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Title: Anarchism in Japan Author: Chushichi Tsuzuki Date: AUTUMN 1970 Language: en Source: Government and Opposition, AUTUMN 1970, Vol. 5, No. 4 (AUTUMN 1970), pp. 501-522 Notes: Cambridge UNIVERSITY TRESS Anarchism in Japan Author(s): Chushichi Tsuzuki Source: Government and Opposition, AUTUMN 1970, Vol. 5, No. 4 (AUTUMN 1970), pp. 501-522 Chushichi Tsuzuki Anarchism in Japan Cambridge
Chushichi Tsuzuki Anarchism in Japan
It would seem curious to an outside observer that the dissolution of the
Nihon-Anakisuto-Kenmei (Japanese Anarchist Federation) should be
formally announced in January 1969, at a time when militant students
were determined to defend their âfortressâ, the Yasuda auditorium of
Tokyo University, which they had occupied for several months, against an
attack by the riot police. The anarchists themselves called the
dissolution âa deployment in the face of the enemyâ. Yet they had to
admit at the same time that they had reached a deadlock in their
attempts within the Federation to formulate new theories of anarchism
and to hit upon new forms of organization for the new era of direct
action which they believed had begun.1 Indeed, they remained very weak
numerically, and they had only a limited direct influence among the
student movements which appeared in their eyes to have ushered in this
era. It has been said that acceptance of democracy in post-war Japan
encouraged the spread of anarchism as a sentiment, and this, in turn,
rendered anarchism as a movement âsuperfluousâ.2 One of the stalwarts of
the Todai-Zenkyoto (Council of United Struggle, Tokyo University)
cheerfully declared that they were âaristocratic anarchistsâ. Their
struggle, he said, was ânot the one fought by the maltreated, nor even
on their behalf, but was the revolt of the young aristocrats who felt
that they had to deny their own aristocratic attributes in order to make
themselves truly nobleâ.3 It has also been pointed out that the concept
of student power and the tactics of campus occupation were in the line
of anarcho-syndicalism in spite of the professed political sympathies
(Trotskyism or Maoism) of the movementâs leaders. Yoshitaka Yamamoto,
the leader of the Todai-Zenkyoto admitted that the term anarchism had
been used as an epithet as derogatory as âleft-wing infantile diseaseâ
or âgenerational struggleâ. 1 Jtyu-Rengo (âLibera Federacioâ), 1 January
1969. 2 Michio Matsuda, Anaki^umu (Anarchism), Tokyo, 1963, p. 61. 3
Joky6 (Situation), No. 8, 1969, p. 37. 601
CHUSHICHI TSUZUKI These, he said, had been freely levelled by the
âbureaucratsâ of the Communist Party and the âauthoritarianâ professors
of universities (both formerly champions of the post-war democracy)
against what he called âincalculable human (revolutionary) passionsâ. He
felt, however, that anarchism had been unduly neglected and ought to be
re-examined.4 Indeed, there was an element of anarchism in all this.
Anarchism, or rather nihilism, as a sentiment, however, flourished in
post-war Japan not so much because of the apparent progress of
democracy, as because of the fact that parliamentary democracy, still a
delicate plant in a hostile soil, began to show signs of atrophy under
the perpetual rule (or misrule) of conservative governments. Moreover,
there was nothing novel in nihilism as such. As the pioneer anarchists
sometimes remarked, the spirit of total negation can be traced to the
influence among other things of Buddhism and of Taoism,5 6 and it
provided a moral seedbed for the introduction of anarchism as a body of
European thought. This was a profound shock to the authoritarian
government of Meiji, which drew its sustenance from another national
tradition, that of conformity. In the following account I propose to
deal mainly with anarchism as an intellectual movement in Japan and its
bearing on the studentsâ revolt in the 1960s. HISTORICAL BACKGROUND It
is noteworthy that anarchism in Japan has been closely related to the
movement against war. In fact, it had its origin in an anti-war campaign
during the Russo-Japanese war, when Shusui Kotoku, editor of the
anti-war socialist paper Heimtn (Common People), read Kropotkin while in
prison. It is also significant that Kotoku approached socialism and
anarchism in terms not of working-class politics but of the
self-sacrificing devotion of the high-minded liberals of lower Samurai
origins. Within the short-lived Socialist Party of Japan, he led the
âhardâ faction of direct actionists against the âsoftâ parliamentarians,
at a time when neither parliamentary action nor direct action in the
form of a general strike was possible for the socialists. He was
involved in a premature plot against the Emperor 4 Y. Yamoto,
Chisei-no-Hanran {Revolt of Intellect), Tokyo, 1969, p. 195; Asabi
Journal, 6 July 1969. 6 For instance Shusui Kotoku in Hikari (Light), 15
December 1906. 602
ANARCHISM IN JAPAN Meiji, and in the treason trial of 1910-11, which was
largely rigged by the prosecution, 26 anarchists (including three
Buddhist priests) were indicted, 12 of whom, including Kotoku, were
executed. Some anarchists were spared, simply because they were already
in prison for other offences. Sakae Osugi, one of the prisoners, who was
destined to succeed Kotoku, came from a family of distinguished soldiers
and had introduced himself as âthe son of a murdererâ when he joined the
anti-war movement led by Kotoku. For some time after the treason trial
he concentrated upon literary work, and in this less provocative way he
was able to develop his own anarchist thought under the influence of
Bergson and Sorel, Stirner and Nietzsche. The nature of the social
system which would come as the result of economic progress, he argued,
would depend upon âan unknown factorâ in manâs reasoning to be developed
by âa minority who would strive for the expansion of each oneâs selfâ.6
He applied his philosophy of life to the labour movement which, he
declared, was âan attempt on the part of the working man to regain
himselfâ and consequently âthe problem of life itselfâ.7 During the
first world war, the Japanese socialists and anarchists remained too
powerless to raise even the feeblest voice of protest. The rapid
expansion of industry during the war, and the inspiration given by the
Russian revolution, however, led to a real awakening of the labour
movement. Osugi flirted with the Comintern for a while, but soon broke
with those who organized the clandestine Communist Party in 1922. This
Ana-Boru Ronso (dispute between the anarchists and bolsheviks)
culminated in a bold attempt by Osugi to capture the nascent trade union
movement for anarcho-syndicalism, but all his efforts in this line were
frustrated by government intervention. Meanwhile, some anarchists,
especially those organized in a secret society called Girochinsha
(Guillotine Society), were driven to acts of terrorism. Ironically,
Osugi himself fell, victim to the âwhiteâ terrorism of the military
police which followed the Kanto earthquake of 1923. He was murdered in
an army barracks. Thereafter, there was a revival of anarchism as a form
of reaction against the political achievements of âTaisho Democracyâ
embodied as they were in the Universal Suffrage Act of 192 5, which was
accompanied by a safety measure, an act for the maintenance of internal
security. While the inaugural conference of the Peasants- 6 Osugi,
âKusari-Kojo (The Chain Factory)*, Kindai-Shiso (Modern Thought),
September 1913. 7 Osugi in Kodo-Undo (Labour Movement), October 1919,
June 1920. 503
CHUSHICHI TSUZUKI Workers Party was dispersed by the police, anarchist
stalwarts of various factions arrived on the scene to denounce the
beginning of the workersâ participation in parliamentary politics, and
from this rather unseemly protest was born the Black (Youth) Federation.
