Japanese PM's Yasukuni Offering Sparks Regional Tensions, Echoes Past

Japanese Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi has sent a ritual offering to the controversial Yasukuni Shrine, reigniting longstanding diplomatic tensions with neighbors China and South Korea. The shrine, which honors Japan's war dead including convicted war criminals, is viewed by critics as a symbol of past militarism. Takaichi has signaled she may break the precedent set after 2013 and become the first sitting prime minister to visit the shrine in years. Such visits or offerings are consistently seen as a provocation, drawing fierce condemnation and hurting regional relations.

Key Points: Japan PM's Yasukuni Shrine Offering Stirs Diplomatic Friction

  • Ritual offering renews diplomatic friction
  • Shrine honors WWII war dead
  • No sitting PM has visited since 2013
  • Takaichi signals possible future visit
  • Actions seen as provocation by neighbors
2 min read

Japanese PM sends ritual offering to Yasukuni Shrine

PM Sanae Takaichi sends ritual offering to war-linked Yasukuni Shrine, risking renewed criticism from China and South Korea over historical grievances.

"create an environment conducive to paying respects at the shrine - Sanae Takaichi"

Tokyo, April 21

Japanese Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi on Tuesday sent a ritual offering to the Yasukuni Shrine on the occasion of its spring festival.

Takaichi sent a ritual "masakaki" tree offering to the war-linked shrine on the first day of its three-day ceremony.

Yasukuni Shrine, located in central Tokyo's Chiyoda Ward, has long been a source of diplomatic friction between Japan and its neighbours, reports Xinhua news agency.

For a long time, visits and ritual offerings made by Japanese officials to the controversial shrine have consistently sparked criticism and opposition both at home and abroad, hurting the feelings of the people of China, South Korea, and other countries.

Any visit or even ritual offerings by Japanese officials is seen as a provocation, drawing immediate, fierce condemnation. When Shinzo Abe, then prime minister, visited Yasukuni in 2013, the backlash was so widespread that even the United States made a rare public expression of "disappointment."

No sitting prime minister has visited the shrine since, yet Sanae Takaichi has signalled she may break the precedent.

Fresh from her victory in the lower house election, Takaichi floated the prospect of a visit, saying she had been working to "create an environment" conducive to paying respects at the shrine.

Amid the upheaval of the Meiji Restoration, the Yasukuni Shrine was initially built by order of Emperor Meiji to honour those who died in the civil war that paved the way for Japan's modernisation -- and, unfortunately, militarism.

In the late Meiji era, Japan launched the First Sino-Japanese War, forcing China to cede Taiwan to Japan.

Originally called Shokonsha, dedicated to the spirits of the war dead, the shrine was later renamed Yasukuni, meaning to "preserve peace for the entire nation."

Today, Yasukuni presents itself as a "shrine of peace," enshrining 2.47 million "divinities" who it says "sacrificed their lives in the course of fulfilling their public duty to protect their motherland." Notably, 2.13 million souls contributed to Japan's aggression in World War II.

In the shrine's own account, regardless of their rank, social status and historical role, all are honoured equally and "worshipped as venerable divinities."

- IANS

Share this article:

Reader Comments

S
Sarah B
While every nation has the right to honour its war dead, the historical context here is undeniable. Enshrining Class-A war criminals makes it a political symbol, not just a religious site. The PM should be more mindful of regional sensitivities.
P
Priyanka N
It's very disappointing. Japan is a key partner for India in many areas, but actions like this reopen old wounds for many in Asia. Can't they find a way to remember their soldiers without honouring those responsible for aggression? đŸ¤”
R
Rahul R
Frankly, this is a domestic issue for Japan. But as a neighbour in Asia, we have a stake in regional peace. Glorifying militarism is a dangerous path. Hope cooler heads prevail in Tokyo.
A
Aman W
My grandfather fought in the British Indian Army against Japan. He never spoke much about it, but I know it was traumatic. Seeing Japanese leaders pay respects at such a shrine feels like a betrayal of the peace we've built since. Very sad.
K
Kiran H
We have great relations with Japan today—bullet trains, investments, Quad partnership. Why does the leadership keep doing things that undermine this goodwill? It's counterproductive. Focus on the future, not on honouring a dark past.

We welcome thoughtful discussions from our readers. Please keep comments respectful and on-topic.

Leave a Comment

Minimum 50 characters 0/50