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Title: Uchiyama Gudō
Subtitle: Radical Sōtō Zen Priest
Date: 1997
Source: Retrieved on 2020-08-19 from https://terebess.hu/zen/mesterek/UchiyamaGudo.html
Notes: Chapter 3 in: <em>Zen at War</em> by Brian (Daizen) A. Victoria. New York & Tokyo: Weatherhill, 1997. pp. 66–73.
Authors: Daizen, Brian A. Victoria
Topics: biography, anarchist biography, Japan, Zen, Japanese Anarchists
Published: 2020-08-20 05:15:15Z

By the time of the Russo-Japanese War it is fair to say that the clerical and

scholarly leaders of Japan’s traditional Buddhist sects were firm supporters

of the government’s policies, especially its war policies. But this does not

mean that there was no Buddhist resistance to the government. There were,

in fact, a few Buddhist priests who not only opposed what they believed to

be their government’s increasingly repressive and imperialistic policies but

actually sacrificed their lives in the process of doing so.

This chapter will focus on one such group of “radical” Buddhists. Because

they were quite small in number, it might be argued that this attention is

unwarranted, but few as they were, they had a significant impact on the

Buddhist leaders of their time, especially as those leaders continued to formulate their individual and collective responses to Japan’s military expansion abroad and political repression at home.

Radical Buddhist Priests and the High Treason Incident

It is the High Treason Incident (Taigyaku Jiken) of 1910 that first brought to

light the existence of politically radical Buddhist priests. Twenty-six people

were arrested for their alleged participation in a conspiracy to kill one or

more members of the imperial family. Four of those arrested were Buddhist

priests: Shin sect priest Takagi Kemmyō (1864–1914), a second Shin priest,

Sasaki Dōgen; a Rinzai Zen sect priest, Mineo Setsudō (1885–1919); and Sōtō

Zen sect priest Uchiyama Gudō (1874–1911). All of the defendants were convicted and twenty-four were condemned to death, though later twelve had

their sentences commuted to life imprisonment. Uchiyama Gudō was the

only priest to be executed. The remaining three Buddhist priests were among

those with commuted sentences, though they also all eventually died in

prison, Takagi Kemrnyō at his own hand.

As the execution of Gudō indicates, the authorities clearly considered

him to be the worst of the four priests. This is not surprising, for of all the

priests Gudō was the most actively involved in the movement that the Meiji

government found so reprehensible. Gudō also left behind the most written

material substantiating his beliefs. This said, even Gudō’s writings contain

little that directly addresses the relationship he saw between the Law of the

Buddha and his own social activism. This is not surprising, since neither he

nor the other three priests claimed to be Buddhist scholars or possess special expertise in either Buddhist doctrine or social, political, or economic

theory. They might best be described as social activists who, based on their

Buddhist faith, were attempting to alleviate the mental and physical suffering they saw around them, especially in Japan’s impoverished rural areas.

The Japanese government attempted to turn all of the accused in the

High Treason Incident into nonpersons, even before their convictions. The

court proceedings were conducted behind closed doors, and no press coverage was allowed, because, the government argued, would be “prejudicial

to peace and order, or to the maintenance of public morality.” Gudō’s temple of Rinsenji was raided and all his writings and correspondence removed

as evidence, never to surface again. Only a few statues of Buddha Shakyamuni that Gudō had carved and presented to his parishioners were left

behind. Even his death did not satisfy the authorities. They would not allow

his name to appear on his gravemarker at Rinsenji. In fact, when one of his

parishioners subsequently dared to leave some flowers on his grave, the

police instituted a search throughout the village of Ōhiradai, located in the

mountainous Hakone district of Kanagawa Prefecture, to find the offender.

