Unveiling Histories of the Tohoku
District
by Eishiro Ito |
Juan
Goto and Crypto-Christians γ‘υΑ Ζ BκLV^ |
Fukuwara,
Mizusawa Ward & Tokusui-en Park, Isawa Ward, Oshu City, Iwate βθ§Bs ςζ΄ & _ςζΏ |
Statue of Juan Goto (by Teruo Konno, 1953) Roman Catholic Church Mizusawa |
In
the early seventeenth century, Juan Goto (?1577-?1638), was the
Christian lord
of Fukuwara (literally the "God-Blessed Field") in the western part of
Mizusawa Ward, Oshu City, Iwate.
According to Ginosuke Kanno, the most famous researcher of
Juan Goto, he was born as Matagoro (as called in his childhood), the
third son of Hidenobu Iwabuchi, the lord of Fujisawa-jo Castle, County
Higashi-Iwai, Iwate.
His family suddenly declined after Hideyoshi Toyotomi
accused their master, Great Lord Kasai of not campaigning for Toyotomi
at Battle of Odawara in 1590 and confiscated their
dominions.
Although his elder brother Nobutoki died in the battle, Matagoro
managed to escape danger and went to Nagasaki and took ship for Ukujima
Island of the Goto Islands to be baptized a Christian. He
was given his Latin Christian name "Juan" and renamed himself as Juan
Goto in c.1596.
He used two Chinese characters for "Juan," meaning "(a)
happy hermitage." He hoped that he could live long
comfortably with other Christians here in Fukuwara. He
invited many Christian missionaries who were eager to proselytize
the local farmers and iron-workers, etc. It is said that 500
to 1,000 Christians lived here for a time in the early seventeenth
century. In 1623, however, the Christian faith was prohibited by the Tokugawa Shogunate government. Fukuwara the God-blessed land could not exist under the strict prohibition: it was a never-never land for Juan Goto. Before leaving Fukuwara, while eluding arrest for keeping his faith, he developed irrigation canals for growing rice. Thanks to "Juan-zeki" (Juan's canals) this land (the southwest part of Oshu City) has become a prosperous grain belt. |
|
The Historical Background |
Since the first Jesuit Francisco Javier (St. Francis Xavier: 1506-1552) came to Kagoshima, Kyushu, Japan on August 15, 1549 and spent two years and three months to propagandize Christianity (Catholicism) in several towns in Western Japan such as Kagoshima, Hirado and Yamaguchi until November 15, 1551, many Christian missionaries (Jesuits and Franciscans) came to Japan under the guardianship of some Japanese lords, Sorin Otomo, Ukon Takayama, Tadaoki Hosokawa, Masamune Date, etc. Nobunaga Oda (1534-1582), the most powerful lord at the time allowed the Jesuit missionaries to propagandize Christianity and employed Rev. Luis Frois (Jesuit, 1532-1597) as an adviser to antagonize Hongwan-ji Temple, the headquarters of the Jodo Shin-shu sect of Buddhism, trying to get information abroad from him. It is also noted that the Portuguese superior Jesuit Francisco Cabral (1529-1609) who had a strong contempt for Asians, strictly denied the possibility of any Japanese formally becoming a Catholic priest, while the Italian Jesuit Alessandro Valignano (1539-1606) firmly insisted the necessity of training Japanese Christians for the priesthood and also proposed to send the Japanese missionary or envoys to Rome and other European countries. The Japanese Christian lords of the Kyushu District, Sorin Otomo, Harunobu Arima and Sumitada Omura sent four boys coming of good samurai families and studying at the Japanese Jesuit school "Seminario nella citta d' Arima, nel Giappone" plus other three Japanese boys accompanied with four Jesuits to Pope of Rome Gregorius XIII (r.1572-1585) in 1582. It is later called "the Tensho-Ken-o-Shonen-Shisetsu" (Boys' Envoys to Europe of the Tensho Era [1582-1590]). Although attracted by the tremendous profits from trading with Western countries at first, the Hideyoshi Toyotomi (1537-1598), the successor of Oda, suddenly promulgated a deportation order to "Bateren" (Port. "padre") missionaries and banned Christianity on July 24, 1587. The fact warrants Hideyoshi's statement. During battles of Kyushu, a Portuguese Jesuit (a Marrano) Gasper Coelho (1530-1590), the first chief of the Japan Branch of the Society of Jesus (the Jesuits), proudly showed Hideyoshi his battleships of the newest European type. By that time, Hideyoshi had already noticed that the Jesuits, with the Spanish Invincible Armada's overwhelming naval power, planned to bring Japan