The Aum Shinrikyō Executions and a Society in Denial

Society

On July 6, former Aum Shinrikyō cult leader Asahara Shōkō (Matsumoto Chizuo) was put to death, along with six of his senior followers. Executions of the remaining six death row prisoners in the case followed on July 26. Asahara never spoke during his trial, and now that he is dead the possibility of ever learning what motivated the cult’s attack on the Tokyo subway has gone with him.

Groupthink and the Banality of Evil

In the years since 1995, there has been an increasing tendency toward groupthink in Japanese society, provoked by mounting anxiety and fear. Groups bring together people linked by imagined ties of homogeneity or shared identity. Peer pressure and in-group solidarity lead to an urge to expel any foreign intruders from the group and encourage members to look for enemies outside the group.

This kind of group conformity both encourages and requires a strong, dictatorial political leader. Unfortunately, this phenomenon is not something that we can comfortably consign to the past tense; it is happening now, in the present continuous. (This same growth in groupthink and factionalism has been spreading around the world in recent years, particularly since the terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001.)

Anxiety and fear exacerbate this tendency to find comfort within the group. This is a human instinct—we are a tribal species that has made an evolutionary choice to live together in groups. But sometimes groups can stampede and run out of control. Once people allow their individuality to be subsumed within a group, they become capable of terrible atrocities. That is why it would have made more sense to have given Asahara the medical treatment he needed and then forced him to speak truthfully about his motives once he had recovered his faculties. I’ve come in for a lot of criticism for this opinion from experts and journalists, who claim either that Asahara was faking his illness or that he would never have told the truth in any case, even if he had been nursed to recovery.

Adolf Eichmann was one of the key figures in the Holocaust, responsible for transporting millions of Jews to their deaths at Auschwitz and the other Nazi camps. At his trial in Israel in 1961, he was asked what had motivated him to play such a central role in this crime against humanity. His only answer was that he had been following orders. Many people were disappointed by these words. But Hannah Arendt, who was attending the trial, drew on his words to formulate her famous concept of the “banality of evil.”

Eichmann was not sentenced to death because he personally killed people with his own hands. His crime was to have subordinated himself to an organization that had lost its imaginative sympathy for ordinary human values and behavior. Arendt’s observations about the nature of evil are helpful as we struggle to comprehend the whirlwind of negative passion that caused the Holocaust and led to a crazed attempt to wipe a whole people from the face of the earth. People do not commit evil because they are necessarily evil themselves. Sometimes they can commit evil because they have surrendered their individuality to the group. The 12 executed members of the Aum cult, too, became complicit in a plot to take innocent lives without ever ceasing to be individuals with kind and gentle personalities in other areas of their lives.

But men like Eichmann were never the main drivers of the Holocaust. Its chief protagonist took his own life in his bunker in Berlin as the country he had led collapsed into ruins around him. The Nuremberg trials had to be carried on without him. The trials could never deliver the final blow to the Nazi doctrine. As a result, admiration and even reverence for Hitler continue to smolder on in pockets even today, and revisionist ideas about the Nazis and the Holocaust continue to haunt the political landscape like revenant ghosts.

The Refusal of Interpretation

But Asahara did not take his own life. And therefore, he ought to have been given medical treatment and restored to a condition of sound mental health so that he could tell the truth. We ought to have pressed and harried him until he confessed everything. There are concerns that the straggling remnants of his cult (which live on under various names) will revere Asahara as a divine figure now that he is gone. But in this case, it would have made more sense to have restored him to his right mind and pressed him to talk while he was still alive. We should have lanced the boil and brought the full truth to light in a public setting. But the chance to do that has gone.

Like the Holocaust and the many other massacres and wars that blight human history, the Aum sarin attack shone a light on the serious genetic dangers that Homo sapiens has inherited from our ancestors’ decision to live in groups, and laid bare the fundamental dangers inherent in religion. Ultimately, however, Japanese society chose to misinterpret the event—or rather, refused to interpret it seriously at all. And the judiciary and media submitted to this view and went along with society.

Underlying my discomfort with the recent executions is this: It is simply wrong to execute a person who is in a state of mental incompetence. This is one of the most basic tenets of the modern judicial state.

Convicted prisoners condemned to death for their part in a single crime should all be executed at the same time. This ought to have been the basic principle on which the Abe government made its decision to carry out this mass execution. But Asahara and six other prisoners were executed on July 6. There was then was a gap of 20 days before the death sentences on the remaining six prisoners were carried out.

There has not yet been any clear explanation for why this happened. But it seems likely that the decision was prompted by the fierce criticism directed at Abe after the prime minister was seen wining and dining with his political supporters in the Akasaka region of Tokyo on the evening of July 5, while thousands of people in western Japan were being evacuated from their homes and the emergency services struggled to cope with some of the most devastating floods of recent times.

The remaining six men must have known that the first batch of executions had been carried out. What thoughts would have been in their minds for the remaining 20 days of their lives? It is terrifying to contemplate. I can’t help remembering their faces as I talked to them through those thick acrylic panels. What they were subjected to is torture: there is no other word for it.

Of course, the feelings of the bereaved relatives of the victims should come first. Some victims of the attack still suffer the lingering aftereffects to this day. Everything that can possibly be done to redress their suffering should be done. But personally, I do not believe that this is equivalent to the death penalty. In the end, all these sentences have achieved is to add 13 more deaths to the toll and increase the numbers of the bereaved.

In closing, there is a question I would like to direct to the government, and to Japanese society in general. The members of the Aum cult committed a grave crime, one that can never be undone, because they allowed themselves to become part of a group that had lost its sympathy for human values and human life. This is my question: Which side has lost sight of that imaginative sympathy now?

(Originally published in Japanese on July 26, 2018. Banner photo: A Tokyo newspaper worker hands out an extra edition on July 6, 2018, reporting the execution of former Aum Shinrikyō leader Matsumoto Chizuo and six of his followers. © Jiji.)

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