|














| |
|
BUSHIDO
BUSHIDO
& SAMURAI
Bushido,
literally translated "Way of the Warrior," developed in Japan
between the Heian and Tokugawa Ages (9th-12th century). It was a code and
way of life for Samurai, a class of warriors similar to the medieval
knights of Europe. It was influenced by Zen and Confucianism, two
different schools of thought of those periods. Bushido is not unlike the
chivalry and codes of the European knights. "It puts emphasis on
loyalty, self sacrifice, justice, sense of shame, refined manners, purity,
modesty, frugality, martial spirit, honor and affection" (Nippon
Steel Human Resources Development Co., Ltd. 329).
ORIGINS AND INFLUENCES
Bushido comes out of Buddhism, Zen, Confucianism, and Shintoism. The
combination of these schools of thought and religions has formed the code
of warrior values known as Bushido. From Buddhism, Bushido gets its
relationship to danger and death. The samurai do not fear death because
they believe as Buddhism teaches, after death one will be reincarnated and
may live another life here on earth. The samurai are warriors from the
time they become samurai until their death; they have no fear of danger.
Through Zen, a school of Buddhism one can reach the ultimate
"Absolute." Zen meditation teaches one to focus and reach a
level of thought words cannot describe. Zen teaches one to "know
thyself" and do not to limit yourself. Samurai used this as a tool to
drive out fear, unsteadiness and ultimately mistakes. These things could
get him killed. Shintoism, another Japanese doctrine, gives Bushido its
loyalty and patriotism. Shintoism includes ancestor-worship which makes
the Imperial family the fountain-head of the whole nation. It awards the
emperor a god-like reverence. He is the embodiment of Heaven on earth.
With such loyalty, the samurai pledge themselves to the emperor and their
daimyo or feudal landlords, higher ranking samurai. Shintoism also
provides the backbone for patriotism to their country, Japan. They believe
the land is not merely there for their needs, "it is the sacred abode
to the gods, the spirits of their forefathers . . ." (Nitobe, 14).
The land is cared for, protected and nurtured through an intense
patriotism. Confucianism gives Bushido its beliefs in relationships with
the human world, their environment and family. Confucianism's stress on
the five moral relations between master and servant, father and son,
husband and wife, older and younger brother, and friend and friend, are
what the samurai follow. However, the samurai disagreed strongly with many
of the writings of Confucius. They believed that man should not sit and
read books all day, nor shall he write poems all day, for an intellectual
specialist was considered to be a machine. Instead, Bushido believes man
and the universe were made to be alike in both the spirit and ethics.
Along with these virtues, Bushido also holds justice, benevolence, love,
sincerity, honesty, and self-control in utmost respect. Justice is one of
the main factors in the code of the samurai. Crooked ways and unjust
actions are thought to be lowly and inhumane. Love and benevolence were
supreme virtues and princely acts. Samurai followed a specific etiquette
in every day life as well as in war. Sincerity and honesty were as valued
as their lives. Bushi no ichi-gon, or "the word of a samurai,"
transcends a pact of complete faithfulness and trust. With such pacts
there was no need for a written pledge; it was thought beneath one's
dignity. The samurai also needed self-control and stoicism to be fully
honored. He showed no sign of pain or joy. He endured all within--no
groans, no crying. He held a calmness of behavior and composure of the
mind neither of which should be bothered by passion of any kind. He was a
true and complete warrior. These factors which make up Bushido were few
and simple. Though simple, Bushido created a way of life that was to
nourish a nation through its most troubling times, through civil wars,
despair and uncertainty. "The wholesome unsophisticated nature of our
warrior ancestors derived ample food for their spirit from a sheaf of
commonplace and fragmentary teachings, gleaned as it were on the highways
and byways of ancient thought, and, stimulated by the demands of the age
formed from these gleanings a new and unique way of life" (Nitobe,
20).
I have no parents; I make the Heavens and the Earth my parents.
I have no home; I make the Tan T'ien my home.
I have no divine power; I make honesty my Divine Power.
I have no means; I make Docility my means.
I have no magic power; I make personality my Magic Power.
I have neither life nor death; I make A Um my Life and Death.
I have no body; I make Stoicism my Body.
I have no eyes; I make The Flash of Lightning my eyes.
I have no ears; I make Sensibility my Ears.
I have no limbs; I make Promptitude my Limbs.
I have no laws; I make Self-Protection my Laws.
I have no strategy; I make the Right to Kill and to Restore Life my
Strategy.
I have no designs; I make Seizing the Opportunity by the Forelock my
Designs.
I have no miracles; I make Righteous Laws my Miracle.
I have no principles; I make Adaptability to all circumstances my
Principle.
I have no tactics; I make Emptiness and Fullness my Tactics.
I have no talent; I make Ready Wit my Talent.
I have no friends; I make my Mind my Friend.
I have no enemy; I make Incautiousness my Enemy.
I have no armour; I make Benevolence my Armour.
I have no castle; I make Immovable Mind my Castle.
I have no sword; I make No Mind my Sword.
|
|