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Martial Arts Of The World - Webs

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Eventually, they would adopt textbooks and training methods developed<br />

by educators at Tokyo Teacher’s College in the department of physical education<br />

that had been founded by Kanô Jigorô.<br />

When the Ministry of Education finally adopted jûjutsu and gekken as<br />

part of the standard school curriculum in 1911, Japan’s political situation<br />

had changed dramatically. Military victories against China in 1894–1895<br />

and against Russia in 1905 not only demonstrated Japan’s ability to challenge<br />

European nations but also gave Japan control over neighboring territories.<br />

Nonetheless, Japan’s industrial capacity could not supply armaments<br />

in the quantities required by its military ambitions. Faced with this insurmountable<br />

economic inferiority, Japanese army leaders decided to rely on<br />

fighting spirit (kôgeki seishin [16]) to defeat the material superiority of<br />

Western forces. Beginning in 1905 the development of a program of spiritual<br />

education (seishin kyôiku [17]) became a top priority. In 1907 the army<br />

identified martial arts as one of its basic methods for training the spirit.<br />

<strong>The</strong>reafter, it became increasingly common for Japanese intellectuals to<br />

contrast Japanese spirituality with Western materialism and to link martial<br />

arts to spiritual development. In this context, however, the term spirit<br />

(seishin) denoted “willpower” as in the well-known phrase “indomitable<br />

spirit” (seishin ittô [18]) coined by the Chinese Confucian scholar Zhu Xi<br />

[19] (a.k.a. Chu Hsi, Japanese Shushi, 1130–1200). Malcolm Kennedy, a<br />

British soldier assigned to a Japanese army unit from 1917 to 1920, correctly<br />

captured the true sense of spiritual education when he explained it as<br />

“training of the martial spirit.” He notes that it was designed to foster aggression<br />

on battlefields abroad and to dispel “dangerous thoughts” (e.g.,<br />

bolshevism or antidynastic sentiments) at home (54–55, 311, 337).<br />

Public school education played an indispensable role in preparing students<br />

for military training. In 1907, therefore, the same year that the army<br />

linked martial arts to spiritual education, Japan’s legislative Diet passed a<br />

law requiring the Ministry of Education to develop jûjutsu and gekken curriculums.<br />

This law explicitly identified martial art instruction with bushidô<br />

[20] (warrior ways), and the law’s sponsors argued that bushidô was more<br />

important than ever because everyone in the country must become a soldier<br />

(zenkoku kaihei [21]).<br />

Significantly, Japanese Christians originally had popularized the concept<br />

of bushidô. <strong>The</strong>y had justified their own conversion to Christianity by<br />

describing it as the modern way to uphold traditional Tokugawa-period<br />

Confucian values, which they referred to as bushidô. <strong>The</strong> first book ever<br />

published with the word bushidô in its title, for example, was Kirisutokyô<br />

to bushidô [22] (Christianity and Bushidô, 1894) by Uemura Masahisa<br />

[23] (1858–1925), a professor of theology at Meiji Gakuin Academy. In<br />

this work, Uemura argued that modern Japanese should rely on Christian-<br />

Religion and Spiritual Development: Japan 479

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