Sakutaro Iwasa, a veteran anarchist, who had set up a Social
Revolutionary Party among the Japanese immigrants in San Francisco when
Kotoku visited there, now exerted a decisive influence upon the
Federation. He was an exponent of âpure anarchismâ, according to which
all the socialist parties and trade unions would only assist the
progress of capitalism with the ideology of class war, which was âa
shamâ. âThe workers who work under big capitalistsâ, he declared, âare
sharing and promoting their mastersâ exploitation.â They themselves
would exploit the people if they were successful in revolution; only an
anarchist minority could achieve a revolution for the people because
they desired freedom and emancipation, but not power for themselves, and
consequently would attain their aims by freeing other people from
exploitation and from power.8 By calling for a boycott of all forms of
organization, however, Iwasa and the Black Federation crippled the newly
created syndicalist federation, the National Association of Trade
Unions, which had had an auspicious start with a combined membership of
over 10,000 in 1926.9 Shortly afterwards, yet another syndicalist
federation came into existence with the assistance of, among others,
Sanshiro Ishikawa. Ishikawaâs anarchist convictions, which dated from
before Kotokuâs, had been strengthened by reading Towards Democracy and
other writings of Edward Carpenter. âI have for a very long time been
dissatisfied with mere mechanical materialistic Socialism and the
parliamentary movementâ, he wrote to Carpenter in 1909.10 Like Osugi, he
was spared because he had been in prison at the time of the treason
trial. After his release, he spent eight years as an exile in Europe,
mostly with the Reclus family in Brussels. With a knowledge of the
French syndicalist movement, he now exhorted his followers to ally
themselves with working-class organizations. 8 Iwasa, Kakumei-Danso
(Thoughts on devolution), 1958, quoted in Kiyoshi Akiyama, Nihon-no
Hangyaku-Shiso (Rebellious Thought in Japan), Tokyo, 1968, p. 164;
Iwasa, âKaiho-nitaisuru-Anakisuto-no-Yakuwari (The Anarchist Role in
Emancipation), Jiyu-Rengo-Sbinbun illiberal Federation Newspaper), 1 May
1930, Matsuda, op. cit., pp. 376, 382. 9 Kensuke Yamaguchi,
âNihon-niokeru-Anaruko-Sandikarizumu (Anarcho-Syndicalism in Japan)â,
Shisd-no-Kagaku (Science of Thought), November 1966. 10 Ishikawa to
Carpenter, 14 December 1909, Carpenter Collection, Sheffield City
Library. 504
ANARCHISM IN JAPAN During the years of great depression, the syndicalist
unions, formed mainly among the workers employed in small firms, fought
a series of desperate struggle, the most celebrated of which was the
workersâ occupation of a dyeing factory in Tokyo in 1930, when an
anarchist worker sat on the top of a tall chimney for 15 days with a
black flag flying. After the Japanese invasion of Manchuria in 1931,
government action against left-wing bodies became more ruthless and
frequent. The tenacity with which the Left held out is attested by an
attempt made in 1935 to form a united front, an âalliance to smash
Nazism and Fascismâ as it was called, among the left-wing social
democrats, bolsheviks, anarchists and syndicalists, though it was at
once suppressed by the police. In the same year, the syndicalist unions
received a fatal blow, the arrest of the members of a secret society
called the Anarchist Communist Party, which had been formed to organize
an armed uprising against the government. Characteristically, the
âself-righteousness and adventurism of the intellectualsâ of the âpartyâ
were condemned by the syndicalist workers.11 AFTER THE SECOND WORLD WAR
In 1945, unconditional surrender and the physical destruction of the
country seemed to promise a new era when, free from the old government
and the old ruling classes that had gone, as it seemed, for ever, the
anarchists might be given a chance to try their ideas for the
reconstruction of society. It was with such hope that the aged Ishikawa
wrote an anarchist âUtopiaâ entitled â Gojunen-go-no-Nihon (Japan 50
Years Later)â shortly after the end of the war. In this work, democratic
reorganization of post-war Japan, itself a pale imitation of the
European experience of the last hundred years, is followed by a peaceful
revolution; the extensive use of mutual exchange banks and the growth of
mutualist trade unions lead to the emergence of a new society, in which
the old Diet building is used only for meetings of the unions, and
culture and the economy are conducted on a co-operative basis so as to
enable each individual to live a life of artistic creation. Most of
Ishikawaâs fellow anarchists, however, do not appear to have shared his
belief in nudity as the symbol of natural freedom nor his peculiar view
that the emperor should be 11 Yamaguchi, loc. cit.y 4. 505
CHUSHICHI TSUZUKI maintained even in an anarchist Utopia as the symbol
of communal affection.12 The Japanese Anarchist Federation came into
existence in May 1946, at a time when millions of hungry workers were
taking part in demonstrations all over the country demanding food and a
âdemocratic popular frontâ. The revived anarchist movement, however,
failed to make an impression on the Left; their programme of action
remained academic, in spite of some attempts made by syndicalist
unionists to establish workersâ control of production. The anarchists
favoured âa revolutionary popular frontâ but quarrelled among themselves
over their attitude towards the Communist Party. Their organ, Heimin,
unlike its predecessors edited by Kotoku and Osugi, âdid not create a
great social shockâ.13 It seems that the anarchists, lacking an adequate
theory of transition, could not compete with the communists or
socialists in practical proposals for the reconstruction of society.
