http://www.dailytimes.com.pk/default.asp?page=2009\12\22\story_22-12-2009_pg3_4

Tuesday, December 22, 2009

PURPLE PATCH: Evolution of Japan -Sidney Gulick

 The study of the evolution of Japan is one of unusual interest; first, because 
of the fact that Japan has experienced such unique changes in her environment. 
Her history brings into clear light some principles of evolution which the 
visual development of a people does not make so clear.

In the second place, New Japan is in a state of rapid growth. She is in a 
critical period, resembling a youth, just coming to manhood, when all the 
powers of growth are most vigorous. The latent qualities of body and mind and 
heart then burst forth with peculiar force. In the course of four or five short 
years the green boy develops into a refined and noble man; the thoughtless girl 
ripens into the full maturity of womanhood and of motherhood. These are the 
years of special interest to those who would observe nature in her time of most 
critical activity.

Not otherwise is it in the life of nations. There are times when their growth 
is phenomenally rapid; when their latent qualities are developed; when their 
growth can be watched with special ease and delight, because so rapid. The 
Renaissance was such a period in Europe. Modern art, science, and philosophy 
took their start with the awakening of the mind of Europe at that eventful and 
epochal period of her life. Such, I take it, is the condition of Japan to-day. 
She is "being born again"; undergoing her "renaissance". Her intellect, 
hitherto largely dormant, is but now awaking. Her ambition is equalled only by 
her self-reliance. Her self-confidence and amazing expectations have not yet 
been sobered by hard experience. Neither does she, nor do her critics, know how 
much she can or cannot do. She is in the first flush of her new-found powers; 
powers of mind and spirit, as well as of physical force. Her dreams are 
gorgeous with all the colours of the rainbow. Her efforts are sure, to be noble 
in proportion as her ambitions are high. The growth of the past half-century is 
only the beginning of what we may expect to see.

Then again, this latest and greatest step in the evolution of Japan has taken 
place at a time unparalleled for opportunities of observation, under the 
incandescent light of the nineteenth century, with its thousands of educated 
men to observe and record the facts, many of whom are active agents in the 
evolution in progress. Hundreds of papers and magazines, native and European, 
read by tens of thousands of intelligent men and women, have kept the world 
aware of the daily and hourly events. Telegraphic dispatches and letters by the 
million have passed between the far East and the West. It would seem as if the 
modernising of Japan had been providentially delayed until the last half of the 
nineteenth century with its steam and electricity, annihilators of space and 
time, in order that her evolution might be studied with a minuteness impossible 
in any previous age, or by any previous generation. It is almost as if one were 
conducting an experiment in human evolution in his own laboratory, imposing the 
conditions and noting the results.

In Japan there is going on to-day a process unique in the history of the human 
race. Two streams of civilisation, that of the far East and that of the far 
West, are beginning to flow in a single channel. These streams are exceedingly 
diverse, in social structure, in government, in moral ideals and standards, in 
religion, in psychological and metaphysical conceptions. Can they live 
together? Or is one going to drive out and annihilate the other? If so, which 
will be victor? Or is there to be modification of both? In other words, is 
there to be a new civilisation - a Japanese, an Occidento-Oriental civilisation?

The answer is plain to him who has eyes with which to see. Can the Ethiopian 
change his skin or the leopard his spots? No more can Japan lose all trace of 
inherited customs of daily life, of habits of thought and language, products of 
a thousand years of training in Chinese literature, Buddhist doctrine, and 
Confucian ethics. That "the boy is father to the man" is true of a nation no 
less than of an individual. What a youth has been at home in his habits of 
thought, in his purpose and spirit and in their manifestation in action, will 
largely determine his after-life. In like manner the mental and moral history 
of Japan has so stamped certain characteristics on her language, on her 
thought, and above all on her temperament and character, that, however she may 
strive to Westernise herself, it is impossible for her to obliterate her 
Oriental features. She will inevitably and always remain Japanese.

Japan has already produced an Occidento-Oriental civilisation. Time will serve 
progressively to Occidentalise it. But there is no reason for thinking that it 
will ever become wholly Occidentalised. A Westerner visiting Japan will always 
be impressed with its Oriental features, while an Asiatic will be impressed 
with its Occidental features. This progressive Occidentalisation of Japan will 
take place according to the laws of social evolution.

Comparison is often made between Japan and India. In both countries enormous 
social changes are taking place; in both, Eastern and Western civilisations are 
in contact and in conflict. The differences, however, are even more striking 
than the likenesses. Most conspicuous is the fact that whereas, in India, the 
changes in civilisation are due almost wholly to the force and rule of the 
conquering race, in Japan these changes are spontaneous, attributable entirely 
to the desire and initiative of the native rulers. This difference is 
fundamental and vital. The evolution of society in India is to a large degree 
compulsory; in a true sense it is an artificial evolution. In Japan, on the 
other hand, evolution is natural. There has not been the slightest physical 
compulsion laid on her from without. 

(This extract is taken from Evolution of the Japanese: Social and Psychic by 
Sidney Gulick)

Sidney Gulick was an educator, author, and missionary who spent much of his 
life working to promote greater understanding and friendship between Japanese 
and American cultures


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