned to their cells with their clothes. Next, they all demanded to

go to the toilet, but when permission was refused urinated through the

bars. The cell corridor soon resembled a sewer.

Sentences on Socialism

Yamagata, via the emperor, put pressure on Saionji to resign, which he

was forced to do on 4^(th) July 1908. General Katsura Taro, Yamagata’s

protege, headed the cabinet and announced further restrictions. The

surviving so cialist groups were suppressed, police harassed meetings,

and rights of assembly and free expression were restricted. Katsura also

ordered the courts to pass heavy sentences for the Akahata Jiken (“Red

Flag Incident”). In court on 29^(th) August 1908, prosecution witnesses

statements were fervently challenged by the defendants; and, those

defendants who claimed, like Sakai, that they were only acting as

intermediaries were ignored. Osugi received 2&112 years, plus a fine of

25 yen; Sakai, Arahata, Yamakawa Hitoshi and others 2 years and most of

the rest at least a year. Kanno and Kamikawa, despite their admission of

sympathy towards Anarchism, were released without fines or further

imprisonment. Additionally, the authorities were incensed over a scrap

of poetry which was scribbled on a police cell wall in Chinese. The poem

praised praised the French King’s execution during the revolution, which

was regarded as lese-majeste. Sato Satura was held responsible, and

despite his claims of innocence, supported by the other defendants, he

still received 3&314 years imprisonment. The severity of the sentences

shocked the defendants and created an uproar. When they recovered;

shouts of “Long Live Anarchy!” along with the singing of revolutionary

songs were heard from the dock...

For Osugi, the only.possible ‘consolation’ was that the 1 & 1/2 year

sentence recently announced for the Tokyo tramway “Streetcar Incident

riot was to pass concurrently. He entered Chiba prison in September

1908, after having waited 3 months in pre-trial detention, and was

eventually released in November 1910. For Osugi this event was to have

saved his life; he couldn’t be implicated in the Taigyaku Jiiken (“High

Treason Case”). It also saved the lives of Sakai, Yamakawa and Arahata,

but Kanno, who was released, was later hanged. All were questioned about

it whilst in prison, the public prosecutors insisting that the plot was

hatched some four or five years earlier, so that they could have known

about it, plus other conspirators had already named Osugi. The latter

was questioned only once about it, but his jailers treated him with

suspicion from then onwards and refused him his twice-monthly letters

and visits, which worried him. In jail he actually met Taigyaku Jiken.

defendants but only dared speak to speak in a whisper to Kotoku, but as

the latter was partially deaf he did not hear him.

As we mentioned much earlier, Kotoku, after hearing about the “Red Flag

Incident,” quickly completed his translation of Kropotkin before

returning to Tokyo on the 21^(st) June 1908, visiting Oishi and Gudo en

route, and to re-establish the old Heiminsha. Although he was not

involved in these events, his presence did not go unnoticed by Japan’s

rulers. Ever since the “Open Letter” event (November 1907) his house in

Nakamura was so carefully watched; and meticulously, that the family’s

sake business began to decline. After the “Red Flag Incident” and

Katsuar’s new repressive policies, surveillance on Kotoku was increased:

“...his house was guarded by four police men, two in front and two in

back. Everyone who visited him was forced to give their name, and then

this person was also followed by a detective.”[19]

The police set up a tent in a field adjacent to the Heiminsha and

interrogated anyone visiting it and followed them in turn. Kotoku

wrote:” During the time I was in Tokyo the policemen always followed me.