Thus they were driven either into political and industrial struggles
outside their own ranks or back into the realm of the ideal, in which
they were unrivalled. By the end of 1946 the tone of the Heimin had
become more intellectual and idealist and more conspicuously
anti-Marxist than before. When SCAP (Supreme Commander for the Allied
Powers) issued an injunction against a general strike prepared by a
Joint Action Committee of communists, socialists and their trade union
allies on behalf of the underpaid governmental workers, an industrial
offensive which threatened the overthrow of the conservative government,
the anarchist organ indulged in Schadenfreude by criticizing what they
called âthe conservative nature of the strike of the bureaucrats (namely
governmental workers)â.14 SCAP sought to contain communist influence
among government employees by depriving them of the right to strike,15
to the relief of the government and to the delight of the anarchists,
who insisted that the civil servants were âthe agents of
authoritarianismâ. The anarchists, it seems, failed to see the nature of
the power wielded by SCAP, just as the communists had for some time
after the war regarded the American forces as an army of liberation. In
the meantime, the pre-war debate on the difference between 12 Published
in Shisd-no-Kagakuy December 1966. 13 Michio Osawa,
âSengo-Nihon-no-Anakizumu-Undo (The Anarchist Movement in Post-war
Japan) IVâ, Jtyu-Rengo, 1 October 1964. 14 Heimin-Shinbun, 12 February
1947. 15 Ibid., 9 August 1948. 506
ANARCHISM IN JAPAN âpure anarchismâ and anarcho-syndicalism was revived,
and the resulting division within the handful of participants in the
debate led to the dissolution of the Japanese Anarchist Federation in
October 1950. The disintegration, however, should be considered against
the background of the cold war and the change in American policy towards
Japan. The implementation of the new democratic peace constitution gave
way to measures for the swift recovery of the national economy which
encouraged employers to take the offensive against the workers. The
virtual suppression of the Japanese Communist Party by SCAP in June 1950
preceded the outbreak of the Korean war, and the conclusion of the San
Francisco Peace Treaty in the following year cleared the way for the
return of war-time leaders in almost all spheres of national life.
Indeed, 1950 marked a turning-point in the post-war history of Japan,
and the decline of anarchism was only part of the general crisis which
threatened the Japanese Left about this time. THE STUDENTS The post-war
student movement had consolidated its strength by 1948, when the
students set up the Zengakuren (Zen-Nihon-Gakusei-Jichikai-Sorengo or
All Japan General Federation of Student Unions) with a militant
tradition already established through a series of struggles against an
increase in tuition and fees and against those whom they regarded as the
enemies of peace and democracy. Their relations with the Communist Party
were tenuous from the start, though their militancy was encouraged for a
while by the latter when the party, confronted with the Cominform
criticism of 1950, abandoned its previous policy of peaceful revolution
and adopted one of guerrilla warfare and armed insurrection. It is,
however, noteworthy that the studentsâ demands for âlocal communesâ and
their insistence that âit was high time to take over university power by
themselvesâ can be traced to their struggles of this period.16 The
Communist Partyâs futile policy of âextreme-leftist adventurismâ, and
its dismal failure, left the student movement in low spirits and
confusion. It was not until 1956, when the revelation of the Stalinist
enormities in Russia stirred world opinion, that left-wing forces
outside 10 Akira Yamanaka, Sengo-Gakusei-Undoshi (History of the
Post-war Student Movement), Tokyo 1969, p. 154. 507
CHUSHICHI TSUZUKI the Communist Party found strength to stand on their
feet again. In this year, what was called âthe second foundation
congressâ of the Zengakuren was held, and it was decided that the prime
responsibility of the student movement was to promote the struggle for
peace. In the same year, the anarchists revived their Federation with
the Kurohata (Black Flag) as its new organ. Meanwhile, the cautious
response of the Communist Party to the events of 1956 (they regretted
that the criticism of Stalin had gone too far in Hungary) led to the
rise of âIndependent Marxismâ which politically took the shape of a
Japanese Trotskyist Federation, formed in January 1957, soon to be known
as the Kakukjodo (Kakumei-Kyosanshugisha-Ddmei or Revolutionary
Communist League). In the following year, a muddled debate over the new
draft constitution of the Communist Party further encouraged the
âIndependent Marxistsâ as the draft appeared too ânationalistâ and
conservative. Japan, it declared, was still a âsemi-dependentâ country
âhalf occupied by American imperialismâ, and would require a two-step
revolution: a peopleâs democratic revolution through the establishment
of a âNational Democratic United Frontâ (itself a re-statement of a
similar âfrontâ advocated in 1949) which would allow an alliance with
ânationalâ capitalists; and a socialist revolution which would follow.