and China into subjection by colonialism. (European Propagandism , to say the least, in the Grand Age de la Navigation between fifteenth and seventeenth centuries, was inwardly linked to exploitation and colonialism as world history proves.) Hideyoshi also got the information that the Portuguese deceived and kidnapped as many as 500,000 baptized Japanese (especially beautiful girls) to sell them in Europe and Latin America after 1543 when the Portuguese first introduced European firearms to Japan. Later, the Christian boys' group called "the Tensho-Ken-o-Shonen-Shisetsu" (Boys' Envoys to Europe of the Tensho Era [1582-1590]) and Tsunenaga Hasekura's group (gKeicho-Ken-o-Shisetsuh [The Embassy to Europe of the Keicho Era] 1613-1620) were greatly shocked and disappointed to see Japanese slaves (especially half-naked beautiful Japanese girls in chains) in ships and other occasions on the way to Europe and in Latin America. Of course, such an inhumane action was impossible without some Christian Japanese lords' influence, especially in Kyushu where many Japanese Buddhist monks and Shinto priests were cruelly murdered in the name of Christianity and numerous Christian churches were built in the sites of demolished Buddhist temples and Shinto shrines. The most powerful Christian lord was Sorin Otomo who "traded" in medicines, pepper, gunpowder, slaves etc. with Luis de Almeida (1525-1583) and other Jesuits, which had made a huge amount of money for Portugal and the Roman Catholic Church for years. Almeida was also known as the person who built the first Western-style hospital in Bungo-Funai (Lγ{ΰ; now Oita City) and started medical training for Japanese in Oita in 1558. As the "Tensho-Ken-o-Shonen-Shisetsu"' report tells: "Everywhere we go, so many Japanese women can be seen. They say that the total number of Japanese slavery women in Europe is as many as about 500,000. We cannot bear to look at the fact that fair-complexioned, beautiful Japanese girls are in chains, exposing their sexual organs, falling prey to men's lust, and finally to be resold to another proslavery country. Of course we have long felt massive anger against the White people who set leg irons to our fellow country people to sell them to such far countries. They also belong to the same European cultural group. Why do they enslave women from our country? Fathers of Portuguese churches exchange Japanese women with saltpeter and gunpowder in India and Africa." (Excerpted and Translated from Hideaki Onizuka's Japanese Emperor's Rosary, vol. II [SΛGΊ wVcΜUI Ίx] (2006), pp.96-97 ; the original source: the first edition of Soho Tokutomi's Hsitory of Modern Japanese People: The Toyotomi Era 2nd volume [Ώxhτwί’ϊ{―j Lbγ³Ρx] (1918-1952), pp.337-387; cf. also Meiko Yamada's Dowan-Hon-Chao (Soul-Wrenching Bridge) the "Rabbits" Crossed [RcΏq wETM½ΏͺnΑ½f°΄x] (1995), 2 vols.) (*Opinion is divided on the reliability of this report.) As Tokutomi notes, the Japanese girls were exchanged with saltpeter at the rate of 50 girls per one barrel. It is difficult to tell to what degree and how many of the Jesuits got involved with the slave trade. However, witnessing the dark side of what they called "missionaries," the Japanese Christian envoys naturally distrusted Christianity itself and some apostatized from the belief when they returned from Europe. Around this time, the antagonism of the Society of Jesus (Jesuits) against the late comer Order of Friars Minor (Franciscans) became severe in Japan. In 1587, Hideyoshi Toyotomi called Gasper Coelho to command to stop slave trade of Japanese and bring back all the Japanese immediately, etc. Coelho persistently wrote for the Invincible Armada and prepared for war with Japan in vain. To save the country Hideyoshi immediately promulgated the "Bateren-tsuiho-rei" (the Purge Directive Order to the Jesuits) on July 24, 1587 (June 19 in the 15th year of Tensho era). It consists of 11 articles and one of them is: "No. 10. Do not sell Japanese people to the Namban [Portuguese]." Finally in 1596, the Jesuit fathers prohibited slave trade in and outside Japan. Hideyoshi also strictly ordered all the Japanese Christian lords to apostatize from their Christian faith and most of them obeyed to keep their feudal statuses and dominions. However, there were a few lords who did not obey the order and lost their statuses like Ukon