Uchiyama’s Life

Early Life

Uchiyama was born on May 17, 1874, in the village of Ojiya in

Niigata Prefecture. His childhood name was Keikichi, and he was the oldest

of four children. Gudō’s father, Naokichi, made his living as a woodworker

and carver, specializing in Buddhist statues, family altars, and associated

implements. As a child, Gudō learned this trade from his father, and, as

noted above, later carved Buddhist statues that he presented to his parishioners at Rinsenji. Even today these simple yet serene nine-inch images of

Buddha Shakyamuni are highly valued among the villagers.

Gudō was an able student, earning an award for academic excellence

from the prefectural governor. Equally important, he was introduced at an

early age to the thinking of a mid-seventeenth-century social reformer by

the name of Sakura Sōgorō, Discussions of such issues as the need for land

reform to eliminate rural poverty and the enfranchisement of women were

an integral part of his childhood education.

Gudō lost his father at the age of sixteen. In his book <em>Buddhists Who

Sought Change (Henkaku o Motometa Bukkyōsha)</em>, Inagaki Masami identifies this early death as a significant factor in Gudō’s later decision to enter

the Buddhist priesthood. On April 12, 1897, Gudō underwent ordination in

the Sōtō Zen sect as a disciple of Sakazume Kōjū, abbot of Hōzōji temple.

Over the following seven years, Gudō studed Buddhism academically

and trained as a Zen novice in a number of Sōtō Zen temples, chief among

them the monastery of Kaizōji in Kanagawa Prefecture. On October 10, 1901,

Gudō became the Dharma successor of Miyagi Jitsumyō, abbot of Rinsenji.

Three years later, on February 9, 1904, Gudō succeeded his master as Rinsenji’s abbot, thus bringing to an end his formal Zen training.

The temple Gudō succeeded to was exceedingly humble. For one thing,

it had no more than forty impoverished families to provide financial support.

Aside from a small thatched-roof main hall, its chief assets were two trees, one

a persimmon and the other a chestnut, located on the temple grounds. Village

tradition states that every autumn Gudō would invite the villagers to the temple to divide the harvest from these trees equally among themselves.

In his discussions with village youth, Gudō once again directed his

attention to the problem of rural poverty. He identified the root of the

problem as being an unjust economic system, one in which a few individuals owned the bulk of the land and the majority of the rural population was

reduced to tenancy. Gudō became an outspoken advocate of land reform,

something that would eventually come to pass, but not until many years

later, after Japan’s defeat in the Pacific War.

What is significant about Gudō’s advocacy of land reform is that he

based his position on his understanding of Buddhism. In discussing this

period of his life in the minutes of his later pretrial hearing, Gudō stated:

The year was 1904 ... When I reflected on the way in which priests
of my sect had undergone religious training in China in former
times, I realized how beautiful it had been. Here were two or three
hundred persons who, living in one place at one time, shared a
communal lifestyle in which they wore the same clothing and ate
the same food. I held to the ideal that if this could be applied to one
village, one county, or one country, what an extremely good system
would be created.

The traditional Buddhist organizational structure, the Sangha, with its communal lifestyle and lack of personal property, was the model from which

Gudō drew his inspiration for social reform.

It was also in 1904 that Gudō had his first significant contact with a

much broader, secular social reform movement, anarcho-socialism. Gudō

appears to have first come into contact with this movement as a reader of a

newly established newspaper, the **Heimin Shimbun** or “The Commoner’s

News.” By the early months of 1904 this newspaper had established itself as

Tokyo’s leading advocate of the socialist cause, and Gudō later expressed its

impact on him: “When I began reading the **Heimin Shimbun** at that time

[1904], I realized that its principles were identical with my own and therefore I became an anarcho-socialist.”

Gudō was not content, however, to be a mere reader of this newspaper.

In its January 17, 1904 edition, he wrote:

As a propagator of Buddhism I teach that “all sentient beings have
the Buddha-nature” and that “within the Dharma there is equality,
with neither superior nor inferior.” Furthermore, I teach that “all
sentient beings are my children.” Having taken these golden words
as the basis of my faith, I discovered that they are in complete
agreement with the principles of socialism. It was thus that I
became a believer in socialism.