It was under these circumstances that the revived Anarchist Federation
at its annual conference of 1958 reviewed its whole attitude towards
revolution. The delegates argued that the people would soon be forced to
choose between atomic death and social revolution, and peaceful
co-existence would only serve the interests of the rulers of the two
world states. They would support the militant students and workers âfrom
behindâ with an advocacy of âPeopleâs Direct Actionâ against the danger
of a nuclear war.17 The anarchists, however, remained a group of
devotees without allies. The workers on the whole were engaged in their
own struggles for higher wages, which they were assured as long as they
would work for higher productivity; while the militant students came
largely under the influence of the Trotskyist movement. From the
âRenaissanceâ of the student movement there emerged greater militancy
and vehemence in the âMain Streamâ or âAnti-Yoyogiâ faction (Yoyogi
being the name of the district in which the headquarters of the
Communist Party is located) of the Zengakuren. Militant students now
declared âthe Kishi government, tied as it was to the forces of
international imperialismâ, to be their âenemy at 17 Kurohata, 1
December 1958. 508
ANARCHISM IN JAPAN homeâ, and sought to turn the peace movement into a
class struggle. They saw âthe crucial phase of a decisive battle in
class warâ in every issue that cropped up. A pattern of protest was
formed at that time, when the government, in a rash attempt to
strengthen the police system, failed to pay due respect to parliamentary
opposition, and thereby provoked extra-parliamentary opposition by the
indignant workers and students. The crisis was overcome by an agreement
among top politicians to drop the matter altogether: this was a
âcompromiseâ (itself an immoral concept in Japanese terms) that appeared
to the students to be a criminal âbetrayalâ on the part of the
working-class âestablishmentâ, the Socialist Party and its ally the
Sohyo (Nihon-Rddd-Kumiai-So-Hydgikai or General Council of Trade Unions
of Japan), the major trade union federation. The range of negation for
the militants was thus greatly extended. The pattern was repeated on a
much larger scale, with more serious results in i960, when the nation
was given for the first time a chance to decide its attitude towards the
Security Treaty (or military alliance) with the United States. The âMain
Streamâ Zengakuren had tried to invade the premises of the Diet, and had
been at loggerheads with a National Council of socialists, communists,
Sohyo, and some intellectuals, who favoured orderly petition against the
treaty. In May when Kishi enraged his adversaries by rushing the
controversial treaty through the Diet with the aid of the police,
overthrow of his government and defence of parliamentary democracy
became the immediate targets of the national movement. Huge
demonstrations were organized almost daily around the Diet, and a series
of protest strikes was staged by the Sohyo and other unions, involving 4
to 6 million workers, with considerable public support. Although the
magnitude and vehemence of the protest led to the cancellation of
Eisenhowerâs proposed visit and also to the resignation of Kishi, the
opposition forces failed in their primary object of destroying the
Security Treaty. And what had become of democracy? The Kurohata had been
appealing for a general strike. Now the anarchist organ commented that
âwe have learned by experience . . . that politics which plead for
democracy in the form of political parties, parliament, and political
power, must inevitably lead to dictatorshipâ. The Anarchist Federation
had joined with the âMain Streamâ Zengakuren in demanding fighting
rather than demonstrations, and in this, it claimed, they were supported
by âthe peopleâ who had âsurpassedâ those who had in the past acted as
their leaders. In this sense âthe anarchist revolution had begunâ, and
had been 509
CHUSHICHI TSUZUKI suppressed by the National Council.18 Hence the charge
of dictatorship. However fanciful many of the anarchist claims may now
seem, there is a grain of bitter truth in their allegation: belief in
parliamentary democracy was now seriously shaken, and the gap between
the militants and the existing left-wing parties was unbridgeably
widened, especially as the communists condemned âTrotskyist* tactics as
responsible for the death of a Zengakuren student in a skirmish with the
police. The Kurohata also pointed out that the ruling party, the liberal
democrats, had amassed many votes by bribery and other means and
therefore the demonstrations around the Diet had also been directed
against âdirty politics.19 Yet there was a temporary lull after the
storm. As âdoubling of income and âhigh economic growth* became not only
the shibboleth of the government but also the signs of actual prosperity
that marked the years after the i960 struggle, the unbroken rule of the
liberal democrats seemed assured in the Diet. At the same time the
oposition parties consoled themselves with the modest achievement of
retaining one third of the Diet seats, which would enable them to
forestall an attempt to eliminate the peace clause of the constitution.
The Zengakuren militants busied themselves with endless debates over the
niceties of revolutionary theories and tactics which divided and
subdivided their forces into warring sects. The anarchists seem to have
had second thoughts on the Zengakuren sects and the movement of the âNew
Left* in general, which they thought were making their leaders into
âlittle Stalins*. They were particularly suspicious of the Trotskyist
Kakukyddo (Revolutionary Communist League) whose allies among the
students, the Maruga-kudo {Marukusushugi-Gakusei-Domei or Marxist
Student League), had captured the Zengakuren executive. In fact, at the
general election for the House of Councillors in July 1962, the
Trotskyists put forward one of their leaders, a young philosopher who
preached a âsubjective materialism* of human alienation. âExtravagant*,
said the anarchists, âis the farce of the Kakukyddo twisting
anti-Stalinism into a dogma, suppressing the creative opinions of its
members in the name of building a true and only party of the advance
guard . . . and enshrining its sacred founder in the bourgeois
temple.*20 The excitement of the early summer of i960 had by now been 18
Kurohata y 1 July i960. 19 Ibid. 20 Kurohata y 1 February 1962. 510
ANARCHISM IN JAPAN replaced by a bitter feeling of frustration among the
Left, which led to recrimination, confusion, and apathy, but also to
some soulsearching attempts to find a new basis for fresh and possibly
more successful activities. The socialists began to talk about âvisionâ
and (together with some communists) about âstructural reformâ. The
anarchists, too, launched an ambitious debate on âthe need for
emancipating anarchism from the classical theories of revolutionâ. Among
the anarchist ranks, those who had joined the movement after the war had
by now come to the forefront of its activities. Masamichi Osawa, one of
the leading theorists of the younger generation, started questioning the
validity of the revolutionary ideas that his predecessors had inherited
from the 19th century. The cult of fixed principles had hampered the
revolutionary movement in Japan, he declared, taking his cue from
Professor Maru-yamaâs famous analysis of the subject. In the pages of
the Jiju-Rengo (âLibera Federacioâ) which had succeeded the Kurobata,
Osawa dealt with the new type of poverty in mass society, dehumanization
or alienation. It was a novel argument, certainly among the anarchists,
and from it he drew lessons for revolution: the upper, rather than the
lower, strata of the proletariat would fight for the control, rather
than the ownership, of the means of production; multiplication of free
associations and communes rather than the seizure of political power
would be the form of revolution. The change, he went on, would be
gradually carried out through structural changes in various social
groups, in each industry, school and university, local community and
individual family; hence revolution would be social and cultural rather
than political, and arts and education would play an important role in