Takayama (Dom Justo Takayama, 1552-1615) who was held in high esteem with his many abilities and natural virtue by other lords. He chose to abdicate his feudal status and dominion in Akashi [now a part of Hyogo]. Justo lived under the protection of his friends for several decades, but following the 1614 prohibition of Christianity by Tokugawa Shogunate,, he was expelled from Japan. On November 8, 1614, together with 300 Japanese Christians he left Japan from Nagasaki. They arrived at Manila on December 21 and was greeted warmly by the Spanish Jesuits and the local Filipinos there. The Spanish Philippines offered their assistance in overthrowing the Japanese government by an invasion to protect Japanese Catholics. However, Ukon declined to take part in the plot and died of illness just 40 days after his arrival. It is reported that the Spanish government respectfully interred him in Philippine soil in a Christian manner. Thus all the Christians over Japan were gradually subjected to the suppression. The Tokugawa Shogunate (1603-1867) was also fascinated by the profits from trading with Western countries at the start, but they gradually came to fear that Japan might have been colonized by Spain and Portugal like other Asian countries if Japan continued to trade with them and allowed their Christian (mostly Catholic, esp. Jesuit) missionaries to Japanese people. The Shogunate also feared that their favored order of Neo-Confucianism (the teachings of Chu Hsi, Southern Sung) might have been destroyed by Christianity. So in 1639 (until 1854), they closed its door to foreigners (except China, Korea [through the lord of Tsushima] and the Netherlands): no foreigners (except licensed Dutch merchants, etc.) were officially admitted into Japan and no Japanese could go abroad. Under the seclusion policy, the Shogunate and some chartered merchants enjoyed the monopoly of trading silk, japan (lacquer ware), etc. with the licensed Chinese, Korean and Dutch merchants. It was only through the medium of the Dutch at Nagasaki that the exclusive Japan learned about the Western World. |
Before the Tokugawa Shogunate's seclusion and prohibition Masamue Date's foreign policy was literally admirable: he invited Rev. Luis Sotelo (Spanish-born Franciscan, 1574-1624) from Edo and allowed him to build a Catholic church and propagandize Catholicism in his huge dominions. According to some local historical record, the missionaries propagandized about 30,000 only in the Date dominions (the southern part of Iwate and the northern part of Miyagi [now Fujisawa-cho and Tome City]). In c.1611 when Juan Goto worked in Kyoto as a missionary, he contracted a friendship with Katsusuke Tanaka who, at Ieyasu Tokugawa's command, accompanied Rodrigo de Vivero y Velasco (Mexco-born Spanish governor-general to the Philippines: ?-1636) to Mexico in 1610. Velasco, on his return trip to Mexico, was overtaken by a storm and cast ashore in Iwawada, Kazusa (now Chiba). Next year (1611) Tanaka came back to Japan boarding on the Spanish ship of Sebastian Viscaino (1551-1615). Masamune Date dreamed of the commercial intercourse with Mexico and Spain at that time. So he sent Tsunenaga Hasekura (1571-1622), a veteran of the invasions of Korea in 1592 and 1597, to Tanaka to hear the status quo of the world. Tanaka introduced Goto to Hasekura as a man conversant with foreign affairs. With Hasekura's recommendation, Goto won Masamune Date's favor and was given dominion over Fukuwara (now southern part of Mizusawa, Oshu City, Iwate) in 1612, one year before Hasekura, Sebastian Viscaino and Rev. Luis Sotelo left the port of Tsukinoura (now Ojika Peninsula, Miyagi) at Lord Date's command for Spain and Rome via Mexico boarding on "San Juan Bautista" (St. John the Baptist), the first Japanese ship crossing the Pacific Ocean, on October 28, 1613 [the Keicho Envoys to Europe 1613-1620]. It was, however, it was the year when Ieyasu Tokugawa announced the strict ban on Christian mission over Japan. Three months after departure, they arrived at the port of Acapulco, Mexico. The missions were permitted to take passage in a warship of the Spanish Armada for Spain on June 10, 1614. During their journey to Europe, the situations were dramatically changed. But they did not know that they were driven to the wall where Lord Date left them in the lurch when they came back to Sendai