The phrase, “all sentient beings have the Buddha-nature” is one of the

central themes of the Lotus Sutra, as is the phrase, “all sentient beings are

my children.” The phrase, “within the Dharma there is equality, with neither

superior or inferior” comes from the Diamond Sutra. Regrettably, this brief

statement is the only surviving example of Gudō’s understanding of the

social implications of the Law of the Buddha.

Even this brief statement, however, puts Gudō in direct opposition to

Meiji Buddhist leaders such as Shimaji Mokurai. In his 1879 essay entitled

“Differentiation [Is] Equality” **(Sabetsu Byōdō)**, Shimaji maintained that

distinctions in social standing and wealth were as permanent as differences

in age, sex, and language. Socialism, in his view, was flawed because it

emphasized only social and economic equality. That is to say, socialists

failed to understand the basic Buddhist teaching that “differentiation is

identical with equality” **(sabetsu soku byōdō)**. Or phrased somewhat more

philosophically, socialists confused the temporal world of form **(yūkei)** with

the transcendent world of formlessness **(mukei)**, failing to recognize the

underlying unity of the two. It was Shimaji’s position that would gain

acceptance within institutional Buddhism.

Village Priest and Social Activist

Of the eighty-two persons who eventually

expressed their allegiance to socialism in the pages of the **Heimin Shimbun**,

only Gudō and one other, Kōtoku Shūsui, were later directly implicated in

the High Treason Incident. This suggests that Gudō, like Kōtoku, was a

leading figure in the nascent socialist movement, but that was not the case.

Gudō’s relative physical isolation in the Hakone mountains limited the role

that he was able to play. He might best be described as a rural social activist

or reformer who, in his own mind at least, based his thought and actions on

his Buddhist faith.

Ironically, it was Gudō’s relative physical isolation that eventually thrust

him into the historical limelight. The Japanese government and police

devoted ever-increasing efforts to suppressing the growing socialist movement with its pacifist platform. This suppression took the form of repeated

bannings of politically offensive issues of the **Heimin Shimbun**; arresting,

fining, and ultimately jailing the newspaper’s editors; and forcefully breaking up socialist meetings and rallies. With two of its editors (including

Kōtoku Shūsui) on their way to jail for alleged violations of the press laws,

the **Heimin Shimbun** printed its last issue on January 25, 1905. When the

newspaper closed down, the socialist antiwar movement within Japan virtually came to an end, thereby enabling the government to prosecute its war

with Czarist Russia free of domestic opposition.

In September 1905 the war with Russia ended with a Japanese victory.

The victory was, however, a costly one, both in terms of the government’s

expenditures on armaments and the high number of military casualities.

When it became general knowledge that the peace terms did not include a

war indemnity, riots broke out in Tokyo and martial law was immediately

imposed. In this atmosphere of significant social unrest, the government

pursued its suppression of socialism even more relentlessly than before. On

February 22, 1907, the Socialist Party was banned and socialists were

harassed, beaten, and jailed. By 1908, unable to hold public meetings or

publish either newspapers or magazines, what was left of the socialist movement went underground. Prohibited from advocating socialism openly,

some members of the movement came to believe that the only way they

could succeed was to take some form of “direct action” against the imperial

house itself.

It was these circumstances which prompted Gudō to visit Tokyo in

September 1908. He not only met with Kōtoku Shūsui but purchased the

necessary equipment to set up a secret press within his own temple. The

printing equipment itself was hidden in the storage area located underneath and to the rear of the Buddha altar in the Main Hall. Gudō used this

press to turn out popular socialist tracts and pamphlets, and he also wrote

and published his own materials, including his best-known work,

<em>In Commemoration of Imprisonment: Anarcho-Communism-Revolution</em>

(入獄紀念・無政 府共產・革命 **Nyūgoku Kinen-Museifu Kyōsan-Kakumei).**

That work is interesting for a number of reasons. It contains a pointed

critique of the then prevalent understanding of the Buddhist doctrine of

karma. After beginning with a lament for the poverty of tenant farmers,

Gudō writes:

Is this [your poverty] the result, as Buddhists maintain, of the retribution due you because of your evil deeds in the past? Listen,
friends, if, having now entered the twentieth century, you were to
be deceived by superstitions like this, you would still be [no better
than] oxen or horses. Would this please you?