it.21 Osawaâs propositions were soon under attack as âan anarchist
variety of reformismâ or revisionism. He was rightly criticized for his
neglect of Japanese realities, the mixture of elements both new and old,
the contrast of modern technology and semi-feudal social relationships;
and it was indeed against this curious mixture that new revolt was soon
to raise its ominous head. The lively debate that followed, however,
made it clear that the anarchists agreed to differ on the vital question
of how to achieve revolution. THE VIETNAM ISSUE The American bombing of
North Vietnam which began in February 21 Jiyu-Rnego, 1 June 1965. 511
CHUSHICHI TSUZUKI 1965, and the menace of total war thus created,
provided the occasion for the left-wing forces to intensify their
campaign against war. Thus they were able to recover from the effects of
the years of disarray which had been worsened by the impact of the
Sino-Russian dispute. As for the anarchists, however, their attitude
towards the Vietnamese war was rather complex: they believed, as the
Jiju-Rengo put it, that struggle for national emancipation in
underdeveloped countries would lead to world war rather than world
revolution, and nationalism in these countries would lead to national
capitalism in spite of its socialist mask. The anarchist alternative to
the nation states should be village communes that would provide centres
for the development of agricultural societies. Therefore, the anarchists
should work for immediate cessation of hostilities, and they were
prepared to join in forming an anti-war movement which would be a loose
federation of various left-wing opinions.22 In fact, such a movement had
just begun in the form of Betonamu-ni Heiwa-wo Shimin-Rengo (Citizensâ
Federation for Peace in Vietnam) soon to be known as Beheiren, and the
anarchists, bearing the black flag, had participated in the
demonstrations which led to its formation in April 1965. Its founder,
Minoru Oda, who had studied in America, drafted what he called ca
Citizensâ Pact between Japan and America for Peace and against Warâ, in
which he declared for âinternational civil disobedienceâ. He
distinguished between âdemocracy for the peopleâ and âdemocracy of (and
by) the peopleâ, and saw in the latter the principle of his own movement
which was to be translated into demands for direct democracy and direct
action by the citizens.23 Indeed, Odaâs views had much in common with
anarchism, but the anarchist movement as such does not seem to have
exerted much influence on the activities of the Bebeiren, which sought
to attract attention by publishing an advertisement for peace in the New
York Times and by actively aiding the American soldiers who deserted
while on leave in Japan. In 1965, the anti-war movement was further
accelerated by events which appeared to confirm Japanâs deeper
involvement in the war in Vietnam: her rapprochement with South Korea,
including close economic co-operation, and the dispatch of the Korean
âTigerâ Division to South Vietnam. Ratification of the treaty with South
22 Jiyu-Rengo, 1 June 1965. 23 Oda,
âGenri-toshiteno-Minshushugi-no-Fukken (Rehabilitation of Democracy as a
Principle)â, Tertbo (Prospect), August 1967. 512
ANARCHISM IN JAPAN Korea was forced through the Diet in the teeth of
opposition both inside and outside. It was a repetition of the i960
struggle, another crisis in parliamentary democracy. It was said, argued
Osawa, that the governmentâs rash action was an âoutrageâ, but a bill on
internal security or on foreign and military affairs had rarely been
passed without such an âoutrageâ. Each time an âoutrageâ took place, he
went on, a âthreat to parliamentary democracyâ was talked about by
journalists, and two camps of party politicians inveighed against each
other and then contrived a truce. âThis is the scene we have tirelessly
watched for the 20 years since the end of the war.â He asked whether
parliamentary democracy could thrive at all in Japan, where class
division was so intense and involved that mediation or moderation
through parliament appeared almost impossible. Moreover, he believed,
parliamentary democracy was becoming outdated, as a dominant political
institution throughout the world and was sooner or later to be replaced
by direct democracy and federalism. So he urged his followers to raise
the voice of no confidence in political parties and the Diet.24 From the
protest against ratification of the treaty with South Korea was born a
new working-class organization called the Hansen-seinen-i
(Hansen-Seinen-Iinkai or Anti-War Youth Committee), which was soon to
provide young activists from the ranks of trade unionists to co-operate
with the Zengakuren militants in a series of direct actions against war.
It is true that the initiative in launching the Hansenseinen-i was taken
by the Youth Section of the Socialist Party in August 1965, in
conjunction with the Youth Department of the Sohyo and the Shaseido
(Shakaishugi-Seinen-Ddmei or Socialist Youth League connected with the
Socialist Party) with a view to creating a nation-wide youth movement
against the war in Vietnam; and militant trade unionists played a
prominent role in several demonstrations and sit-ins around the Diet
during the Korean Treaty struggle. In spite of the socialistsâ pretence
of patronage, however, the new organization developed into a movement
for protest against the very existence of the Socialist Party and the
Sohyo. âPost-war democracyâ, remarked one of the movementâs leaders,
âhas come to mean the existing political order for petit-bourgeois life
. . . âDemocracyâ has been emaciated into the petty act of voting, and
trade unions, which had been highly valued as a blessing of post-war
democracy, have become service organs which would secure for us
sufficient wages to maintain the standard of petit-bourgeois living
through 24 Jiju-Rengo, 1 December 1965. 513
CHUSHICHI TSUZUKI âdemocraticâ parleys between capital and labour.â25
Thus the campaign of the militant unionists against war was also a form
of protest against the âfalseâ prosperity of the workers. Moreover they
were ready for direct action in the streets, but apparently not in the
factories. Direct action in the factories was left in the hands of more
professional revolutionaries, the anarchists. They had, however, no
following among organized labour, and consequently their âpropaganda by
deedâ took the daring form of a few determined men sneaking into a
munitions factory and cutting off the supply of electricity for io or 15
minutes. This was what actually took place when twelve or thirteen
anarchists raided a machine-gun factory at Tanashi, Tokyo, in October
1966. This raid, and another in Nagoya, were organized by a Behan-i
(Betonamu-Hansen-Chokusetsu-Kodo-Iinkai or Anti-Vietnam War Direct
Action Committee), which consisted mostly of anarchist students. This
body published details of the munitions industry in Japan under the
heading of âGroup Portrait of the Merchants of Deathâ, and called for
âfactory occupationâ and âsabotageâ against them.26 Indeed, bold action
earned sympathy and support for the anarchist students, but some
anarchists distrusted what they called âthe prelude to terrorismâ and
irresponsibility.27 In fact, the Behan-i soon disintegrated, with the
disturbing result that the leader of a group called Haihansha (Revolt
Society), who had taken part in the Tanashi raid, later became a police
spy.28 THE 1967-8 CLIMAX 1967 was the year when the militant students,
with the aid of activist workers of the Hansenseinen-i, started a series
of direct actions against the war in Vietnam: a sit-in demonstration at
the American air base at Tachikawa (Sunagawa) in May, and the âHaneda
Incidentâ in October when, in an attempt to prevent Premier Satoâs visit
to South Vietnam, about 2,500 students and their working-class allies
clashed with the Kidotai (riot police) near Haneda Airport. Direct
action, which inevitably meant a battle with the well-armed police, now
fashioned the style of their protest: the students armed themselves 25
Keishi Takami, Hansen-Seinen-Iinkai, 1968, p. 131. 26 Behan-i (ed.),
Sbi-no-Sbdnin-e-no-Cbdsen {(Challenge to the Merchants of Death), 1967,
passim. 27 Jiyu-Kengo, 1 February 1967. 28 Asahi-Shinbun, 7 August 1969.