on August 26, 1620. The diplomatic mission had two purposes: 1. to meet King of Spain to gain his permission of directly trading with Mexico; 2. to meet Pope of Rome to ask to send missionaries to Sendai. Lord Date trusted them with two correspondences: one for King of Spain and the other for Pope of Rome which was translated into Latin). In Madrid, Hasekura met King of Spain Felipe III (Philip III: 1578-1621; reign 1598-1621) on January 30, 1615 and gave him Lord Date's correspondence and was baptized before King of Spain and Anne of Austria (1601-1666; daughter of Felipe III; later Queen of France and mother of Louis XIV). But they could not receive a good answer from King of Spain because he knew through other correspondents what happened to the missionaries and that Masamune Date was just a lord, not the king of Japan. So the mission went to Rome and met Pope of Rome Paulus V (Camillo Borghese, the 233rd pope; 1605-1621) on November 3, 1615. Hasekura was raised to the peerage and the eight Japanese including him were given citizenship of Rome. After Paulus V promised him to send missionaries to Sendai, the mission went back to Madrid, but they could not stay so long this time and go to Sevilla where Hasekura and Sotelo remained to negotiate with King Felipe III in vain. They left Europe for Acapulco on July 4, 1617, then boarding on "San Juan Bautista" they went to Manila, the Philippines where they had to stay for two years. With their broken hearts, the mission returned to Sendai on August 26, 1620 when the Sendai clan had already set forth the prohibition against Christianity following the Tokugawa Shogunate's policy. Hasekura soon debriefed their journey to Masamune Date who later submitted the report to the Shogunate. spent the sad evening of his life in obscurity and died in Sendai only two years after his return. Hasekura and the mission brought so many things from abroad but almost everything was safekept as Christian-related under the strict prohibition for about 250 years until Tomomi Iwakura discovered Hasekura's record in Venice in 1873. *Masamune's legitimate wife Mego-hime (€P, 1568-1653), and their first daughter Iroha-hime (άYͺP, 1594-1661) who married Ieyasu Tokugawa's 6th son Tadateru Matsudaira (Ό½P, 1592-1683), were Catholic (at least for a while). Although Masamune was not baptized, he reportedly walked, wearing white and carrying a gilded cross, in the city centre of Kyoto toward Jyurakudai (γΪyζ), Hideyoshi Toyotomi's Kyoto residence in late 1591 or (19th year of Tensho [V³19N]). Masamune was then under suspicion about agitating the Kasai-Osaki-ikki (Όεθκ), the revolt of the former retainers of the Kasai clan (Ό) and the Osaki clan (εθ) who were deprived of their fiefdoms in the present northern Miyagi and southern Iwate for the simple reason that they did not participate in Hideyoshi's attack against the Hojo clan (kπ) in Odawara (now Kanagawa Prefecture). Masamune's Christ-like labors (together with other practical ingenuities) were crowned with success to dispel suspicion. |
Returning to the story of Fukuwara, Juan Goto reemployed old retainers of the Iwabuchi family scattering over Fujisawa. He made a 600-meter main street lying east and west and allocated the both sides of the road to his retainers. His small castle was built in the western edge of the road. He converted his retainers to Christianity and made a Catholic church off the street. He and his retainers were very proficient in construction. They developed irrigation canals from River Isawa for growing rice, which, even now standing, made Goto's name immortal in this region. Commanding his men as the chief of Date's gun regiment, he went campaigning for the Tokugawa Shogunate at the two battles of Osaka in winter 1614 with 60 men, and in summer 1615 with 100 men. Lord Date treated Goto as a precious man of wisdom, and tried to protect Goto against the Tokugawa Shogunate's prohibition. In early 1623 Lord Date denounced the prohibition all over his dominion but he secretly passed the following three restrictions to Goto: 1. Do not invite a Christian priest to thy castle, even for a moment. 2. Do not convert anyone to Christianity. 