
Ninomiya Sontoku: Symbol of Self-Education Makes a Comeback
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Trials and Spiritual Awakening
In 1823, Ninomiya moved to Sakuramachi with his wife and son and set about revitalizing the district. The soil was poor, and rice yield was very low. The villagers lacked discipline and motivation, and their farms were in a deplorable state of neglect. Many fields had been abandoned entirely. As a result, revenue from the district had fallen sharply.
Trials and triumphs await Ninomiya (played by Gōda Masashi) at his new post in Sakuramachi. (© Movie Ninomiya Kinjirō Production Committee)
Shortly after Ninomiya assumed his post, the daimyō offered a generous grant to jump-start the revitalization process. But he refused the assistance, convinced that such aid from the domain government had contributed to the problem by undermining the villagers’ work ethic. Instead, he used his own assets, along with the money the domain was paying him, to provide low-interest financing for the purchase of farming implements and other inputs, on the understanding that profits from the sale of the crops would be applied to repayment. In this way he sought to foster personal responsibility and initiative among the villagers.
Ninomiya also recognized that cooperation and solidarity were essential to the well-being of a farm community. With this in mind, he encouraged a participatory consensus-building process that he dubbed imokoji (in reference to the technique of peeling taro roots by stirring them together in a tub).
Tempers get heated during Ninomiya’s revitalization efforts. (© Movie Ninomiya Kinjirō Production Committee)
It was not long, however, before Ninomiya’s reforms ran into political resistance from samurai bureaucrats who resented his authority and local interests that favored the status quo. Stymied, he temporarily retreated to Naritasan Shinshōji temple in present-day Chiba Prefecture. After 21 days of fasting and meditation, he had a spiritual awakening. Armed with the monistic concept of ichien, or “one circle,” Ninomiya returned to Sakuramachi, convinced that he could win over his opponents.
Ninomiya faces off with his nemesis, the samurai bureaucrat Toyota Shōsaku. (© Movie Ninomiya Kinjirō Production Committee)
The Buddhist monks of Naritasan Shinshōji bid a fond farewell to Ninomiya as he heads back to Sakuramachi, armed with a new spiritual understanding. (© Movie Ninomiya Kinjirō Production Committee)
Things progressed more smoothly after Ninomiya’s return from Naritasan. The villagers had come to appreciate his wisdom and leadership, and his foremost antagonist had been replaced by the domain authorities. To help revitalize the depopulated district, Ninomiya encouraged resettlement from surrounding areas. He also promoted trading on the rice market, tapping a promising young villager to forecast yields year by year and buy or sell accordingly. (When the great Tenpō Famine hit in the 1830s, Sakuramachi had a substantial stockpile of rice and consequently suffered less than much of the surrounding region.) By 1831, the final year of Ninomiya’s appointment, the potential rice yield of the district’s taxable rice fields had nearly doubled compared with 1823.
Word of Ninomiya’s achievement spread, and he was subsequently drafted to lead similar programs in other districts and farming communities. By some estimates, as many as 600 villages around the country ultimately benefited from his direct guidance.
Unification of Ethics and Economics
Ninomiya also developed his own system of economic ethics, dubbed hōtoku, which was to have a profound influence on later generations. The hōtoku philosophy stressed behavior consistent with a sense of gratitude toward one’s family, one’s ancestors, the larger community, and the earth. To this end, it set forth four basic principles of conduct: shisei, or honesty and sincerity; kinrō, or diligence; bundo, or budgeting within one’s means; and suijō, what people nowadays might term “giving back.” Ninomiya preached that economic activity aimed at the accumulation of wealth could benefit society as a whole if anchored by such virtues as restraint and altruism. Such concepts laid the ethical and spiritual foundations for modern Japanese capitalism, performing much the same role that Max Weber (1864-1920) attributed to the Protestant ethic when tracing the development of Western capitalism.
Ninomiya’s Spiritual Legacy
Ninomiya’s philosophy of hōtoku inspired some of the most iconic and pivotal figures in the economic history of modern Japan. His spiritual heirs include industrialist Shibusawa Eiichi (1840-1931), dubbed the “father of Japanese capitalism”; entrepreneur Yasuda Zenjirō (1838–1921), who helped build Japan’s modern banking system; inventor and industrialist Toyoda Sakichi, who established Toyota; and the legendary Matsushita Kōnosuke (1894-1989), founder of Panasonic.
Family and friends welcome Ninomiya back to Sakuramachi after his spiritual retreat. (© Movie Ninomiya Kinjirō Production Committee)
In the popular imagination, the image of Ninomiya Sontoku as agrarian reformer and economic thinker has tended to take a backseat to that of the paragon of youthful diligence and academic zeal. The film Ninomiya Kinjirō, released near the start of the new Reiwa era, attempts to redress that imbalance, shining a spotlight on Ninomiya’s struggles and achievements as a pioneering agricultural administrator. It also highlights the social altruism that played such an important role in his career, as in the lives of the industrialists who helped build modern Japan. At a time when such values often seem to have been cast by the wayside, the return of Ninomiya Sontoku is a welcome and encouraging development.
(Originally published in Japanese on June 1, 2019. Banner photo: Portrait of Ninomiya Sontoku by Okamoto Shūki. Courtesy Hōtoku Museum, Odawara.)
Related Tags
history Edo period agriculture local community management biography