DECISIVE FACTORS OF
JAPANESE GROWTH
AND
EMERGENCE
DAVID LAN PHAM, F.A,B.I.
Japan is an
archipelago in Northeast Asia. Like the
Chinese, Koreans and Vietnamese, the Japanese are yellow- skinned people. Chinese, Koreans and Japanese live in the temperate
regions. Therefore their complexion is
brighter than that of the Vietnamese living in the tropical regions.
Unlike
Vietnam and Korea, Japan wasn’t under Chinese rule although it was influenced
by Chinese culture under the Tang (618- 906).
Chang- an, present Sian, was the Capital of Lights in the Far East one
time. In the 6th
century the Korean monks taught Buddhism
in Japan. Buddhism developed
harmoniously with Shintoism which was Japanese traditional religion. The Japanese characters, kana, came into existence in the Heian era
(794- 1185). In this period the role of
Nara declined before Heian- kyo, present Kyoto, where the Japanese Tennos resided until 1868. Meiji Tenno moved to Edo he renamed Tokyo
which became the capital of Japan. The
new name of the capital marked the new era of reforms a l’occidentale.
In the 19th century only Japan, Siam (Thailand),
and Turkey maintained their independence facing intermittent threats from
Western empires. After 30 years of
reforms Japan became the only industrialized country in Asia by the end of the
19th century. It defeated China and forced the latter to
sign the treaty of Shimonoseki in 1895.
In 1904 Japan defeated the Russian troops in Manchuria. In 1905 the Russian fleet was destroyed by the Japanese Navy under Togo at Tsushima. Russia signed the treaty of Portsmouth and
ceded Southern Sakhalin island to Japan.
In 1910 Japan established its protectorate in the Korean peninsula. Japan was one of the Big Five after the end
of World War I without sending troops to the European battlefields. It took control of Shantung in China and
other German possessions in the Pacific Ocean.
In World War II Japan occupied some parts of China, all Southeast Asian
countries, and threatened Australia. On
December 07, 1941 Japan attacked Pearl
Harbor. The United States declared war
on Japan. It sided with democratic
countries to fight Germany, Italy and Japan.
On August 06 and 09, 1945 the United States dropped two atomic bombs on
Hiroshima and Nagasaki. Japan
surrendered unconditionally to the United States on August 14.
Japan was a
Power of the Big Five (United Kingdom, United Sates, France, Italy, Japan) after World War I. It became a war loser in 1945. Many Japanese cities were destroyed by the
American raids. Japanese economy was
ruined due to continual wars of expansion in China, Southeast Asia and the
South Pacific Ocean. It underwent
sufferings and bitterness as a war loser.
A few years after the defeat Japanese economy was restored and stabilized. Japan developed its industries while heavy
industries were banned. It succeeded in
turning war time industries into peace time industries. Fifteen years after the end of World War II
Japanese shipbuilding surpassed British shipbuilding. Japanese electronics was well known in the
world. From the 1980s on Japanese cars
conquered the world. Detroit is no
longer the world’s capital of automobiles.
Japanese economy ranked second in the world after the United States’.
What are the
decisive factors of Japanese growth and emergence?
- Geographical Factor
Japan is an archipelago composed of 3,000
islands. It has no common border with
China. It wasn’t ruled
by this large and most populous country in the past. In the 13th
century the Mongolians conquered China.
In the attempt of attacking Japan their warships were sunk twice by the
typhoons. The Japanese thanked the
typhoons they call kami- kaze for
saving their islands from the Mongolian invasion.
The Japanese
are islanders, who are used to isolation.
They endure hardship to struggle against rocky and wooded mountains and
the immensity of the ocean surrounding them.
They are required to have initiatives, bravery and adventures in the
struggle for survival. For lack of
weapons they think of martial arts. They
must love one another, help one another and unite one another to confront
severe weather, natural disasters, and strangers attacking and plundering their
villages.
- Studies and Creation
The Japanese are studious and creative. They learned Mahayan Buddism from
the Chinese through the Korean monks. But Japanese Buddhism is some kind of
‘Prostestant’ Mahayana Buddhism. Zen
(Dhyana: meditation) is popularized. It
was taught in Japan in the 12th
century. At that time Thien (Dhyana) was
introduced into Viet Nam under the Ly dynasty.