3. If thou makest a pledge for the above two, only thou canst keep Christian faith; however, by God, thou shalt not tell it to anyone. But Goto refused Masamune Date's lenity, saying, "Most humbly and with proper formalities, I am filled with gratitude for my Lord's favor, but Jesus Christ's favor is far more immense than my Lord's. I will not be able to please your lordship this time." As Lord Date recognized Goto's will, the crackdown was approaching to Fukuwara. In the last Christmas in Fukuwara in 1623, Goto was titled "Brother" as a person who had done many years of meritorious services by Rev. Diego Carvalho (Jesuit; b. in Coimbra, Portugal, 1578 - Feb. 22, 1624). Soon Goto left Fukuwara with only several retainers. After the last Christmas in Fukuwara, Rev. Diego Carvalho was captured in Sengenbara, upper River Isawa (27 km west of Fukuwara), immediately sent to Sendai in spite of heavy snow and water- tortured to death by the Date retainers in the bank of River Hirose, Sendai on February 22 (January 4 in the Lunar Calendar), 1624. Some people might think it was a brutal persecution against a Western priest, but it was impossible for Date clan to blink at him under the strict prohibition all over Japan. Masamune Date and his retainers did not want to persecute or kill Goto and his retainers as well as the other Christians who greatly underpropped the development of Date clan with their Western-styled techniques of iron-making and construction: so Kojyuro Katakura, the sniper Masamune sent to Juan Goto, was said to spent a whole month purposely to go to Fukuwara (normally within a few days), which helped the Goto group's flight. After Masamune's death in 1636, more than 300 Christians were executed only in Date dominion in 1639-1640; the crackdown against Christians extended to the iron-industrial area, Okago and Osawagara (now Fujisawa-cho, County Higashi-Iwai, Iwate), also known as Christian communities, but some people miraculously lived as crypto-Christians over the Edo Period; some crypto-Christians prayed for Jesus and Maria in a cave (now known as "Okarasawa-doya"). It was said that Goto and his men wandered in the Nambu dominions where the anti-Christian suppression was not so severe. Toshinao Nambu, the chief lord of the Nambu clan, was a good friend of Ujisato Gamo of the Aizu-jo Castle, the greatest Christian lord of Japan who owned 120 million goku at that time: His younger sister was Toshinao's wife. Naturally Toshinao understood what is Christianity and was sympathetic to Christians. As some researchers have been trying to prove, it was Isenokami Akisuke Kashiyama who mainly sheltered Juan Goto in the Nambu dominion. He was the lord of Iwasaki-jo Castle, Waga close to the dominion border. He was the former lord of Obayashi-jo Castle on the Date clan's side. He was said to have become a Christian under the influence of Juan Goto when he was the lord of Obayashi-jo Castle, Isawa. Under Isenokami's protection, Juan Goto could find some lurking places to continue to preach the gospel not only in Iwasaki but also in Hanamaki, Morioka and even Tono. In 1636, however, the third Tokugawa Shogun Iemitsu strictly ordered Toshinao Nambu to prohibit Christianity in his dominions. Soon Isenokami was summoned to Hanamaki-jo Castle on the occasion of Toshinao's visit and treated some poisonous food and drink: Isenokami and the lord of Hanamaki-jo Castle Masanao Nambu, an illegitimate child of Toshinao and a good Christian friend of Isenokami, were poisoned. In fact, there lived many Christians in their dominions, which probably threatened Toshinao so much. What happened to Juan Goto after Isenokami's death is under investigation. In March 1951, however, a grave inscribed with the name of "Don Juan Gotoo 1565-1626" was discovered by an editorial staff of the History of Miyagi Prefecture in Nishikamizawa, Yonekawa, Towa-cho, Tome City, Miyagi, adjoining to Fujisawa-cho. However, the biographical dates inscribed on the grave is quite doubtful. |
For
further information of the 16th-century Christian Mission Work and Juan Goto,
1. go to the "Mizusawa, Oshu City" page.
2. go to the "Ichinoseki City " page.
3. go to the "Tome City
" page.
4. go to the "Azuchi-cho, Omihachiman City" page.
5. go to the "Sakai City" page.
6. go to the "Shimonoseki City" page.
7. go to the "Yamaguchi City" page.
8. go to the "Hioki City" page.
9. go to the "Kagoshima City" page.
10. go to the "Nagasaki City" page.
11. go to the "Oita City" page.
12. go to the "Hagi City" page.
13. go to the "Tsuwano Town" page.