All my business and movements were so illegally and cowardly interfered

with by them that I became unable to get any livelihood.”[20] The

purpose of all this being :”...not merely to keep watch on the

socialists but to make life impossible for them... Few employers would

give work to men and women whom the police agents were ostentatiously

shadowing and many socialists were reduced to the direst poverty.”[21]

Also: “The police openly boasted that, when it came to controlling the

socialist movement, they did not consider themselves bound by the

constitution and it was widely rumored that a directive had gone out to

army units throughout the country early in 1907, instructing them to

hold themselves in readiness ‘to destroy the socialist movement at its

roots.’”[22]

Although State repression had increased with Katsura in July 1908, the

following account, taken from the Shakai Shimbun (Socialist Weekly) for

26^(th) April 1908, entitled “Intimidation the way of Suppressing (the)

Socialist Movement, is very illuminating:

“The police then go to the employers and advise them to prohibit the

Socialist Weekly (i.e. Shakai Shimbun). The employers are glad to do so

and order the workers not to read the paper and say that they will be

dismissed if they disobey the order. We have several cases of dismissals

of workers because they read the S.W. or received a letter from our

editor. If our organizer goes to a worker’s house the police to go to

the worker and cross-examine him as if he be connected with some

criminals. On the road where we sell the Socialist papers or books the

police stand by to investigate and put down buyers’ names and places of

living. By this way the authority has been attempting to kill the

movement and above all boycott the Socialist Weekly.”[23]

As far as Kotoku was concerned, at this time, his intention was to work

on the Heiminisha. That summer. Kanno was secretary to the paper, and a

relationship developed between the two. This had consequences in more

ways than one. Kanno had registered at the prison that she was Arahata’s

“common-law wife” which gave the impression that Kanno and Kotuko had

betrayed Arahata, who was serving two years for the “Red Flag Incident.”

They both received a lot of flak for this from within the Anarchist and

socialist movements. Kanno always insisted that she did this as a ruse

to obtain prison visiting rights, and that Arahata himself was aware of

that, and that their relationship had ended prior to their being

imprisoned awaiting trial. Kanno always maintained her commitment to

those left behind in prison. In fact this made them a constant source of

police harassment. Kotoku was also receiving criticism because of his

lack of drive, especially when he had been put on a bit of a pedestal as

a mentor: he just wasn’t living up to (somebody’s) expectations. This

left them somewhat isolated both ideologically and socially.

Kanno’s militancy certainly was a source of inspiration for Kotoku, and

his ideas about direct action certainly appealed to her as well. This

combination, in conjunction with the State’s brutal repressive policies,

could make assassination of an emperor-deity seem a really good idea.

There is one other important factor as well; they were both aware that

they were each dying from tuberculosis and didn’t have much longer to

live. Kanno had caught that terrible disease when she was nursing her

sister Kanno Hide. In December 1906, Kanno (Suga) and Hide moved to

Tokyo where Suga managed to get a job with the Mainichi Denpo (“Daily

Telegraph”). She was also writing for the Sekai Fujin (“Women of the

World”), a feminist paper, which first appeared in 1^(st) January 1907,

and celebrations commemo rating the first issue of the Heimin Shimbun

were held at her house. By February though her sister’s condition had

deteriorated seriously; and from the 9^(th) to the 21^(st) February she,

and Arahata, whom she was living with, watched helplessly as the life

slowly drained out of her. Hide died at the age of twenty-one, and was

buried at Tokyo’s Seishunji temple at 6 a.m. “...without Buddhist or

Shinto priests; without flowers or flags. (It was a ceremony of)...only

true feelings.”[24]

Near the end, Arahata and Kanno talked of obtaining hospital treatment

for Hide, but with only 40 yen between them this last minute effort

wouldn’t have helped much. After her death, Kanno took a leave of

absence from her job and went to the health spa of Ito to test and

reflect. Her own condition had already been diagnosed as positive, and

feeling totally drained from caring for Hide this only served to

emphasize her own illness. When she returned to Tokyo in the late summer

of 1907 she worked again for the Mainichi Denpo, mainly to obtain a

wage. She felt the loss of her sister very deeply, and she was becoming

estranged from Arahata, both personally and politically. She spent most

of her time within the socialist community, especially with the Sakai

family: Sakai Toshihko, Nobuaka Tameko (who were married) and their

children.

Tameko, with whom she became friends, had become involved with the

Heimin Shumbun in May 1905 after hearing Matsuoka give a lecture on

behalf of the women’s socialist group, called “The Mission of Today’s

Socialist Woman.” The offices of the Heiminsha were being used on

Saturday afternoons for women’s meetings, where lectures, food and

companionship were offered. Apart from women based articles originating

from there that appeared in a variety of socialist papers at this time,

Tameko and Matsuoka encouraged everyone using the Heiminsha of fice to

use the same neutral form of address, thus eliminating (verbal)

distinctions of class and sex.