Gudō clearly understood that the Buddhist doctrine of karma was

being interpreted as providing the justification for social and economic

inequality. That is to say, if tenant farmers were impoverished, they had no

one to blame but themselves and their own past actions. Shaku Sōen was

typical of the Buddhist leaders who advocated this interpretation: “We are

born in the world of variety; some are poor and unfortunate, others are

wealthy and happy. This state of variety will be repeated again and again in

our future lives. But to whom shall we complain of our misery? To none but

ourselves!” Gudō was also critical of certain aspects of Buddhist practice.

For example, on May 30, 1904, he wrote a letter of protest to the abbot of

Jōsenji, Orihashi Daikō. In this letter he requested that the Sōtō sect cleanse

itself of the practice of selling temple abbotships to the highest bidder.

When Daikō refused to endorse his position, Gudō expressed his determination to push for this reform on his own.

The real significance of **In Commemoration of Imprisonment** lay not in

its critique of certain aspects of Buddhist doctrine, but rather in its blistering rejection of the heart and soul of the Meiji political system, the emperor

system. It was, in fact, this rejection of Japan’s imperial system that, more

than any other factor, led to Gudō’s subsequent arrest, imprisonment, and

execution. He wrote:

There are three leeches who suck the people’s blood: the emperor,
the rich, and the big landowners ... The big boss of the present
government, the emperor, is not the son of the gods as your primary school teachers and others would have you believe. The
ancestors of the present emperor came forth from one corner of
Kyushu, killing and robbing people as they went. They then
destroyed their fellow thieves, Nagasune-hiko and others ... It
should be readily obvious that the emperor is not a god if you but
think about it for a moment.
When it is said that [the imperial dynasty] has continued for
2,500 years, it may seem as if [the present emperor] is divine, but
down through the ages the emperors have been tormented by foreign opponents and, domestically, treated as puppets by their own
vassals ... Although these are well-known facts, university professors
and their students, weaklings that they are, refuse to either say or
write anything about it. Instead, they attempt to deceive both others
and themselves, knowing all along the whole thing is a pack of lies.

Imprisonment

Gudō printed between one and two thousand copies of the

tract containing the foregoing passages and mailed them to former readers

of the **Heimin Shimbun** in small lots wrapped in plain paper. Its radical content, especially its scathing denial of the emperor system, so frightened

some recipients that they immediately burned all the copies they received.

Others, however, were so excited by its contents that they rushed out onto

to the streets to distribute the tract to passersby. It was not long, predictably,

before copies fell into the hands of the police. This in turn sparked an

immediate nationwide search for the tract’s author and the place and means

of its production.

On May 24, 1909, Gudō was arrested on his way back to Rinsenji after

having finished a month of Zen training at Eiheiji, one of the Sōtō sect’s two

chief monasteries. He was initially charged with violations of the press and

publications laws and, at first, believed he would simply be fined and

released. Upon searching Rinsenji, however, the police claimed to have discovered a cache of explosive materials including twelve sticks of dynamite,

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

One contemporary commentator, Kashiwagi Ryūhō, claims, though

without presenting any proof, that the charges relating to the possession of

explosive materials were false. In an article entitled “Martyr Uchiyama

Gudō” he states: “The dynamite had been stored at his temple in conjunction with the construction of the Hakone mountain railroad. It had nothing to do with Gudō.” Nevertheless, Gudō was convicted of both charges

and initially sentenced to twelve years’ imprisonment. On appeal, his sentence was reduced to seven years.

