May 17, 2014 from NewDawnMagazine Website
Freemasons figured prominently in the American Revolution and the birth of the American Republic. The French Revolution, with its notions of "Liberty, Equality, and Fraternity," originated in the radical Masonic lodges.
Secret societies have been connected to a range
of movements that sprang up around Europe in the eighteenth and nineteenth
centuries to defend people's rights against the abuses of royal and priestly
power, and to promote freedom by any and every means.
While much is written about Europe's hidden fraternities, little attention has been given to Asia's secret societies and the important part they played in organizing resistance to the violent onslaught of European colonialism.
As one China specialist points out, the Chinese secret societies,
Secret societies were deeply rooted in Chinese historical reality, and did not divide matters into the spiritual and the mundane.
The source of their power lay in their total opposition to the established order: political and religious, social and ideological. The secret societies relied for support primarily upon the oppressed classes of China.
They were the authentic expression of popular hostility to China's harsh imperial authorities and to foreign encroachment.
In the words of the Sorbonne professor Jean Chesneaux:
Like the societies in China, their mystico-political
teachings combined elements of Buddhism, Taoism, and traditional beliefs.
All refused to recognize the dominant system and resolutely opposed the
humiliations inflicted by the Western powers.
A sense of solidarity between members was strengthened by initiation rites drawn from Buddhism and Taoism, and directed by a spirit medium.
Resembling Freemasonry in some ways, their
elaborate ceremonies were held at night with the blessings of Buddhist
monks. As in China these groups had clearly defined political objectives, in
this case, the ending of French domination.
The movement's leader Ch'oe Che-u, after a period of ‘aimless wandering' reminiscent of a Taoist monk, derived the movement's ideology from Confucianism, Buddhism, and Taoism.
The Tonghak greatly contributed to the development of Korean national consciousness, one of their leaflets proclaiming:
At the dawn of the twentieth century secret societies were behind radical nationalist uprisings across Asia.
From the Young Turks and Young Persians of the
Muslim East to Japan's Black Ocean society and Chinese Triads, the secret
societies provided support networks for Asia's young revolutionaries.
One notable founding member of the Black Ocean
society was Toyama Mitsuru (1855-1944).
A complex, charismatic, and controversial figure known as the "Shadow Shogun" and "Spymaster Supreme," Mitsuru became one of the most powerful men in Japan.
A master of traditional Japanese brush work, he
lived frugally and remained a private citizen all his life.
Hiraya Amane's writings were diligently studied
by a new generation of Japanese secret society members in the 1920s.
Established in 1901 by a Black Ocean society
leader and Buddhist monk, Ryohei Uchida, the Black Dragons, with
their Pan-Asian vision, had links with the Triads and supported China's 1911
Republican Revolution. Their agents undertook intelligence gathering
operations in China, Korea, Manchuria, Mongolia, Siberia, and established
relations with anti-colonialist circles in the Muslim world.
Throughout the 1920s and 30s the Black Dragon society supported Indian independence activities, providing political and financial assistance to Indian nationalists who looked to Japan as the only Eastern power capable of liberating Asia from the stranglehold of European colonialism.
One such Indian nationalist was Subhas
Chandra Bose (founder of the anti-colonialist Indian National Army), a
correspondent in the 1930s for the influential German journal Geo-political
Review, published by Professor Karl Haushofer.
After the First World War, Haushofer became Professor of Geopolitics at the University of Munich where Rudolf Hess (later to become Hitler's deputy) was his student assistant.
Haushofer wrote that,
He urged Japan to come to terms with China and the Soviet Union, and consistently advocated an alliance between Germany and the USSR.
This would facilitate what Haushofer called the,
Some researchers are convinced Haushofer, a lifelong admirer of Oriental wisdom, was the emissary of "Unknown Superiors" in Asia, effectively acting as a crucial link between the Eastern secret societies and their European counterparts in the German lodges.
The French authors Pauwels and Bergier mention a rumor that Haushofer was initiated into a secret Buddhist society and to have sworn, if he failed in his ‘mission', to commit suicide,
Haushofer, who committed suicide in 1946, is still remembered today by Russia's Eurasian thinkers because he never reconciled himself to Hitler's invasion of the USSR.
Had the Nazi leadership taken note of Haushofer's views, the Second World War could have been avoided.
No doubt conscious of Haushofer's remarkable
role in hidden history, Anton LaVey, founder of the
Church of Satan
in the United States, dedicated his infamous Satanic Bible to the German
general.
One successful Black Dragon agent in America was Satohata Takahashi.
Sent to the US in 1929, Takahashi formed a mystico-political movement called the Society for the Development of Our Own, recruiting several thousand members to his Pan-Asian cause, most of them of African-American, Filipino, or East Asian descent.
The "Five Guiding Principles" of the group were,
Through Takahashi the Black Dragon society channeled financial aid to Black Muslim groups in the US.
The Moorish Science Temple, founded by Noble Drew Ali in 1913, taught the true origin of Black Americans was "Asiatic."
Another Muslim teacher, Master Wallace D. Fard, the mysterious leader of the Allah Temple of Islam declared,
Fard's chief disciple the Honorable Elijah Muhammad, prophet of the Nation of Islam, told his followers,
Another organization to enjoy Takahashi's
patronage was the Pacific Movement of the Eastern World, which campaigned
for the US to stay out of the war and promoted the Pan-Asian agenda among
non-white Americans.
Fearing a surprise American attack on Japanese forces, the Black Dragons urged Japan's military hierarchy to launch a pre-emptive strike on the US.
After the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor the
espionage and sabotage operations carried out by the Black Dragons became
legendary.
Many Black Dragon members were part of Japan's industry and government, holding key diplomatic and military posts. With the Japanese surrender in 1945 some Black Dragons in government were charged as war criminals.
But the Allied victory in Asia could not extinguish the dream of freedom. Japan had shattered the myth of the military invincibility of Western colonialism.
The seeds sown by the secret societies flourished in a new wave of national liberation movements that led the peoples of Asia to independence in the years immediately following the end of the war.
In our twenty-first century most people, mesmerized by the electronic media, are conditioned to dismiss the notion that secret societies may be tied-up with political intrigue.
Yet Western intelligence agencies frequently rely on clandestine conspiratorial networks in their subversion of foreign governments.
British intelligence services have a long history of involvement with underground ‘Muslim' brotherhood groups actively opposed to the Arab nationalist states of the Middle East.
The roots of the recent bloody conflict in the Russian republic of Chechnya can be traced to British intelligence service support of secretive ‘Muslim' sects in the Caucasus.
Many believe the American CIA is currently using a range of quasi-religious cults in clandestine operations aimed at destabilizing the People's Republic of China.
Has world history been shaped by conspiratorial
groups employing secret knowledge? Are the Anglo-American secret societies
engaged in a titanic struggle with Eastern adepts and their allies?
The counterculture novelist William S. Burroughs once suggested the form of the Chinese secret society served as the perfect mode of organization for marginal groups. Indeed, when the State becomes the oppressor of its own citizens, the only alternative is to disconnect and seek autonomy by any means necessary.
The hidden history of secret societies may still
have a lot to teach us.
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