A Target for the State

During this period, late summer through to her own arrest in the “Red

Flag Incident” in June 1908, she listened to all the debates raging

within socialist circles about direct action and parliamentarism. As she

professed in court, in August 1908, she was sympathetic to Anarchism.

her sister had died of tuberculosis, which affected her profoundly, and

she was dying from it also. There had been social discontent on a large

scale ranging from strikes, particularly at Ashio, as well as the

street-car riots in Tokyo; additionally, the State’s repressive policies

towards Anarchists, socialists and feminists, whom she knew per sonally,

highlighted her feelings of social injustice. She herself had spent two

months in prison for having committed no crime, was brutally treated

whilst in custody, was eventually found not guilty and to top it all her

illness was made worse by her imprisonment, and she had lost her job

with the Mainichi Denpo, which refused to employ someone under constant

police surveillance. She was now a target for the State, and she was

aware that she would remain so, given her views and commitment to those

in prison.

Despite these horrendous conditions under which Kanno and Kotuko

individually lived, along with the malicious rumor campaign permeating

radical circles about their relationship which isolated them, they tried

once more to produce a paper. On 25^(th) May 1909 Jiiyu Shiso (“Free

Thought”) was published, but it was banned immediately. Kanno was fined

140 yen and Kotoku 70 yen on the 10^(th) of August for an article that

advocated the destruction of the family. On 1^(st) September Kanno. was

caught illegally distributing a second issue and was fined the

staggering sum of 400 yen. Also, in late May 1909 the Rinsenji Temple in

Hakone was raided by the police. They discovered twelve sticks of

dynamite, four packages of explosive gelatin, a supply of fuses and a

variety of Anarchist literature. Uchiyama, with these explosives, along

with five or six “...death defying men...” was hoping to kill the

emperor. Six days later, on 29^(th) May, Uchiyama was arrested when he

returned to Hakone. He was charged with illegal possession of

explosives, as well as violating the press and publication laws. He was

found guilty and sentenced to twelve years imprisonment. He was later

re-arrested, charged, found guilty and hanged in the Taigyaku jiken.

Uchiyama was a member of the Soto sect attached to the Rinsenji Temple,

and became concerned about the dire state of the impoverished peasants

in the local mountainous region in which he served. His interest in

socialism began after reading Yano Fumio’s Shin Sekai, and in 1905. He

met Kotoku at Kato Tokijiro’s hospital in Odawara. This is when he

became seriously interested in revolutionary activity. Uchiyama went to

Tokyo in September 1908 to consult with Kotoku, specifically about

Kropotkin’s ideas, as well as obtaining the equipment to start an

underground press in Hakone. Kotoku orally translated passages from

Roller’s “Social General Strike,” to explain how Kropotkin’s

Anarcho-Communist ideas could be achieved. Uchiyama, convinced by the

principles of Anarcho-Communism, and the strategy of

Anarcho-Syndicalism, as well as being impressed by Kotoku’s ability to

provide the desired printing equipment, returned to Hakone. There he

quickly printed Roller’s pamphlet, published in Japanese as Shorai no

Keizan Shoshiki (“The Economic System of the Future”) and, subsequently,

other literature as well.

Bomb Throwing

In September, discussions about an assassination at tempt were carried

on in the Heiminsha offices. By October, Kanno’s health was failing, she

was coughing up blood, and she suffered a nervous breakdown. November

saw the first successful explosion by Miyashita, and on New Year’s Day

they practiced throwing cans.

Kanno was all in favor of killing the emperor, and Niimura suggested

that she could act like Sophia Perovskaia, when the latter had taken

part in assassinating Tsar Alexander II. Kotoku however, although

sympathetic to the idea, was warned by Koizumi Shanshin of the imminent

danger, especially after Uchiyama’s arrest, in which they all were.