On July 6, 1909, even before his conviction, officials of the Sōtō Zen sect

moved to deprive Gudō of his abbotship at Rinsenji. Once he had been convicted, they quickly moved on to yet more serious action. On June 21, 1910,

Gudō was deprived of his status as a Sōtō Zen priest, though he continued

to regard himself as one until the end of his life.

Toward a Second Trial

On May 25, 1910, two socialists, Miyashita Takichi and

Niimura Tadao, were arrested in Nagano Prefecture after police searched

their quarters and found chemicals used to make explosives. In the minds of

the police this was concrete evidence of the existence of a wider conspiracy

against the imperial house. This in turn led to Kōtoku Shūsui’s arrest a week

later, and the investigation and interrogation of hundreds of men and women

in the following months. By this time Gudō had already been in prison for a

full year, yet this did not prevent him from becoming a suspect once again.

At the conclusion of its investigation, charges were brought against

twenty-six persons, including Gudō and one woman, Kanno Sugako. If

convicted under Article 73, “Crimes Against the Throne,” of the new criminal code, all of them could face the death penalty. Under Article 73 prosecutors had only to show that the defendants “intended” to bring harm to

members of the imperial house, not that they had acted on this intent in

any concrete way. Ideas, not facts, were on trial.

The trial commenced in Tokyo on December 10, 1910. Kanno Sugako

not only admitted in court that she had been involved in the alleged conpiracy but indicated how many others had been involved as well. Upon

being asked by the presiding judge, Tsuru Jōichirō, if she wished to make a

final statement, Kanno responded:

From the outset I knew that our plan would not succeed if we let a
lot of people in on it. Only four of us were involved in the plan. It
is a crime that involves only the four of us. But this court, as well
as the preliminary interrogators, treated it as a plan that involved a
large number of people. That is a complete misunderstanding of
the case. Because of this misunderstanding a large number of people have been made to suffer. You are aware of this ...
If these people are killed for something that they knew nothing
about, not only will it be a grave tragedy for the persons concerned, but their relatives and friends will feel bitterness toward the
government. Because we hatched this plan, a large number of innocent people may be executed.

In her diary entry for January 21, 1911, Kanno identified the other persons

involved in the plot as Kōtoku, Miyashita, Niimura, and Furukawa

Rikisaku.

Kanno’s plea on behalf of the other defendants fell on deaf ears. As for

Gudō, Chief Prosecutor Hiranuma Kiichirō went on to identify his earlier

writing, with its uncompromising denial of the emperor system, as “the

most heinous book ever written since the beginning of Japanese history.”

He also mentioned a second tract which Gudō had printed, entitled <em>A

Handbook for Imperial Soldiers (Teikoku Gunjin Zayū no Mei)</em>. Here Gudō

had gone so far as to call on conscripts to desert their encampments <em>en

masse</em>. In addition, Gudō had, as already noted, repeatedly and forcefully

advocated both land reform in the countryside and democratic rights for all

citizens.

Many years later an alternative view of Gudō’s role in the alleged conspiracy came from a somewhat surprising source, namely the administrative headquarters of the Sōtō Zen sect. In the July 1993 issue of **Sōtō Shūhō**,

the administrative organ for this sect, an announcement was made that as

of April 13, 1993, Uchiyama Gudō’s status as a Sōtō priest had been restored.

The announcement went on to say, “[Gudō’s] original expulsion was a mistake caused by the sect’s having swallowed the government’s repressive

policies.”

