京都大学大学院アジア・アフリカ地域研究研究科 COSER Center for On-Site Education and Research 附属次世代型アジア・アフリカ教育研究センター
京都大学大学院アジア・アフリカ地域研究研究科
フィールドワーク・レポート

Burmese Political Monk U Ottama and the role of Pan-Asianism

Photo 1: Japanese document on ‘Hindu Mahasabhas’ and a chapter on U Ottama

Research background

 U Ottama (1879-1930) was a Buddhist monk who was a forerunner of a Burmese nationalist movement. He traveled throughout the world, and extensively in Asia where he both studied and taught. He denounced colonial rule and was strongly influenced by the Indian Independence Struggle and Japanese model (Motadel 2014:290)[1] .
 His first-hand experience to the nationalism was while he was studying in Calcutta, where he was introduced to ideas of non-violence and boycott movement. In 1935, he was elected to become head of Hindu Mahasabhas, which was a split of the influential Indian National Congress. Much of his political ambitions were taken after the ideology of the Indian Independence struggle where he urged the Burmese people for non-cooperation and boycott of the British goods. For this reason, he was imprisoned by the British for sedition act for the first time in history for political speech, made against the British Empire.
 The next model he sought after for his political ambitions was that of Japan.After the victory of Japan in the Russo-Japanese War of 1904-1905, U Ottama was intrigued by how “small” Asians had defeated “the bigger and stronger” Europeans when the European Empires were vast and dominant, occupying large areas of Asian continent and putting former Asian empires under their control. He repeatedly visited or stayed in Japan, and even brought Burmese students to study in Japan. His pro-Japan stance was evident in his writings about Japan where he praised industrialization, modernization and militarism taking place in Japan. His stance even led to controversial accusation against China as a war-monger in his book ‘China and Japan’, published in 1938.
 In this research, the role of ‘Pan-Asianism’ on U Ottawa’s political ambitions was to be studied. First-hand experiences of living in both India and Japan had pushed forward U Ottama to engage in anti-colonial activism and to spread nationalist ideology among the common Burmese people. However, how the ‘Pan-Asianism’ of both India and Japan had impacted on U Ottama’s political activism is under-studied, and the aim of this research is to further explore this research gap.


[1] Motadel, D. (2014) Islam and the European Empires. Oxford University Press.

Research purpose

 The research trip to the National Diet Library, Diplomatic Archives of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs(Japan), and Renkoji temple is primarily to do an archival research on political monk, U Ottama, and his political ambitions in relations to India and Japan, especially in an attempt to understand the role of ‘Pan-Asianism’. It is to explore how Indians and Burmeses perceived Japanese Empire at that time, and how Japan perceived others, Asia, while supporting both Indian and Burmese nationalist movements.

Photo 2: Statue of Subhas Chandra Bose at Renkoji and wishes of leaders of Independent India who paid visits