Kotoku, aware of his own imminent death by tuberculosis: “... realized

that he had only a few years left; and that given this state of affairs

he was determined to do his ‘utmost’ for the revolution....he was now

‘entering the field of battle’, and was fully prepared to die either of

‘illness’ or the death sentence’ in the next few years.”[25] however,

Niimura, Koizumi and Matsui Hakken persuaded him not to actually get

involved in the assassination attempt, but to use his literary talents,

which were considerable, for the benefit of the movement. Koizumi even

suggested that if Kotoku were to concentrate on writing history for a

while, perhaps the State would ease up in its persecution of him, as

well as Kanno. Exhausted from his years of struggle against the Japanese

State, he felt that he was “fighting the whole of Japan,” he believed

that he and Kanno could move to the countryside, perhaps to his native

village of Kochi, to die in peace. His concern over Kanno’s failing

health, and to rid himself of police harassment, and the malicious

rumors and attacks from within the socialist and capitalist-based Tokyo

press, as well as his own doubts about the plot, all seemed alluring.

Koizumi, in March, approached Hosono Jiro, a member of the lower house

of the Diet, somebody who knew Kotoku personally and was independently

wealthy, to agree to finance Kotoku for the next couple of years. The

catch was that Kotoku would have to give up his radical activities and

just write non-political history. Hosono and Matsui met also with Hirata

Tosuke, the Home Minister in the Katsura Cabinet, and claimed

that.Kotoku had a change of heart, that they would vouch for him and

hoped his talents could be used for the benefit of the nation. They also

suggested to Hirata that the government could help in this by easing the

pressure on Kotoku. Next, Hosono and Koizumi visited the Commissioner of

Police, Kamei Eizaburo, who was a good friend of Hosono’s, several

times. Their visits were designed to arrange police cooperation in this

venture, by easing the restrictions on Kotoku. This would only be done,

however, if Kotoku were to compromise.”

In mid-March, after securing police and government promises of

co-operation, a meeting was arranged in Kojimachi between Kotoku,

Koizumi Hosono and a Home Ministry representative. Hosono openly urged

Kotoku to “recant”; and, Koizumi suggested that he withdraw from the

socialist movement for a couple of years, to write a history of the

Segoku (late Ashikaga) period. If this were done then, it was hinted,

several thousand yen could be found via Hosono and Koizumi. If agreed,

it would be wise if Kotoku were to leave Tokyo for a while, perhaps to

his favorite retreat of Tennoya Inn, in Yugawara. Kotoku revealed some

interest, and Koizumi attempted to convince Kanno of the plan. On

22^(nd) March, they closed the Heiminsha and both left for Yugawara.

During the next couple of weeks Kotoku worked on a history of the

Sengoku period, and police harassment ceased.

The time they spent there was not a happy one, and any “hints” of money

didn’t materialize. Also, Kanno had no reservations and wanted to die in

battle. She accepted responsibility for the fines in the Jiyu Shiso

case, because she knew that Kotoku’s health would not stand up to

another bout of imprisonment. When she left Yugawara from prison both

knew that their relationship had ended.

En route to prison she met the others to discuss plans for the

assassination attempt, whereupon it was agreed that no attempt would be

made until after her release from prison in 3 1/2 months time. She was

alarmed over the lack of security, especially on Miyashita’s part, but

was still committed to it. She had already drawn the winning lot and

would throw the bomb immediately on her release from prison in August

1910.

True to form, Kotoku fulfilled his obligations. His talent. was literary

and was used in the service of the Anarchist movement. His last work

Kirisuto Massatsu Ron (Rubbing out Christ) was, in his own words, about

“...I am writing a book in which I mean to assert that Christ never

existed, but was a myth; that the origin of Christianity is found in

pagan mythology, and that most of the Bible is a forgery....”[26]