The explanation as to what caused this turnabout in the sect’s attitude

toward Gudō was contained in a subsequent article that appeared in the

September 1993 issue of the same periodical. Written by the sect’s new

“Bureau for the Protection and Advocacy of Human Rights,” the highlights

of the article are as follows:

When viewed by to day’s standards of respect for human rights,
Uchiyama Gudō’s writings contain elements that should be regarded
as farsighted. We have much to learn from them, for today his writings are respected by people in various walks of life, beginning
with the mass media. In our sect, the restoration of Uchiyama
Gudō’s reputation is something that will both bring solace to his
spirit and contribute to the establishment within this sect of a
method of dealing with questions concerning human rights ...
We now recognize that Gudō was a victim of the national policy
of that day ... The dynamite found in his temple had been placed
there for safekeeping by a railroad company laying track through
the Hakone mountains and had nothing to do with him ... The
sect’s [original] actions strongly aligned the sect with an establishment dominated by the emperor system. They were not designed
to protect the unique Buddhist character of the sect’s priests ...
On this occasion of the restoration of Uchiyama Gudō’s reputation, we must reflect on the way in which our sect has ingratiated
itself with both the political powers of the day and a state under the
suzerainty of the emperor.

While the Sōtō sect’s statement clearly views Gudō as a victim of government repression, it presents no new evidence in support of his innocence. It merely repeats Kashiwagi’s earlier unsubstantiated claim that the

dynamite found at his temple was put there as part of a nearby railway

construction project. All in all, the Sōtō sect’s statement must be treated

with some scepticism, perhaps as more of a reflection of the sect’s regret for

what it came to recognize (in postwar years) as its slavish subservience to

the state.

Because of this lack of evidence, no definitive statement can be made

about the guilt or innocence of those on trial in the High Treason Incident.

As noted earlier, much critical evidence was destroyed by the government

as it sought to make the accused into “nonpersons.” When in 1975 the

descendents of one of those originally convicted in the case petitioned for

a retrial, the Ministry of Justice stated clearly for the first time that the trial’s

transcripts no longer existed. Even if the transcripts had existed, it is doubtful that they would have provided definitive evidence, given that everyone

directly connected with the trial was by then dead. Historian Fred

Notehelfer admits at the end of his study of the case that “an element of

mystery ... continues to surround the trial.” It probably always will.

There was never any doubt at the time, however, that the defendants

would be found guilty. The only uncertainty was how severe their penalties

would be. On January 18, 1911, little more than a month after the trial began,

the court rendered its verdict. All defendants were found guilty, and twenty-four of them, Gudō and the three other Buddhist priests included, were

condemned to death. One day later, on January 19th, an imperial rescript

was issued which commuted the sentences of twelve of the condemned to

life imprisonment. Three of the Buddhist priests--Takagi Kemmyō, Sasaki

Dōgen, and Mineo Setsudō--were spared the hangman’s noose, though all

would die in prison.

Toward Execution

Mikiso Hane has suggested why the government was so

determined to convict all of the defendants:

The authorities (under Prime Minister Katsura Tarō, who had
been directed by the **genrō** [elder statesman] Yamagata Aritomo to
come down hard on the leftists) rounded up everybody who had
the slightest connection with Kōtoku and charged them with complicity in the plot.

Yamagata was particularly concerned by the fact that the court testimony of

nearly all the defendants revealed a loss of faith in the divinity of the emperor. For Yamagata, this loss of respect for the core of the state represented a

serious threat to the future of the nation. Those holding this view had to be

eliminated by any means necessary.

Acting with unaccustomed haste, the government executed Gudō and

ten of his alleged co-conspirators inside the Ichigaya Prison compound on

the morning of January 24, 1911, less than a week after their conviction.

Kanno Sugako was executed the following day. Gudō was the fifth to die on

the twenty-fourth, and Yoshida Kyūichi records that as he climbed the scaffold stairs, “he gave not the slightest hint of emotional distress. Rather he

appeared serene, even cheerful--so much so that the attending prison chaplain bowed as he passed.”

The next day, when Gudō’s younger brother, Seiji, came to collect his

body, he demanded that the coffin be opened. Looking at Gudō’s peaceful

countenance, Seiji said, “Oh, older brother, you passed away without suffering ... What a superb face you have in death!”

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