Sunday, April 30, 2006

The Meaning Of Harakiri

The Meaning Of Harakiri
2006.02.12 4:07

Traditionally Japan was a Buddhist country. Our ancestor didn't eat meat of animals but only ate a fish. When we cook fish, we take all the offal, some parts are eaten but almost all the cases all offal is thrown away. Then decapitated to make it fillet, then it would be served as food in front of us.
Traditionally after harakiri took place, always decapitation by the helper beside him took place afterwards. I found the similarlity between two. Both offal and internal parts of their body were thought to be 'untidy' both before humans and before God. - After decapitation all fish and them are served as a tidy sacrifice.
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Beheading(Score:2)
by bettiwettiwoo (239665) on 2006.02.12 9:52 (#14697029) (http://xq.se/ Last Journal: 2006.03.24 10:53)
I thought the beheading taking place after the self-inflicted part of seppuku took place as an act of mercy since death is quick and, if done by a good enough beheader, relatively painless, whereas dying by disembowling alone is slow and gruesomely painful.
--The liver is evil and must be punished.
Re:Beheading(Score:1)
by mercedo (822671) * on 2006.02.13 0:21 (#14699857) (http://mercedo-compl.../2006/04/zen-ya.html Last Journal: 2006.04.28 3:11)
Exactly. Seppuku is described as 'self-determination' in Japanese terminology, which itself is very strange, and has long been believed to be related to the purification of soul, but actually it is nothing but a denial of self-existence. Many warrior class people used to do it when they were ashamed of some misconduct or wrongdoing against their master. It was till recently that this act was thought to be the ultimate way to take responsibility for their wrongdoing.
On the other hands, kamikaze has different meaning, which is thought to be an ultimate form of self-sacrifice, to serve their lives to save the lives of their tribes. Only after Western view on value of life was adopted, we can hardly see such heinous acts anymore fortunately.
--Ancient Greek Philosophers -18c Enlightenment Thinkers -Slashdotters
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Re:Beheading(Score:1)
by eglamkowski (631706) <eglamkowski.angelfire@com> on 2006.02.13 22:55 (#14705333) (http://www.angelfire.com/nj/eglamkowski Last Journal: 2006.04.29 1:54)
There's still quite a bit of suicide over things us westerners would not think to do so over. For example: failure to get into university. A friend of mine teaching english in Japan a few years ago witnessed someone do exactly that. She saw the person jump from a building top. The next day saw the news article and lo, it was failure to get into the university.Probably an (academically) intelligent person, but obviously the societal pressure on such people is still excessive. Nobody should commit suicide over that. Just try again next year.
--Government IS the problem.
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Re:Beheading(Score:1)
by mercedo (822671) * on 2006.02.14 4:46 (#14709690) (http://mercedo-compl.../2006/04/zen-ya.html Last Journal: 2006.04.28 3:11)
Basically from the tradition based on Christianity, killing himself has been strongly denied in Western culture, which itself is a very good thing. Japanese people tend to think light of their value of life, because they think too highly of the culture of shame, I think.
I am sad to see just too many Japanese famous writers killed themselves for various reasons. Akutagawa Ryunosuke, Dazai Osamu, Mishima Yukio, Kawabata Yasunari, Ariyoshi Sawako, in the case of Western writers, only Sappho( I am not sure), Hemmingway, (probably) Camus, anyway very few writers committed this most heinous crime.
At age 45, Mishima Yukio cut his belly by Japanese sword at the headquater of Self Defence Force. He was an extremely talented writer, not only him but in other examples, Japan's elitests are vulnerable to reality. I am glad I was not an elite.
--Ancient Greek Philosophers -18c Enlightenment Thinkers -Slashdotters

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