This was his final letter to Albert Johnson and was, in effect, much

more an attack upon Christianity: it extended to “rubbing-out” the

emperor-deity-system as well, but in intellectual terms. To realize this

we have to know about the introduction and influence which Christianity

had upon Japan from the early Meiji era (1868) onwards. Obviously, it

was a western notion, and became so ingrained in the general socialist

movement at the time (also a Western idea) that Kotoku had witnessed the

subtle stranglehold that it had on people. For instance, when he had

attempted to assemble a reliable core of militants whilst in America, he

found that they accepted Christianity, much to his surprise. This

situation was even worse in Japan itself, where there was not only a

Christian movement, but a self-avowedly Christian-Socialist one.[27]

This attack upon Christianity then, was in keeping with his Anarchist

views of “No Gods, No Masters,” and was also an attack on all myths,

including the emperor-deity one. Much of the research for the book was

carried on in the San Francisco library when he stayed there. Also, we

should recall that in prison (1905) just prior to going there he was

reading two types of literature: Anarchist and Anti-religious. He had

also been sent much Anti-Christian literature by his Anarchist friend,

Albert Johnson, who was a militant atheist. Ironically, when he was

arrested on 1^(st) June 1910, he was trying to board a train for Tokyo

in order to find a publisher for the book. Miyashita, Kanno and the

others were trying to kill the emperor; Kotoku was killing the idea of

an emperor.

Appendix I: References (western languages)

AMPO (Tokyo, 1970-).

Ayusawa Iwao; “Japan” in Organised Labour in four Continents, edited

H.A. Marquand et al (London 1939), pp. 481–510.

Bamba, Nobuya and John F. Howes: Pacifism in Japan: The Christian and

Socialist Tradition. (Kyoto, Minerva Press, 1978).

Badinoff, Boris and Hiroshi Ozeki: “Anarchism in Japan” (Anarchy Vol. 1.

No. 5, second series.)

Beckmann, George F.: “The Radical Left and the Failure of Communism” in

Dilemmas of Growth in Prewar Japan, edited by James William Morley

(Princeton University. 1971), pp 139178.

Bergamini, David: Japan’s Imperial Conspiracy (Panther, 1972).

Billingsley, Phil: The Japanese Anarchists (Leeds, 1970)

Dower, John: “Occupied Japan and the American Lake.” in America’s Asia,

edited by Mark Seldon and Edward

Friedmann (Pantheon, 1975) pp. 146–197.

The Echo, (Kobe, 1962)

Fairbank J. and E. Reischauer: East Asia: The Great Tradition (Tuttle,

Tokyo, 1972).

Halliday, Jon: A Political History of Japanese Capitalism.(Pantheon,

1975)

Ienaga Saburo: The Pacific War: World War II and the Japanese, 1931–1945

(Pantheon, 1978)

Twao Seiichi: Biographical Dictionary of Japanese History (Tokyo,

Kodansha, 1978)

Eguchi Kan: Mémoire sur la situation politique (1967 1973(Tokyo, 1974)

Kotoku Shusui: Letters to Albert Johnson in: Kotoku Shisui Zenshu

(Complete Works of Kotoku Shusui). reprinted from Mother Earth. A

selection from these letters was reprinted in Guy Aldred’s Pioneers. of

Anti Parliamentarism (Glasgow, 1940)pp. 81–85. A different selection,

together with a report on Kotoku’s execution, was reprinted in Man! An

Anthology of Anarchist Ideas, Essays, Poetry and Commentaries, edited by

Marcus Graham (Cienfuegos Press, 1974).

Libero International (Kobe, 1974-)

Livingston. Jon, Joe Moore and Felicia Oldfather: The Japan Reader 1

Imperial Japan, 1800–1945; 11 Postwar Japan, 1945 to the Present

(Penguin, 1976)

Matsui Shichiro; “Industrialisation and the Labour Movement in Japan”

(Paper read to International Symposium on Industrialisation and Labour

Problems in East Asia, Kyoto, 1971.

NAMZU: (Osaka, 1978-)

The New Echo (Kobe, 1969–71)

Les Novelles: (Kobe, 1972)

E.H. Norman: Ando Shoeki and the Anatomy of Japanese Feudalism (Asiatic

Society of Japan, Tokyo, 1949) two volumes.

Notehelfer, F.G. Kotoku Shusui: Portrait of a Japanese

Radical (Cambridge, 1971)

Radical: (Tokyo, 1973–75).

