Japan Data

Yasukuni Shrine: the Basics

Politics Society

Prime Minister Abe Shinzō’s visit to Yasukuni Shrine on December 26, 2013, was the first by a Japanese leader for seven years and drew fierce criticism from China and South Korea. What started as a place to honor those who fell while fighting the Tokugawa shogunate has become a center of controversy in East Asian relations. This article presents the key historical, religious, and political information regarding the shrine.

Yasukuni Outline

• Location  Kudankita, Chiyoda-ku, Tokyo. Next to Kitanomaru Park, which lies to the north of the Imperial Palace. 

• Managing Body  Originally under the jurisdiction of the Ministry of the Interior, the Ministry of War, and the Ministry of the Navy. After World War II, it became an autonomous religious corporation, supported and maintained by major donations and offerings from families and friends of the war dead. The Yasukuni Jinja Sūkei Hōsankai is an organization that helps to support the shrine, currently chaired by former President of the House of Councillors Ōgi Chikage.

• Enshrined kami  Those who died supporting the imperial cause before the Meiji Restoration as well as those who were part of or attached to military forces and died for the country in wars or incidents either within Japan or overseas are enshrined as “glorious spirits.” Over 2,466,000 souls have been enshrined.

• Major Festivals  The shrine’s most important festivals are the Shunki Reitaisai (spring festival), from April 21 to 23, and the Shūki Reitaisai (autumn festival), from October 17 to 20. The Mitama Matsuri (July 13–16) is a festival that began in the postwar era, based on traditional Obon observances. No special festival is held on August 15 to commemorate the end of World War II, although many visitors choose to attend on this day.

Major Historical Events

1978 Former Prime Minister Tōjō Hideki and other class A war criminals are enshrined.

1869 The newly established Meiji government founds the Tokyo Shōkonsha in the Kudan district of Tokyo to honor those who had fallen in the Boshin War.
1879 Tokyo Shōkonsha is renamed Yasukuni Shrine.
1945 Following the end of World War II, the Supreme Commander for Allied Powers abolishes State Shintō.
1946 The Constitution of Japan is adopted.
1952 The Allied Occupation ends and Yasukuni Shrine becomes an autonomous religious corporation under the Religious Corporations Law enacted in 1946.
1959 Chidorigafuchi National Cemetery is completed.
1969 The Liberal Democratic Party introduces an ultimately unsuccessful bill in the Diet proposing nationalization of Yasukuni Shrine.
1978 Former Prime Minister Tōjō Hideki and other class A war criminals are enshrined.
1980 The government announces that attending Yasukuni Shrine in an official capacity may be unconstitutional.
1985 Prime Minister Nakasone reverses the 1980 decision by visiting Yasukuni Shrine in an official capacity on War Memorial Day (August 15). On August 7, the Asahi Shimbun publishes a special feature on the “Yasukuni issue”; on August 14, the Chinese government issues its first formal statement of concern about Yasukuni visits.
2006 Koizumi Jun’ichirō becomes the first sitting prime minister for 21 years to attend the shrine in an official capacity.

 

Yasukuni’s Enshrined Souls

Boshin War and Meiji Restoration (1867–69) 7,751
Invasion of Taiwan (1874) 1,130
Satsuma Rebellion (1877) 6,971
Sino-Japanese War (1894–95) 13,619
Boxer Rebellion (1900) 1,256
Russo-Japanese War (1904–5) 88,429
World War I (1914–18) 4,850
Jinan Incident (1928) 185
Mukden Incident (1931–37) 17,176
Sino-Japanese War (1937–41) 191,250
World War II (incl. Pacific theater and Indochina; 1941–45) 2,133,915
Total 2,466,532

Note: Conflicts and numbers of souls are as listed in Yasukuni Shrine documents.

Enshrined Class A War Criminals

Tōjō Hideki Army general Prime minister, minister of war Executed
Hirota Kōki Diplomat Prime minister, foreign minister Executed
Doihara Kenji Army general Mukden Military Intelligence Bureau director Executed
Itagaki Seishirō Army general China Expeditionary Army chief of staff Executed
Kimura Heitarō Army general Burma Area Army commander in chief Executed
Matsui Iwane Army general Central China Area Army commander in chief Executed
Mutō Akira Army lieutenant general Ministry of War Military Affairs Bureau director Executed
Hiranuma Kiichirō Judicial officer Prime minister, president of the Privy Council Life sentence
Shiratori Toshio Diplomat Ambassador to Italy Life sentence
Koiso Kuniaki Army general Prime minister, governor-general of Korea Life sentence
Umezu Yoshijirō Army general Kwantung Army commander in chief Life sentence
Tōgō Shigenori Diplomat Foreign minister, ambassador to Germany, ambassador to Soviet Union 20 years’ imprisonment
Nagano Osami Navy admiral of the fleet Minister of the Navy Died of natural causes before end of trial
Matsuoka Yōsuke Diplomat Foreign minister Died of natural causes before end of trial

 

Postwar Imperial Visits

Emperor Shōwa made a total of eight postwar visits to Yasukuni Shrine, starting in 1945. He attended for the last time on November 21, 1975, which was the last imperial visit to date; Emperor Akihito has never attended the shrine.