514
ANARCHISM IN JAPAN with wooden staves and helmets painted with the
colours and name of the sect to which they belonged. By this time the
Zengakuren had recovered from the chaos that followed the i960 struggle
and the ceaseless transmutation of its various sects now yielded
temporarily to relative stability, as the sects were grouped into three
Zengakurens, each with an esoteric name: the Kakumaru-Zengakuren
dominated by the Kakumaru (Kaku-meiteki-Marukusushugi or Revolutionary
Marxist) faction of the Trotskyist Marugakudo
(Marukusushugi-Gakusei-Domei or Marxist Student League); the Sanpa-kei
(Three School Faction) Zengakuren which consisted of three sects - the
Chukaku (Central Core) faction of the same Marxist Student League, the
Sbagakudo (Shakaisbugi-Gakusei-Ddmei or Socialist Student League),
consisting primarily of those students who had been expelled from the
Communist Party (formerly Communist Student League), and the Kaiho
(Emancipation) faction of the Sbaseido (Shakaishugi-Seinen-Ddmei or
Socialist Youth League), a body which had been expelled from the
Socialist Party but maintained its original aim of establishing an
alliance of the students and workers; and finally the Communist
Zengakuren which was then called the Heimin-Gakuren
(Heiwa-to-Minsbushugi-wo-mamoru-Zenkoku-Jicbikai-Rengd or National
Federation of Student Unions for Defence of Peace and Democracy) and
soon to be called the Minsei-kei-Zengakuren, Minsei being the communist
sponsored Minsbu-Seinen-Ddmei or Democratic Youth League. The above
outline of the Zengakuren may be confusing enough for the uninitiated;
it suffices to add that divisions could and did go further as
differences of opinion developed as to the degree of militancy or the
relative priority of each article of faith, such as anti-imperialism or
anti-Stalinism, or priority in actions, such as extra-campus struggles
or confrontation within each university. Indeed, the Sanpa, the most
heterogeneous of the three, later split, and the anti-imperialist
Zengakuren, a motley collection of Trotskyists and Maoists, emerged. It
seems that the students were utterly incapable of stable alliance, and
their intolerance was illustrated by uchigeba (internal violence),
physical fights between the sects and factions including several cases
of brutal beatings. The anti-communist Zengakuren remained a minority,
and the communist students, who took a more active interest in campus
democracy and student welfare, were said at the time of the Haneda
incident to have controlled nearly 80% of all the student unions.29 29
Asabi-Sbinbun, 9 October 1967. 515
CHUSHICHI TSUZUKI In the following year (1968) the studentsâ
extra-campus struggles âescalatedâ as they fought increasingly violent
battles with the Kidotai: the massive demonstrations in January against
the visit to Sasebo of the American nuclear submarine Enterprise; the
raid on the Oji US Field Hospital in Tokyo; support for the stubborn
resistance of the peasants who refused to sell their land as a site for
a new international airport at Narita in the spring; and the riotous
demonstrations in Shinjuku (Tokyo) on âInternational Anti-War Dayâ in
October when more than a thousand students and others were arrested.
âThe Opening of the Era of Direct Actionâ encouraged the anarchists as
it coincided with the radicalization of student movements abroad, in
particular the âMay Revolutionâ in Paris. In Japan, too, âit is a
well-known factâ, remarked the Jiyu Rengo â. . . that university
education is becoming a process of mass production as in the factories,
and resistance to such tendency provides the mainspring of the studentsâ
revolt. ... It is only natural that they should lead the revolt against
the system because they are intellectual workers under training, soon to
be sent to the key positions in the process of dehumanization now
developing. From this point of view we may say that the time will soon
come when the student movement will unite with the workersâ movement.â30
Yet the students did not appear anxious to co-operate with the workers.