Zen makes the Japanese patient, calm, enduring, relaxed, optimistic
facing permanent challenges such as earthquakes, volcanic eruption, typhoons,
tsunamis and the wrestling for life in a populous and narrow country in which
85% of its area are occupied by forests and mountains. Zen helps the Japanese turn their country
into a paradise full of flagrant flowers and rare herbs. They love their country and wish to live
there to contribute to its embellishment although they face thorny challenges
every day. The Japanese love trees and
herbs. This love reflects their respect
toward talented people and their preference for their people’s collective
strength.
The Japanese
Buddhist monks learned art of drinking tea from the Chinese Buddhist
monks. They turned this art into Chanoya with many complicated rites. Even the bourgeois intellectuals spend their
life time learning Chanoya without
saying they are tea masters.
Buddhism had
its influential development without eclipsing traditional Shintoism.
The Japanese
kana was the simplified Chinese
characters.
The
Constitution of 1889 wasn’t written by the Constituent Assembly but by the
Japanese legal experts directed by Ito.
The Japanese adapted to the democratic activities after the end of World
War II by respecting the Constitution of 1946 strictly. This Constitution was written by a group of
American lawyers. It is effective in our
days.
The Japanese
learned many things from the Americans especially their business
management. They tried their best to
surpass all the countries they learned from by inventing their own ways which
are simpler, more convenient and effective.
At present the Americans have to recognize the strength and efficiency
of Japanese management.
- Discipline and Respect to Leaders
Influenced by
Shintoism the Japanese believe unconditionally that their Supreme
Leader is a descendant of Amaterasu (Goddess of the
Sun). In the past he wasn’t considered a
simple and human King or Emperor. He was
called Tenno or Mikaido.
In the 7th century the Tang
reached the height of its strength and its cultural and economic prosperity
Regent Shotuku (574- 622) called China the Land of
the Setting Sun, and Japan the Land of
the Rising Sun.
The Japanese
respect and love their Tenno from their minds and hearts. Therefore, all the Japanese Emperors from
Zimmu Tenno (600 B.C.) to Akihito have belonged to the same dynasty. This clean course of history wasn’t found
anywhere in the world.
From 1185 to
1867 the Japanese Emperors lost their power.
Japan was ruled by the Tokugawa from 1603 to 1867. The real power was in the Shoguns’ hands. The Tennos were powerless but they weren’t
overthrown by the Shoguns. In 1867
Shogun Yoshinobu Tokugawa resigned. The
shogunal regime ended. Prince Mitsu Hito
came to the throne at the age of 15.
That was Meiji Tenno, who won support from the aristocrats, samurais in Southern Japan, and the Japanese
people to begin Japanese modernization.
Prince
Yoshihito Shinno came to the throne in 1912.
It was Taisho Tenno. The Tenno was in bad health due to meningitis
since his birth. The courtiers took care
of all the national affairs. They were
loyal to their Tenno and devoted to
their country without thinking of coup d’etat
or usurpation. Under the reign of Taisho
Tenno (1912- 1926) Japan was one of the Big Five (France, United Kingdom,
United States, Italy, Japan) after World War I.
The treaty of Versailles (1919) gave Shantung and German possessions in
the Pacific Ocean to Japan.
The Japanese
heightened bushido’s discipline. The samurais were
brave, courageous, devoted to their military career, and loyal to their
leaders. The samurais’
discipline and ethics linked Japan to Germany under Bismarck and Adolf
Hitler. The Japanese Constitution of
1889 had many similarities to the German Constitution of 1871. It was replaced by the Constitution of 1946
written by the American lawyers to democratize Japanese political activities
and to belittle the Emperor’s power. The
Japanese Emperor has his symbolic and ceremonial role in the democratic
parliamentary regime. In reality, the
Emperor has absolute power in the Japanese people’s hearts and minds.
- Timely Response to the New Situations
It isn’t right to
jump to the conclusion that the Japanese are Conservative or
Progressive. The Japanese Westernized their country by
combining the OLD and the NEW harmoniously.
They
maintain the monarchy and respect their Emperor.
Shintoism is
still influential in Japanese society.
