ZEN SUICIDE

The well-known method of suicide of the samurai, seppuku, or harakiri (splitting the stomach), often followed from a commitment to certain elements of Zen philosophy.

Judaism, Christianity, and Islam all forbid their followers to kill themselves, suicide being looked upon as rebellion against divine will. Instead of divine will, Buddhism conceived of karma - fate as determined by a man's own character and past actions.

If one's karma has brought one to the verge of death, what is more natural than to seal one's present existence - which is no more than a single scene in a many-act play of metamorphoses - with a courageous deed that will insure better karma in the next incarnation?

In the eyes of a Zen Buddhist, suicide of this sort may even indicate enlightenment, since one who sets no store by either life or death is likely to be liberated from the karmic cycle of births and deaths.

That many samurai leaders in the Kamakura period leaned toward Zen is reflected clearly in their death poems, some of which are translated below.

However, sacrificing one's life for one's lord or for the clan is also a Confucian ideal. The individual who dies "appropriately," according to all the rites and ceremonies, sanctifies the name of the entire group. Thus, even a person who has been a "black sheep" during life is taken back, at death, into the bosom of the "family." The tendency to surround self-imposed death with a halo of beauty is seen not only with the suicide of samurai, but that of lovers as well. Death by suicide was condoned for those caught in dilemmas from which they could not otherwise extricate themselves. Through death, one could cleanse oneself of misdeeds committed and vindicate the social order that had been violated.

There is in suicide, it is said, an element of outright rebellion against the society that has caused the individual's failure.

Lovers' suicide protests class inequality or the conservatism of the marriage institution which prevents the consummation of the couple's love. A student who fails protests, with suicide, against teachers, family, or friends; a corrupt employee, against employers; and parents who kill themselves along with their children, against the society that has not enabled them to live honorably. But though the act of suicide is by nature a protest, the Japanese tend to look upon it with a forgiving eye. Perhaps because suicide victims turn their anger not upon society, but upon themselves, they end up sanctioning, when all is said and done, the status quo.

  • JapaneseDeathPoems [she/her]
    hexagon
    ·
    edit-2
    4 years ago

    The following story appears in the Heike Monogatari (The Tale of the Heike), a collection of stories about heroic warriors written in the latter half of the twelfth century.

    Taira-no-Tadanori (1144-84) was in command of the western flank of the army of the Heike (Taira) clan when Okabe Tadazumi, a warrior of the Genji (Minamoto) clan, overtook him on the battlefield.

    Tadazumi galloped alongside Tadanori and grappled with him. Tadanori, however, overpowered Tadazumi and was about to cut off his head when one of Tadazumi's retainers drew his sword and cut off Tadanori's right arm.

    Tadanori pushed Tadazumi aside and said, "Stay away from me! I wish to say the death prayer!" He turned toward the west and chanted a Buddhist prayer.

    Then Tadazumi approached him from behind and beheaded him. Tadanori's death poem, which he carried with him into battle as was the way among warriors, was found fasted to his quiver.

    The poem is entitled "A Flower at a Traveler's Inn":

    Overtaken by darkness

    I will lodge under

    the boughs of a tree.

    Flowers alone

    host me tonight.