Sixty-one years have passed since the Japanese Constitution was
implemented in 1947. A movement to revise the Constitution, in
particular its Article 9, is gathering strength in response to
criticism that the Constitution is a vestige of the period of the
Allied Occupation, forced upon Japan by the officials of the Allied
forces, and also in response to pressure from inside and out for the
Japanese Self-Defense Forces to contribute even more to the war on
terrorism. At the root of the Japanese people's defense of their
pacifist Constitution, until now, in spite of these various pressures,
has been a deep self-examination centering on Japan's prewar militarism
and of the unspeakable horrors of its wartime experience. Moreover,
many of the Americans who came to Japan immediately after the war to
implement the Occupation policies sincerely wanted to make Japan into a
better country. Among them were anti-war, pacifist Quakers such as Dr.
Hugh Borton, who helped to draft the new Constitution. On the basis of
their draft, the pacifist Constitution that determined that Japan would
neither wage war nor bear arms was joyfully accepted by the people of
the time, who had had their fill of the brutality of war. Upon
rereading the text of this document, I believe that the Japanese
Constitution is an ideal constitution, one that will go down in the
history of the human race. It may have been received from others,
forced upon us, but in my considered opinion a good thing is a good
thing.
From the 1931 Manchurian Incident (the act of sabotage that led to
the Japanese occupation of Manchuria) through the Pacific War to the
signing of the Potsdam Declaration and Japan's defeat, Japan was
continuously at war for fifteen years. I was born in 1931; the first
fifteen years of my up-bringing, until I was in the ninth grade, were
either during war or under the clouds of war. The schools had a
completely militaristic curriculum; our teachers taught us that Japan
was a "divine land" where all the gods and goddesses of heaven and
earth abide, that the Emperor reigned as the incarnate divinity who
stood at the top of these gods, and that the war was a "holy war" to
overthrow the brutal United States and Britain and bring about peace in
the world. We accepted all this on faith. In fact, however, Japan
invaded other Asian nations in the name of the "holy war," taking many
precious lives; the Japanese people themselves were the victims of
repeated air raids and had atomic bombs dropped on them twice,
suffering destruction on an unprecedented scale. After the predawn
Tokyo air raid that occurred on March 10, 1945, in which approximately
100,000 lives were sacrificed in one night in a massive incendiary
attack, we couldn't find an aunt who lived in an area that was
destroyed by fire. I walked the fire-ravaged area for three days,
peering at the faces of burnt corpses. My aunt was never found, so the
day of the air raid became the anniversary of her death.
Today, as a Japanese Buddhist, I believe as follows: The foremost
precept that a Buddhist must abide by is the precept of taking no life.
The largest extent of killing happens during war. The optimum situation
for having no wars is to not have weapons. Buddhists, for whom the
foremost precept is not to kill, should not have weapons. Even if there
were to be a war and an enemy were to attack us, it would be better to
be killed than to survive by killing others (in other words, by
violating the precept of taking no life). If asked if this would still
be preferable even if our nation were to be overthrown as a result, my
reply would be that even if the country were to be overthrown as a
result of not killing, that cannot be avoided. This is why we must hold
fast to the spirit of the Constitution's Article 9. To hold fast to the
spirit of Article 9, we must do all that we can to make true peace
possible.
"Thou shall not kill" is a precept that is not just Buddhist; it has
been common to many religions since ancient times. Nonetheless, looking
at the international situation these days, it seems that actions that
result in the sacrifice of the lives of others are being coldly taken
in the name of eradicating terrorism and protecting peace. What is
more, these actions are undeniably happening against the background of
a competition for underground resources. The justification of bearing
arms and killing people in the name of peace, a contradiction that was
put forth earlier in prewar Japan as well, is a contradiction that
Japanese Buddhists must not allow. To avoid the contradiction, it is
the duty of Japanese Buddhists to stand firmly by Article 9 of the
Constitution.
Koichi Kita is former director of the Chuo Academic
Research Institute of Rissho Kosei-kai in Tokyo. He now serves as a
lecturer on Buddhism on many occasions.
This article was originally published in the January-March 2008 issue of Dharma World.