The Japanese preserve and maintain the old temples as their traditional
cultural heritages. The statue of Great
Buddha in Kamakura was erected in the 12th
century. It remains there. It is made of bronze, 11.4 m high, and weighs
122 tons. The statue of the Great
Buddha showed Japanese metallurgic maturity and fine art of molding 817 years
ago (1192- 2009). The Buddhist Temples
in the Nara era (710- 749) with the world’s biggest wooden statues remain
intact. The huge Shinto Gates and
Temples made of cypress wood recognized by UNESCO as the world’s cultural
heritages seem to be unchanged in a rainy country permanently threatened by
disasters.
The Japanese
celebrate their wedding ceremonies according to the Shinto rites. They used to make prayers at the Shinto
Temples or to look for the soothsayers to ask for advice. They believe in sacred trees. Thanks to this belief they keep many secular
trees from 500 to 1,000 years of age.
The Japanese
celebrate the New Year on January 1st
instead of the traditional Lunar New Year.
They consume more wheat than rice
to save time and money. They turned to
Western Medicine in forgetting Oriental Medicine. The Japanese soldiers put on military
uniforms instead of the samurais’ hakamas. Japanese men and women wear Western
clothes. Japanese ladies wear kimonos during traditional ceremonies.
The Shogunal
regime was built on military exploits.
Facing the American cannon thunders on Perry’s orders in 1853 the Shogun
was reluctant to sign a series of unequal treaties with the Western
countries. Siam was in the similar
situation when signing many unequal treaties with European countries. These unequal treaties kept Japan and Siam
independent. None of the Western
countries could turn Japan or Siam into its colony. The signing of the unequal treaties became
Japanese calculated politico- economic concession to save independence.
Shogun
Yoshinobu Tokugawa’ s resignation was a patriotic act. The Shogunal regime lost its ground facing
the industrial revolution. Renouncing
power existing in Japan in 250 years wasn’t smooth and easy. In 1868 the Boshin War (Boshin: Mau Thin: Year of the Dragon) erupted. The Shogun’ s troops were easily crushed by
the Emperor’s troops. But Yoshinobu
Tokugawa didn’t face trial. In 1902 he
was considered a prince.
In 1853
Shogun Yoshinobu couldn’t use swords, bows, spears to resist the cannon
thunders from the American warships. In
1945 the Japanese troops couldn’t oppose American atomic bombs. Those Generals or government officials
mentioning the unconditional surrender should be assassinated. Only Emperor Hirohito was safe when announcing the unconditional surrender
to the Americans. The Japanese people
obeyed him.
Their duty
was to reconstruct the country and to restore post-
bellum economy.
The
Americans felt more and less irritated
after using the atomic bombs to end the war.
The atomic bombs destroyed Hiroshima and Nagasaki and killed 200,000
inhabitants.
The Cold War between the Free World headed
by the United States and the Communist World headed by the Soviet Union
heightened the important role of Japan.
Instead of giving severe punishments to Japan, the United States helped
it stabilize its economy. The Korean war
(1950- 1953) was advantageous to the economic restoration of Japan which is
closed to the Korean peninsula.
Japanese economic restoration was a miracle thanks to:
Assiduity and
Love of Jobs
Life is hard
in Japan. The Japanese cope with various
kinds of disasters: earthquakes,
Tsunami, volcanic eruption, typhoons.
The Japanese farmers take care of their rice fields like the gardeners
in their gardens. Streets and roads in
Japan are narrow. The drivers must be
clever and cold- tempered in order to avoid accidents, rude words, and
deafening noise. These things are
rarely found in Japan. Japan makes cars
and exports them. The Japanese drive
small and square cars to save fuel and parking space. Most Japanese go to work by bus or by train.
Japan is
373,430 km2. Its population is 120
million inhabitants. It is an honor to
get a job. All the workers are assiduous
and love their jobs no matter they are lucrative or not. A leaf sweeper is in charge of a large space
around the gate of Meiji Tenno Shrine.
He sweeps every leaf with joy and patience. An employee working for a hotel cleans every
leaf of scindapsus
(1). Everyone looks assiduous
and enthusiastic when accomplishing his/her duty.
Improvement of the Products Quality
Between two
World Wars (1919- 1939) Japanese products were quantitatively huge but
qualitatively bad. The dumping of
Japanese watches threatened Swiss expensive and luxurious ones.