Postwar Visits by Sitting Prime Ministers

April visits are for the Shunki Reitaisai (spring festival) and October visits are for the Shūki Reitaisai (autumn festival).

Higashikuni Naruhiko 1 (August 18, 1945)
Shidehara Kijūrō 2 (October 23, 1945; November 20, 1945)
Katayama Tetsu 0
Ashida Hitoshi 0
Yoshida Shigeru 5 (October 18, 1951; October 17, 1952; April 23, 1953; October 24, 1953; April 24, 1954)
Hatoyama Ichirō 0
Ishibashi Tanzan 0
Kishi Nobusuke 2 (April 25, 1957; October 21, 1958)
Ikeda Hayato 5 (October 18, 1960; June 18, 1961; November 15, 1961; November 4, 1962; September 22, 1963)
Satō Eisaku 11 (April 21, 1965; April 21, 1966; April 22, 1967; April 23, 1968; April 22, 1969; October 18, 1969; April 22, 1970; October 17, 1970; April 22, 1971; October 18, 1971; April 22, 1973)
Tanaka Kakuei 5 (July 8, 1972; April 23, 1973; October 18, 1973; April 23, 1974; October 19, 1974)
Miki Takeo 3 (April 22, 1975; August 15, 1975; October 18, 1976)
Fukuda Takeo 4 (April 21, 1977; April 21, 1978; August 15, 1978; October 18, 1978)
Ōhira Masayoshi 3 (April 21, 1979; October 18, 1979; April 21, 1980)
Suzuki Zenkō 9 (August 15, 1980; October 18, 1980; November 21, 1980; April 21, 1981; August 15, 1981; October 17, 1981; April 21, 1982; August 15, 1982; October 18, 1982)
Nakasone Yasuhiro 10 (April 21, 1983; August 15, 1983; October 18, 1983; January 5, 1984; April 21, 1984; August 15, 1984; October 18, 1984; January 21, 1985; April 22, 1985, August 15, 1985)
Takeshita Noboru 0
Uno Sōsuke 0
Kaifu Toshiki 0
Miyazawa Kiichi (not clear whether he attended or not)
Hosokawa Morihiro 0
Hata Tsutomu 0
Murayama Tomiichi 0
Hashimoto Ryūtarō 1 (July 29, 1996)
Obuchi Keizō 0
Mori Yoshirō 0
Koizumi Jun'ichirō 6 (August 13, 2001; April 21, 2002; January 14, 2003; January 1, 2004; October 17, 2005; August 15, 2006)
Abe Shinzō (first term) 0
Fukuda Yasuo 0
Asō Tarō 0
Hatoyama Yukio 0
Kan Naoto 0
Noda Yoshihiko 0
Abe Shinzō (second term) 1 (December 26, 2013)

Created by Nippon.com based on Yasukuni Shrine records as of March 2014

Yasukuni Shrine Keywords

• Tamagushi  An offering consisting of evergreen branches, usually from the sacred sakaki tree, to which folded paper strips (shide) have been attached. Tamagushi are presented to the deities by worshippers and priests at Shintō ceremonies such as weddings and memorial services. Sometimes donations are made in the form of money to pay the shrine to make the offerings.

• Private and Official Visits  There are numerous debates surrounding private and official visits to Yasukuni Shrine, and it is difficult to clearly separate the two. The distinction comes under scrutiny in the case of the prime minister, cabinet members, and members of the Diet. For example, when Prime Minister Nakasone made an official visit in 1985, he used public money to donate ordinary flowers rather than a tamagushi to avoid violating the constitutional separation of religion and state. Earlier, Prime Minister Miki had set forth four basic principles that made his visit a private one: he did not use an official car, he donated his own money for a tamagushi, he did not sign his title in the registry, and he was not accompanied by public officials. However, this was his personal statement and not a government position.

• Chidorigafuchi National Cemetery  Constructed by the Japanese government in 1959, Chidorigafuchi National Cemetery is located in Sanbanchō, Chiyoda-ku, Tokyo. It houses the remains of over 350,000 unknown soldiers who died overseas during World War II and could not be returned to their families. In October 2013, US Secretary of State John Kerry and Secretary of Defense Chuck Hagel visited the cemetery and offered flowers.

• Yūshūkan  A museum within the grounds of Yasukuni Shrine that displays possessions and documents belonging to enshrined soldiers and weapons used during wartime. After opening initially in 1882, it closed its doors in September 1945 before reopening in 1986. The tone of the exhibits and explanations are supportive of the Japanese government’s policies from the Manchurian Incident to the end of World War II.

• Chinreisha A small shrine built south of Yasukuni’s main shrine in 1965. It enshrines the souls of those Japanese who died in wars and disturbances since the last days of the shogunate in the mid-nineteenth century and are not enshrined in Yasukuni Shrine, as well as those of any nationality who have died in wars around the world. When Prime Minister Abe visited Yasukuni’s main shrine in December 2013, he also visited Chinreisha.

(Originally published in Japanese on August 13, 2014. Banner photo shows Yasukuni Shrine. © Jiji)

Related Tags

China Abe Shinzō Nakasone Yasuhiro Koizumi Jun'ichirō South Korea constitution Yasukuni Shrine prime minister class-A war criminals Shintō foreign relations State Shintō Tojo Hideki Emperor Showa Hirohito

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