R.A. Scalapino: Democracy and the Party Movement in Pre-war Japan

(Berkeley, 1953)

S.Shiota: Dictionnaire Biographique du Mouvement Ouvrier Internationale,

Le Japon (Paris, Les Editions Ouvrier, 1978) tome 1

Kazuko Tanaka: The women’s Movement in Modern Japan (Tokyo, Femintern

Press, 1974)

Tohyama Hiroko and Wat Tyler: “Kaneko Fumiko” (Cienfuegos Press

Anarchist Review No. 3, Autumn 1977)

Tsuji Ken: “Labour’ (Japanese Quarterly, details unknown)

Tsuzuki Chushichi: “Kotoku, Osugi and Japanese Anarchism” (Hitotsubashi

Journal of Social Studies, March 1966.pp 30–42) Y

oshino I. Roger and Sue Murakoshi: The Invisible Visible Minority:

Japan’s Burakumin (Osaka, Buruka Kaiho Kenyusho, 1978.

Appendix II: Books and Newspapers Consulted by Victor Garcia

“Declaración de los Anarquistas Japoneses.” (CNT, Toulouse, October 22,

1948)

John Anderson: “Anarchists in Japan” (War Commentary, London, August 11,

1945)

F.Barret : L’Evolution du Capitalisme Japonais (Paris, 1947)

Ralph Barsodi: The Challenge of Asia (Melbourne. University Press, 1956)

Ruth Benedict: The Chrysanthemum and the Sword (To kyo, 1954)

Will durant: La Civilization del Extremo Oriente (Buenos Aires, 1956)

Victor Garcia: Japan Hoy (Buenos Aires, 1960)

“Kotoku, Osugi and Yamaga” (RUTA, Caracas, September 1 1975)

Pierre Gourou , L’ Asie (Paris, 1953)

Jean Grave (?): “Osugi Sakai.” “Japon” (Publications de

La Révolte et Temps Nouvaux No. 41, Paris, July 1 1926)

Lafcadio Hearn: Japan:An Interpretation (New York, 1926)

Toru Kurakowa : Zengakuren and the Anti-War Struggle” (Direct Action,

London, July 1963)

Li Pei kan: “Los Martires de Tokyo” (Umbral, Paris, August 1968)

Robert Linssen: Le Zen (Verviers, Marabout Universite, 1969)

A. Prunier: *Kotoku: Un Francisco Ferrer Giaponese” (ll Libertario,

Milan, several issues during 1949) Gregorio Quintana: “Del País del Sol

Naciente” (Solidaridad Obrera, Paris, September, 1962)

Jean Stoetzel: Without the Chrysanthemum and the Sword (London, 1955)

Takashima Yo: “Trade Unions in Japan” (AIT, Paris, March 1963)

Arthur W. Uloth: “Zen” (Freedom, London, September 17/november 26 1960)

Taiji Yamaga: Japan Martirio de Anarkisme Movado (JAF, Tokyo, 1957)

Shirohure Yamaguchi: Some Aspects of Agrarian Reform in Japan (Tokyo,

1948).

Yefime: Japon (Paris, 1970)

Postscript

There is one other item, which appeared too late to be consulted here,

but which must be mentioned: the Libertaire Group’s A Short History of

the Anarchist Movement in Japan (Tokyo, August, 1979). Conceivably

unique in the history of anarchist publishing, the book becomes an even

more astonishing achievement when one considers that it was produced

entirely by Japanese people with no help from native speakers of

English. Within its 252 pages it contains, apart from a “Historical

Sketch” by Hagiwara Shintaro and a Chronology by Sakaira Junji, more

than 200 pages of documents compiled and translated by Hashimoto

Yoshiharu, dating from the populár: Rights Movement of the 1870’s, to

the Anarcho-Communist party of the 1930’s. Included are writings by

Nakae Chomin, Kotoku Shusui, Osugi Sakae, Kondo Kenji, Mizunuma Tatsuo,

Furata Daijiro, Hatta Shuzo, Ito Noe, Takamure Itsue, Tsuji Jun,

Ishikawa Sanshiro, Iwasa Sakutaro, Kubo Jo, Suzuki Yasuyuki and Uemura

Tei, as well as the rules of the Oriental Socialist Party and the

platform and regulations of the Jiren syndicalist labor federation. Each

selection is prefaced by an explanation and a historical note by

Hashimoto, together with brief biographies of the people mentioned, and

the whole is tied together by short linking — pieces to provide

continuity. This book is a must for all readers of the present volume,

providing the documentary background to the activities of the many

individuals described here.