After World
War II Japan improved the quality of its products to restore the consumers’
trust in the good quality of Japanese
products. Japanese radio sets, T.V.
sets, refrigerators, motorcycles helped developing countries enjoy comforts at
the reasonable price. Japanese watches,
cameras, camcorders, cell phones and automobiles are seen everywhere in the
world. People love their good quality
and their reasonable price as well. They
give up their prejudice against Japanese
cheap and bad products between two World Wars.
Japanese post- bellum products
are durable, comfortable and inexpensive.
They respond to local aesthetics, and to the popular habits. For example, the Vietnamese are right-
handed. They don’t like dark color. The power steering must be on the left side
of the car. Contrarily to the
Vietnamese, the Thai are left- handed, and like dark color. The power steering must be on the right side
of the car.
Politeness, Cleanliness, Hospitability, Honesty and
Punctiality
These are
the strong points Japan enjoys. Foreign
businessmen and tourists come to Japan feel happy to see clean streets, bus
stations, train stations, rest rooms etc.
They are also attracted by Japanese clothing. Most Japanese drive small cars. None of the vehicles is rusted. The car owners are required to tune up and to
paint their cars if necessary every two years.
People are allowed to buy cars only when they have parking lots.
Foreign and
Japanese tourists are warmly welcome everywhere they come, at the hotels, on
the trains, on the busses etc. On the
train the controller bows down before doing his duty. A lady bows down before selling
refreshment.
Tourists
don’t worry about bad people stealing their money or deceiving them for being
unfamiliar with the city streets and with the Yen. A small number of Japanese aren’t good at
English. But their honesty,
hospitability and punctuality impress the tourists keeping nice memories when
they come to Japan and after they leave it.
These above
earmarks are useful to the Japanese development of business and touristic
industry. They are the fruit of popular
education embellished by the Japanese people’s self- consciousness, self-
respect and desire of contributions to their country’s prosperity.
Fukuzawa
Yukichi (1835- 1901) had great contributions to the development of Western education in Japan before Meiji
Tenno’ s Westernization. He founded
Keio- Gijuku that is present Keio University.
The Dong Kinh Nghia Thuc School in Ha Noi was founded in 1907 in
imitation of Keio- Gijuku. Venerable
Thich Thien An received his PH.D in philosophy from Keio University. At present Japan has many internationally
famous Universities compared to Oxford, Cambridge, Harvard, Sorbonne
Universities. Japan has 15 Nobel prize
laureates in the field of chemistry, physics, literature.
****
Japanese post- bellum economy is
more prosperous than its own between two World Wars. Germany, Italy and Japanese lost the
war. But they restored their economy
quickly. The economic restoration of
Japan was a miracle. Japan is 1/28 the
area of the United States. Its economy
ranks second after the United States only.
The reign of Emperor Hirohito (Showa) was marked by military strength in
war time and by economic prosperity in peace time. Japan after World War II was successful to
erase the bad images of Japanese soldiers during World War II from the minds of
the world’s peoples to accelerate trade with the outside world. In 1989 Emperor Hirohito died. Delegates from the Communist and non- Communist countries
attended his funeral.
At this, suddenly tears flow from my
eyes. The image of the soul of the
Journey to the East Movement appears in my mind. Viet Nam Vong
Quoc Su (History of the Downfall of Vietnam), Hai Ngoai Huyet Le Thu (Letter Written in
Blood and Tears from Overseas), Luu Cau Huyet Le
Tan Thu (New Book of Blood Tears from Ryu Kyu), Nguc Trung Thu (Letter in Prison)… wander in
my mind. One hundred and four years ago
, silently Phan Boi Chau set foot on the land of Meiji Tenno in the hope of
learning something necessary to the country’ s liberation and
modernization. From the foreign land the
Vietnamese Bird wished to return to its nest on the Southern branch with
impatience. Phan Boi Chau returned to
‘the nest on the Southern branch’ as a political prisoner sentenced to death by
the Ha Noi Tribunal (1925). He wasn’t
executed by the French colonialists but he was under surveillance at Ben Ngu,
Hue, where he died in 1940 in poverty.
I would like
to use this article to pay respect to Meiji Tenno, and to Phan Boi Chau (1867-
1940), who renounced happy life in exchange for thorny and stormy life just because of his thirst for Vietnam’ s
independence and brilliant future.
(1) Climbing plant (Day trau
ba). Latin name: Scindapsus aureus,
Family: Arecaceae.
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