Fudoshin and Its Continuing Relevance
by Stephen Fabian
This article first appeared in the Spring 1997
issue of the SMAA Newsletter.
Sparkling crystal clinked with seasonal good cheer as the revelers
toasted each other. Garbed in gowns, suits, and other formal
evening wear, the foreign ministers, diplomats, and general VIPs
and their spouses basked in the light and warmth of fellowship and
bounty at the gala event. Suddenly an explosion shook the
assemblage, bursting the dreamlike party image and replacing it
with a nightmare, like the twisted plot of a cinematic thriller.
Gunfire erupted stark and loud and was met by shouts and screams,
and the mass of nearly 400 people milled about confusedly. Doors
burst open and shots cracked over their heads, sending the guests
headlong to the floor. Armed and masked guerrillas swarmed through
the official residence.
"Everyone down," came the snarled command, "and
don't raise your heads unless you wish them blown off!"
Screams were nearing hysteria. "Silence!"
The shots and shouts subsided, replaced by an electrified quiet
punctuated with stifled sobs. Fatigue-clad men glared ominously
over the inert horde, and then leveled their weapons at an
unexpected sight: one VIP remained standing, visibly unshaken
by the violent infiltration.
A rebel moved closer, shoving the still-warm barrel of his gun
towards the his face. "Who are you?"
The man faced gun-barrel and glare without flinching. "I am
Morihisa Aoki, ambassador of Japan." His voice was forceful
and unwavering. "These are my guests, and they are unarmed.
You will respect them and cause them no harm."
Awed, the guerrillas' eyes widened, and for a brief moment fingers
tensed on triggers. But bold themselves, the guerrillas could
admire grudgingly the courage of their captive. The rebel leader
nodded. "All right. No one will be harmed." Guns were
lowered, and an audible sigh spread among the hostages.
Fudoshin. This is a Japanese expression based on the Buddhist
guardian figure Fudo Myo O, who is unflinching in his defense
against wickedness. Figuratively translated, fudoshin means
"unmoving mind/heart"or "immovable mind," and
connotes the imperturbability as well as courage of the
truly mastered self. It is the mind/heart from which have been
purged all impurities and weaknesses in the resolute process of
forging artistic and self-mastery. While historical examples of
the demonstration of fudoshin in Japanese monks and warriors are
not uncommon, the above scenario is not from Japan's feudal and
relatively isolated past, but from its contemporary and
international present.
The scene described is based on newspaper reports of the takeover
in Peru of the Japanese ambassador's residence by Tupac Amaru
guerrillas during an evening Christmas party on December 17, 1996.
Although I know nothing of the Japanese ambassador's past or
training, it is clear that he is a man who has learned to govern
his thoughts, words, feelings and actions. He has discovered
self-mastery, and has applied it strategically and intelligently
to help bring an explosive and potentially deadly situation under
level-headed control.
This model of courageous dignity and calm leadership is the direct
application of fudoshin, and is a model that we who train within
traditional Japanese martial systems, and as members of SMAA,
would do well to try to achieve and emulate. The Japanese warriors
and masters of old, in pursuing mastery of technique and form,
recognized that such mastery was inextricably linked to mastering
the self. Not only is true mastery in the application of form and
technique possible only with a deeper knowledge of the self, but it
is through the long and challenging process of mastering an artistic
"way" that the self can, and must, also be mastered.
Traditional arts, learned in traditional ways--ways that emphasize
long and rigorous training, the tempering of immediate wants and
needs, and the internal fortitude to successfully meet and exceed
these challenges day after day, year after year--are prescriptions
for mastering technique, form, and self.
I do not know what traditional arts or ways Aoki Sensei studied in
the process of his personal development. But his adeptness is
evident and a worthy model for us all. As one freed fellow hostage
was quoted as saying, "In a nightmare of this magnitude, you
need a hero, someone with special valor . . . That's what
ambassador Aoki . . . gave the rest of us. [He] showed us what
dignity meant." (As quoted in the Louisville, KY
Courier-Journal, Wednesday, January 1, 1997, p. A7.)
It is a model we all need, and not only in such a crisis, but as a
model for everyday dignity and rectitude, courage and honor. A
model with which to face the moral challenges, personal choices,
and interpersonal relations and conflicts of our everyday lives.
It is a model that is achievable through long, consistent,
diligent, and selfless training in a traditional Japanese art
or way.
About the Author:
Stephen Fabian Sensei, Associate Professor of Anthropology,
is a Division Director in the SMAA Traditional Jujutsu
Division. Fabian Sensei has been involved in the Asian
martial arts for many years, lives in Illinois, and trains in
Hontai Yoshin Ryu. Mr. Fabian also received a Ph.D. in cultural
anthropology from the University of Illinois and has received
the following academic honors: Fulbright Scholar (Brazil
1982-3), Phi Beta Kappa, and Magna Cum Laude.