Results/Achievements

 Archival research was conducted in three locations, They are at the National Diet Library located in Tokyo,Chiyoda-City,  Nagatacho, 1 Chome-10-1, and at the Diplomatic Archives of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs (Japan) located in Tokyo, Minato-City, Azabudai, 5-3, 1-Chome, and Renkoji temple located in Tokyo, Suginami-City, Wada, 3 Chome-30-20. The research was conducted between September 11 to September 17. On the first day of the arrival from Kyoto to Tokyo, a visit to Renkoji temple was made to visit the burial site of Subhas Chandra Bose, who was the leader of the Indian National Army (INA) and collaborated with the Imperial Japan to set India free from the British Raj. His ashes were preserved in this temple ground and a statue was built in honor of his sacrifice for the motherland. It was visited by some influential leaders of independent India such as Jawaharlal Nehru in 1957, Rajendra Prasad in 1958, and Indira Gandhi in 1969. There, one can witness historic connections between Japan and India.
 Next, some important sources were found in both National Diet Library and in Diplomatic Archives of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs(Japan). As required by the Diplomatic Archives of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, the reservation and the request of the documents were made before the visit. Newspaper articles on Japan written by Indian nationalists and exchanges of both India-Japan, and Burma-Japan were studied. For instance, in the Bombay Chronicle of April 1935, the first Indian scholar who had graduated from a government university in Japan was recorded. In March 1939, the news of some 150 Burmese students to study in Japanese schools was recorded. In this way, one can understand the exchanges between Japan and British India, and between British Burma under the sphere of the Japanese ‘Asianism’. Some praises about Japan, and how India should emulate Japan were also part of the records in the newspaper archives.Moreover, an important Japanese document compiled the history of Hindu Mahasabhas in which U Ottama was recognized as ‘Bhikshu Uttama’ belonging to the association was recorded in the chapter 10. This will provide understandings on the perceptions of the Imperial Japan towards the nationalist association and the role of U Ottama in the movement, and even the intentions behind the volume.
 The last research site was the National Diet Library. Japanese sources written about both U Ottama and Japanese Asiansism before the Second World War were only available at the site, being closed to public access online. Here, many important documents written on U Ottama were collected. For example, there was a short essay on U Ottama in the book ,’Sen-I Fuukei’ 船醫風景(船医風景),which the ship doctor’s onboard essays were compiled and published in 1930. Many short articles were also in ‘New Asia’ Shin-Ajia (新亜細亜) collections and ‘Emergency in Asia’(興亜). Another important finding was a pictorial book written in Katakana from the first edition of the Great Japan Oratorical Society published in 1942, “ウ・オッタマ(ビルマ独立の父)初版 大日本雄弁会講談社 昭和18年”. All of these findings were only available at the research site, and are very important to the understandings of U Ottawa’s political activism, and how Japan played a role in it.

Plans for further research

 For further research, I want to conduct more archival research in Kansai-Kan of the National Diet Library; Ryukoku University and Higashi Hongangji temple where U Ottama stayed and taught and Aichi University to search for articles U Ottama contributed to Thuriya (the Sun) newspaper on microfilm.

  • レポート:Maynadi Kyaw(Enrollment year 2022)
  • 派遣先国:(Japan)Chiyoda-city, Minato-city, Suginami-city of Tokyo
  • 渡航期間:11th September, 2022 to 17th September, 2022
  • キーワード: U Ottama, Pan-Asianism, Japanese Asiansism, British Colonial Rule, Anti-colonial struggle, Indian Independence Movement

関連するフィールドワーク・レポート

インドネシア中部ジャワ農村地域における共有資源管理/住民による灌漑管理とその変容

対象とする問題の概要  インドネシア政府はこれまで多種多様な農村開発プログラムを実施してきた。特にスハルト政権下では、例えば稲作農業の技術的向上を目的としたビマスプログラムのように、トップダウンによる開発政策がおこなわれてきた。しかし、こう…

カメルーン農村におけるキャッサバ生産・加工の商業化に関する研究/住民によるキャッサバ改良品種の受容に注目して

対象とする問題の概要  カメルーン南部州のエボロワの近郊にある調査地では、政府、国際機関、日本の援助機関が森林保全、住民の現金収入の増加を目的にキャッサバ・プロジェクトを実施し、キャッサバの生産・加工の商業化を促進するため、多収で耐病性のあ…

レバノン・シリア系移民ネットワークにおける現代シリア難民 ――国内事例の動向――

研究全体の概要  本研究は、シリア難民のグローバルな経済的生存戦略の動態を明らかにする。19世紀末以降に歴史的シリア(現在のシリアとレバノンに相当する地域)から海外移住したレバノン・シリア系移民は、現在に至るまで自らの商才を生かして世界各地…

都市への移動と社会ネットワーク/モザンビーク島を事例に

対象とする問題の概要  アフリカ都市研究は、還流型の出稼ぎ民らが移動先の都市において出身農村のネットワークを拡大し濃密な集団的互助を行う様子を描いた。これらの研究は、人々が都市においてどのように結び付けられ、その中でどのように行為するのかに…