[1] Mother Earth, associated with Emma Goldman, immediately carried out

a protest campaign, along with other socialist publications. Apparently,

“...even the London Times condescended to murmur apprehensively at the

verdict.” Museifushugi: The Revolutionary Idea in Japan, V. Garcia & Wat

Tyler, p.77.

[2] V.Garcia & Wat Tyler, op cit p. 78.

[3] Shioida Shobei & Watanabe Junzo, (eds), Hiroku Taigyaku Jiken,

quoted in Sharon Slevers, Flowers in Salt: The Beginnings of Feminist

Consciousness in Modern Japan, p.223, n.40.

[4] J.Crump, op cit, p. 315.

[5] J.Crump, ibid, pp. 242–250 for the importance of A.Roller’s

pamphlet, and., chapter 8, “Kotoku Shusui and the American Connection.”

[6] Taigyaku jiken arubamu, comp. Kotoku Shusui zenshu henshu jinkai

(1972) pp 130–133. Quoted in S.Sievers, op cit, p. 222.

[7] S.Slevers, op cit, p. 157.

[8] Kanno Sugako, translated by Y, Hasimoto and published in Libertaire

magazine, vol. 6, No.11 (November 1975) cited in V.Garcia & Wat Tyler,

op. cit, p.76..

[9] V.Garcia & Wat Tyler, op cit, p.78.

[10] Shioda Shobei & Watanabe Junzo (eds.), Hiroku Taigyaku jiken, Vol.

1 p. 126, cited in F. Nolehelfer, Kotoku Shusui: Portrait of a Japanese

Radical, p.170.

[11] ibid., p. 127, cited in Notehelfer, ibid., p. 170.

[12] Arahata Kanson, Yanaka Village, p.17; cited in J. Crump, op cit,

p.30.

[13] “Letter to Albert Johnson, 6^(th) December, 1907.* in Shoida Shobei

(ed.) The Diaries and Letters of Kotoku Shusui, translated in J.Crump,

ibid., p. 308.

[14] J.Crump, ibid., p. 138.

[15] There is an excellent discussion of Kotoku’s “conversion” and the

reasons for it, based upon his experiences in America and of socialism,

the I.W.W. and Anarchism in J.Crump, ibid., chapter 8, *Kotoku Shusui

and the Americam Connection.”

[16]

J. Crump, ibid., p. 205.

[17]

S. Sievers, op cit., p. 154.

[18]

S. Sievers, ibid., pp. 154–155.

[19] Katayama Sen, The Labour movement in Japan, Chicago, 1918. pp.

132–135; cited in S.Sievers, ibid. p.221,n.28.

[20] Kotoku to Albert Johnson 11^(th) April 1910, cited in J.Crump, op

cit., p. 306.

[21]

J. Crump, ibid., p. 306.

[22]

J. Crump, ibid. p.306. The quote is from Ishikawa Kyokuzan (Sanshiro)

and Kokotu Shusul, Nihon Shakalshugi Shi (A History of Japanese

Socialism) in Meiji Bunku zenshu (Collected Works on the Culture of

the Meiji Era), Tokyo, 1929, Vol. 21. p.370.

[23] Cited in J. Crump, ibid., pp. 303–304.

[24] Arahata Kanson, Hitosuji no michi, p. 153. 1954; cited in

S.Sievers, op cit., p. 152.

[25] Shloda Shobel, op cit., p. 171.

[26] Cited in V. Garcia & Wat Tyler, op cit., p. 74.

[27] For a discussion of this see J. Crump, op cit., chapters 4 and 11.