Militant students, especially those in the Trotskyist sects, began to
regard themselves as the main army of revolution rather than the advance
guard or even the âdetonatorâ of the working-class revolution.31 STUDENT
POWER AND INTELLECTUAL TRENDS The immediate issue within the campus was
redress of such grievances as increases in fees, the internship system
for medical students, the reluctance on the part of the university
authorities to give full autonomy to the students in the management of
their hostels and union buildings, and more generally the inevitable
defects of mass education: enormous classes and overworked professors,
and resulting âalienationâ.32 When the students believed that they had
dis- 30 Jtyu-Rertgo, 1 July 1968. 31 Koken Koyama,
âZengakuren-no-Senryaku-to-Senjutsu (The Strategy and Tactics of the
Zengakuren)â, Rodo-Mondai, July 1968. 32 It is interesting to note that
the students did not complain much about the 516
ANARCHISM IN JAPAN covered the ultimate cause of their complaints in
âalienationâ and combined this with theoretical âsituationsâ provided by
Japanese âMonopoly Capitalismâ, âAmerican Imperialismâ, and âRussian
Stalinismâ, it required little mental exercise for them to conclude that
they should strive for revolution, even world revolution, total negation
of all their enemies. Yet this mental process, which is in fact more
nihilist than anarchist, wrought havoc in the Japanese universities. At
the height of the campus disputes it was estimated that i io out of the
489 universities in Japan were in serious trouble, nearly a half of them
occupied by the students.33 One of the strongholds of student power was
Nichidai or Nihon University, the largest example of âprivate
enterpriseâ in education, where irregularities in university finance
incurred the wrath of a good many of its 86,000 students, who repudiated
the spirit of âmoney-makingâ in a âmass-production universityâ.34
Another, and more symbolic, battlefield was provided by Todai or Tokyo
University, where a dispute over the status of graduate students in the
notoriously autocratic faculty of medicine and an allegedly erroneous
judgement passed by the governing board on one of the militant students
led to devastation of much of the campus. The movement for student power
was led by an organization called Zenkyoto (Zengaku-Kyoto-Kaigi or All
University Council for United Struggle). This body, a loose alliance of
some of the anticommunist sects (especially the Chukaku) and ânon-sectâ
radical students, attracted attention when the disputes at Nichidai and
Todai took a serious turn in May-June 1968. A Zenkyoto sprang up in each
storm-centre and was acclaimed by its supporters as an excellent example
of the activists uniting with the âstudent massesâ. After the dramatic
battle fought between the Zenkyoto students who had occupied the Yasuda
Auditorium of Tokyo University, and the Kidotai who attacked them from
the land and the air, their influence further extended, and occupation
of many other campuses followed. The National Federation of Zenkyoto,
which was set up at a rally held at Hibiya Park in September 1969,
appeared perhaps most menacing of all the student organizations, an
alliance of eight offshoots of the former Sanpa-kei-Zengakuren. Yet the
National defects of meritocracy: the intense competition for more
promising schools, universities, and jobs, which distorted their
adolescent life. 33 Asahi-Shinbun, 4 August 1969. 34
Hangyaku-no-Barikeido {Barricade for Revolt), 1968, passim. 517
CHUSHICHI TSUZUKI Federation was a sign not of the strength but of the
weakness of each sect. Yoshitaka Yamamoto, the leader of the
Todai-Zenkyotd, who came to take the chair at the rally, was arrested by
the Kiddtai -it was reported that he âeven seemed to have come to be
arrestedâ.35 Yamamoto, then a 27-year-old graduate student of physics,
had played an important part as a ânon-sectâ radical in co-ordinating
the warring sects of the âNew Leftâ. The ideology of those whom he
represented has been described as that of âself-negationâ, âa subspecies
of anarchismâ.36 In his opinion, campus occupation with barricades
signified ânegation of the university which produces men to serve
capital as if in a factory, and also negation of the existence of
students whose only future was to be cogs in the power machine thus
createdâ. Occupation of professorsâ studies and research laboratories
had to be carried out as an act of negation of scientism, which he
regarded as the achievement of the âhollowâ post-war democracy and also
as a prop of neo-imperialism. The university struggle was only âa form
of manifestation of social contradictionsâ - therefore âthere is no
half-way house in the struggle before the establishment of student
powerâ, the âpower of fighting students with a clear perception of the
whole social struggleâ.37 A mixture of elitism and nihilism can easily
be discerned in these bold assertions. Characteristically, he took
little interest in history. These peculiarities would explain the
absence of reference in his writings to a theory of transition. Indeed,
history meant to him and to his fellow students only the history of the
ignominious post-war democracy that ought to be rejected if possible by
direct action. When action seemed doomed, it appears, he surrendered
himself, an act which could be construed as motivated again by the same
spirit of negation. The activist students, especially ânon-sectâ
radicals, sought emotional as well as theoretical justification of their
action in the translations of Marcuse, Guevara, and Cohn-Bendit. Their
intellectual needs were also met by some Japanese writers, such as
Takaaki Yoshimoto with his doctrine of the state as a system of communal
illusions, and Goro Hani with his panegyric of autonomy in free
universities as well as free cities. Yoshimoto has been referred to as
âan anarchist intellectualâ, and has published An Ode of Resistance in
support of the anarchist 35 Asahi-Shinbuny 5 September 1969. 30 Shingo
Shibata (ed.), Gendai-Nihon-no-Rjadikari%umu (Japanese Radicalism
Today), Tokyo, 1970, pp. 342, 346. 37 Yamamoto, op. cit., pp. 86, 92,
138. 518
ANARCHISM IN JAPAN Behan-i (Anti-Vietnam War Direct Action Committee).
