After Japan opened contact with the rest of the world following the Meiji Restoration in 1868, there were individuals who realized that merely borrowing from abroad forms of administrative modernization and technology was not enough. But they were often lonely thinkers.
Intellectual insularity and ignorance, even of Asian neighbors, helped prompt the Japanese military to seize political power at home and take aggressive action abroad. Even the traumatic military defeat which ended World War II and brought in the Allied Army of Occupation failed to shatter Japanese tendencies toward national elitism and isolation. An ethnically and linguistically homogenous people, they had never learned historically to absorb foreigners and their ideas.
SHlGEHARU MATSUMOTO is one of the small minority of Japanese who appreciated the necessity for Japan genuinely to accommodate her national aims to the realities of a larger world. MATSUMOTO was born in 1899 in Osaka, into a family of business executives. After graduating in law from Tokyo University, he went on to study at the universities of Wisconsin and Yale in the United States, and in Geneva and Vienna, before returning in 1927 to teach.
Following the occupation of Manchuria by the Japanese military in 1931-1932 MATSUMOTO decided to become active in public affairs and pursue a career as an international journalist. For six years he was the Domei News Agency Correspondent in Shanghai, meanwhile keeping his prime minister, Prince Konoye, informed on China at his request. Throughout the Pacific War he was Editor-in-Chief and then concurrently Managing Director of Domei. When Japan surrendered he joined with associates to publish a daily tabloid, Minpo (Peoples Daily), until he was purged by the Occupation late in 1946. Together with his mentor, Dr. Yasaka Takagi, and others MATSUMOTO then founded the Japanese Association for American Studies to help younger Japanese scholars and to enlighten the public through publication of a five-volume documentary history of the United States.
In 1952 as the allied occupation ended, MATSUMOTO, with the encouragement of John D. Rockefeller 3rd, took the lead in organizing, and became the first managing director of Kokusai Bunka Kaikan, The International House of Japan. Enlisting support in Japan to match contributions from abroad, he devoted himself to making this truly a center where all nationalities could meet and share experiences. The critical and constructive role of The International House of Japan and MATSUMOTO would have been recognized earlier by the Ramon Magsaysay Award Foundation had not both institutions been beneficiaries of Rockefeller philanthropy. MATSUMOTO has been nominated for this Award seven times by distinguished countrymen and after 23 years his important contributions must be acknowledged.
By birth and association a member of the Japanese elite, MATSUMOTO thinks carefully, seeks out individuals and ideas that count, and helps open doors for their acceptance. Although he moved up to become Chairman of the Board of Directors in 1965, he has actively continued to guide this unique center of informal diplomacy, with its cultural and intellectual emphasis and excellent library. Much of the world view of modern and democratic Japan is a product of the friendly discussions held in this tasteful house set in a classical garden in the heart of bustling Tokyo. The insights that have been gained here reflect MATSUMOTO's sustained, patient furtherance of informed reason, so necessary in an era of accelerating interdependence.
In electing SHIGEHARU MATSUMOTO to receive the 1980 Ramon Magsaysay Award for Peace and International Understanding, the Board of Trustees recognizes his building constructive relations between Japanese and others through shared knowledge of their diverse histories, needs and national aspirations.