The son of a shipwright, he was very much concerned with the indigenous
ideas and attitudes, the hopes and sorrows of the silent masses. His
wartime experience taught him to tackle seriously the doctrine of
ultranationalism which he regarded as highly suggestive for a pure
theory of the state. His studies of Marx after the war led him to
conceive of the state as illusion or fantasy: the political state, as he
saw it, was a âcommunality reached through evolution of religious
alienationâ.38 Yoshimoto was against classical Marxism of âclassâ and
âproletariatâ, and assigned to the intellectuals the role of
assimilating the unexpressed desires of the masses and standing up
against the system of common illusion, the state. The âoldâ Marxist Hani
exerted considerable influence on the activist students through his
popular book The Logic of the Cities (1968), which is said to have sold
800,000 copies in one year, and through other writings and speeches. He
pleaded for a federation of autonomous cities, the model of which he saw
in Renaissance Italy, and which he believed would provide the foundation
of future socialism. He held that the students, like the citizens of
free cities, had the right to arm, and did no more than exercise their
rights when they erected barricades in their universities. Hani was only
one of many apologists for the students. Under the post-war democracy
which the students detested, flourished the type of publishing house
which specialized in âanti-systemâ intellectual commodities. Indeed, the
intellectual origins of student power in Japan should be traced to the
combined influence of all these and similar writings. The latest
commodity in vogue was nihilism. Within the framework of nihilism and
the ideology of negation, the students were eclectic enough to pick up
novel ideas and slogans from whatever books and articles they happened
to lay hands on: âuniversity communeâ, âuniversity revolutionâ, âthe
illusory stateâ, âthe role of the intellectualsâ, âdirect democracyâ,
âdirect actionâ, and so on. At the height of student power, Osawa, the
anarchist writer, who was on the look-out for signs of anarchist
revival, welcomed what he called âthe recrudescence of revolutionary
violenceâ. The âEpoch of Great Revoltâ, as he called it, coincided with
the period of automation, and rationalization, and it is significant, as
he rightly pointed out, that âthe first really rebellious violenceâ in
post-war Japan should have occurred during the heroic struggle of the
armed 38 Yoshimoto, âJiritsu-no-Shis5-teki-Kyoten (Intellectual Basis of
Independenceâ, Tenbo (Prospect), March 1965, 27. 519
CHUSHICHI TSUZUKI miners against the closure of the pits at Miike in
i960. This was, however, a romantic view of the desperate fight of
unhappy men trapped in a declining industry, the rationalization of
which, under existing arrangements, resulted in the flight of capital,
leaving the men half starving by the unwanted pits. Osawa hoped that
ârevolutionary violenceâ to which the students had resorted at Haneda,
Oji and Narita, would soon spread into the ranks of the workers. He
felt, however, that the âdetonator theoryâ of studentsâ violence had
little to do with anarchism. Violence would become oppressive and
reactionary rather than revolutionary, he said, âwhen it is separated
from the revolutionary masses and concentrated in the hands of a party
of the advance guardâ, and also when it became excessive and constant.
It is for this reason that he called the violence of the anticommunist
Zengakuren âhalf revolutionaryâ. âEven if it succeeded, it would come to
a new Stalinism; if it failed, it would be absorbed by a new Fascism.â39
What Osawa feared was already taking place: there was frequent and
outrageous violence which became really oppressive; the Zenkyoto began
to lose the support of the âstudent massesâ as the campus disputes
seemed stuck in the bog of impossible demands and the real danger of
dissolution of universities loomed on the horizon. There were
extravagances everywhere, not only among the students but also
throughout the âNew Leftâ. Oda of the Beheiren nonchalantly proclaimed
that he would start a citizensâ movement from outside to smash Tokyo
University if the Zenkyoto failed to destroy it.40 One sect of the
Shagakudd (Socialist Student League) called the Sekigun-ha (Red Army
faction), a body of three to four hundred extremist students, went so
far out of its senses that it decided to organize an army of revolution
to turn metropolitan Tokyo into a battlefield in November, 1969, the
date of Satoâs scheduled visit to the United States for extension of the
Security Treaty. According to this plan, âan armed rising and the
assassination of the Premier would lead to the establishment of a
revolutionary provisional governmentâ.41 Their leaders were arrested,
and there were many other arrests throughout 1969, which almost crippled
the fighting capacity of the militant sects, though apparently not
enough to prevent the remaining Red Army students from hijacking a JAL
plane to Pyongyang in the 39 Osawa, â Yomigaeru-Kakumeiteki-Boryoku
(Resuscitation of Re volutionary Violence)â, Kuro-no-Techo (Black
Notebook), January 1969. 40 Oda in Gendai-no-Me (Contemporary Witness),
March 1969. 41 Asahi-Sbinbun, 13 September 1969. 520
ANARCHISM IN JAPAN following year. The militantsâ strength began to
collapse under the weight of their own provocations, especially under
the pressure of legislation they had provoked: the University Temporary
Measures Act which was rushed through in August 1969 after the already
too familiar spectacle of the government simply ignoring opposition both
inside and outside the Diet. Extravagance also marked the form of their
apostasy. One of the leaders of the Anti-Yoyogi Zengakuren at the time
of the i960 struggle is known to have received funds from right-wing
sources and he later became the manager of a yacht training club. It is
indeed an ominous sign that Zenkyotoâs âirrationalismâ was admired by a
novelist of the new Fascism.42 The new radicalism of the âNew Leftâ had
sprung up mainly because post-war democracy had not functioned as its
critics thought it should. The militantsâ protests and direct action
appear to have contributed to the impairment of the already weakened
democratic institutions and practices. It was of no use the anarchists
holding out the millenarian mirror of direct democracy, as if it were a
practical alternative to parliamentary democracy. The anarchists, like
many others, often had second thoughts. Some of them despaired of the
âemotional rebelsâ, and proposed a more realistic attitude towards
political democracy and Marxism. The voice of realism, however, was too
weak to make much impression at the time. As for the studentsâ revolt in
the late 1960s, it was clearly not anarchism as such but emotional
anarchy of nihilism that sustained student power and its violence.
Anarchism, apart from the âpureâ type which is always inclined to
terrorism, has played the role of a sympathetic critic of the âNew
Leftâ, although the anarchistsâ sympathy with direct action, especially
at an early stage of student power, seems to have somewhat blunted the
edge of their criticism. In fact, they remained as critics of the
political left, both new and old. In this respect, the views of Tatsumi
Soejima, a doll-maker and an anarchist of 40 yearsâ standing, expressed
shortly before his death in 1963, are worth recording: âI cannot imagine
a social revolution taking place in human history. All the revolutions
of the past were political revolutions, and so will those of the future
be. Anarchism, which denies political revolution, will become a moral
force and deal with the problem of how to live, and I believe in such
anarchism. ... I do no mean that there ought not to be a political 42
Shibata (ed.), op. cit.y 40. 521
CHUSHICHI TSUZUKI revolution; it is a necessity, and the essence of
anarchism lies in how to participate in that revolution.â43 Although the
new generation of anarchists is still groping its way towards new
theories of autonomy and federation, anarchism itself, it seems, has
become somewhat ethical, and this is no doubt its strength as well as
its weakness. 43 Jiyu-Rengo, i February 1963. 522