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Title: The Invention of a New Religion

Author: Basil Hall Chamberlain

Release Date: December 22, 2008 [EBook #2510]
Last Updated: January 26, 2013

Language: English

Character set encoding: ASCII

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Produced by Peter Evans, and David Widger






 




THE INVENTION OF A NEW RELIGION  




By B. H. Chamberlain  





EMERITUS PROFESSOR OF JAPANESE AND PHILOLOGY
 AT THE IMPERIAL  UNIVERSITY OF TOKYO, JAPAN 1912  












Transcriber's Notes: A few diacritical marks have had to be removed, but  Chamberlain did not use macrons to represent lengthened vowels. What  were footnotes are numbered and moved to the end of the relevant  paragraphs.  











THE INVENTION OF A NEW RELIGION (1)  

    (Note 1)  The writer of this pamphlet could but
    skim over a wide subject.  For full information see
    Volume I. of Mr. J. Murdoch's recently-published
    "History of Japan," the only critical work on that
    subject existing in the English language.

Voltaire and the other eighteenth-century philosophers, who held religions  to be the invention of priests, have been scorned as superficial by later  investigators. But was there not something in their view, after all? Have  not we, of a later and more critical day, got into so inveterate a habit  of digging deep that we sometimes fail to see what lies before our very  noses? Modern Japan is there to furnish an example. The Japanese are, it  is true, commonly said to be an irreligious people. They say so  themselves. Writes one of them, the celebrated Fukuzawa, teacher and type  of the modern educated Japanese man:I lack a religious nature, and have  never believed in any religion.A score of like pronouncements might be  quoted from other leading men. The average, even educated, European  strikes the average educated Japanese as strangely superstitious,  unaccountably occupied with supra-mundane matters. The Japanese simply  cannot be brought to comprehend how a "mere parson" such as the Pope, or  even the Archbishop of Canterbury, occupies the place he does in politics  and society. Yet this same agnostic Japan is teaching us at this very hour  how religions are sometimes manufactured for a special endto  subserve practical worldly purposes.  

Mikado-worship and Japan-worshipfor that is the new Japanese  religionis, of course, no spontaneously generated phenomenon. Every  manufacture presupposes a material out of which it is made, every present  a past on which it rests. But the twentieth-century Japanese religion of  loyalty and patriotism is quite new, for in it pre-existing ideas have  been sifted, altered, freshly compounded, turned to new uses, and have  found a new centre of gravity. Not only is it new, it is not yet  completed; it is still in process of being consciously or semi-consciously  put together by the official class, in order to serve the interests of  that class, and, incidentally, the interests of the nation at large. The  Japanese bureaucracy is a body greatly to be admired. It includes most of  the foremost men of the nation. Like the priesthood in later Judaea, to  some extent like the Egyptian and Indian priesthoods, it not only governs,  but aspires to lead in intellectual matters. It has before it a complex  task. On the one hand, it must make good to the outer world the new claim  that Japan differs in no essential way from the nations of the West,  unless, indeed, it be by way of superiority. On the other hand, it has to  manage restive steeds at home, where ancestral ideas and habits clash with  new dangers arising from an alien material civilisation hastily absorbed.  

Down to the year 1888, the line of cleavage between governors and governed  was obscured by the joyful ardour with which all classes alike devoted  themselves to the acquisition of European, not to say American, ideas.  Everything foreign was then hailed as perfecteverything old and  national was contemned. Sentiment grew democratic, in so far (perhaps it  was not very far) as American democratic ideals were understood. Love of  country seemed likely to yield to a humble bowing down before foreign  models. Officialdom not unnaturally took fright at this abdication of  national individualism. Evidently something must be done to turn the tide.  Accordingly, patriotic sentiment was appealed to through the throne, whose  hoary antiquity had ever been a source of pride to Japanese literati, who  loved to dwell on the contrast between Japan's unique line of absolute  monarchs and the short-lived dynasties of China. Shinto, a primitive  nature cult, which had fallen into discredit, was taken out of its  cupboard and dusted. The common people, it is true, continued to place  their affections on Buddhism, the popular festivals were Buddhist,  Buddhist also the temples where they buried their dead. The governing  class determined to change all this. They insisted on the Shinto doctrine  that the Mikado descends in direct succession from the native Goddess of  the Sun, and that He himself is a living God on earth who justly claims  the absolute fealty of his subjects. Such things as laws and constitutions  are but free gifts on His part, not in any sense popular rights. Of  course, the ministers and officials, high and low, who carry on His  government, are to be regarded not as public servants, but rather as  executants of supremeone might say supernaturalauthority.  Shinto, because connected with the Imperial Family, is to be alone  honoured. Therefore, the important right of burial, never before possessed  by it, was granted to its priests. Later on, the right of marriage was  granted likewisean entirely novel departure in a land where  marriage had never been more than a civil contract. Thus the Shinto  priesthood was encouraged to penetrate into the intimacy of family life,  while in another direction it encroached on the field of ethics by  borrowing bits here and there from Confucian and even from Christian  sources. Under a regime of ostensible religious toleration, the attendance  of officials at certain Shinto services was required, and the practice was  established in all schools of bowing down several times yearly before the  Emperor's picture. Meanwhile Japanese polities had prospered; her warriors  had gained great victories. Enormous was the prestige thus accruing to  Imperialism and to the rejuvenated Shinto cult. All military successes  were ascribed to the miraculous influence of the Emperor's virtue, and to  the virtues of His Imperial and divine ancestorsthat is, of former  Emperors and of Shinto deities. Imperial envoys were regularly sent after  each great victory to carry the good tidings to the Sun Goddess at her  great shrine at Ise. Not there alone, but at the other principal Shinto  shrines throughout the land, the cannon captured from Chinese or Russian  foes were officially installed, with a view to identifying Imperialism,  Shinto, and national glory in the popular mind. The new legend is enforced  wherever feasiblefor instance, by means of a new set of festivals  celebrating Imperial official events.  

But the schools are the great strongholds of the new propaganda. History  is so taught to the young as to focus everything upon Imperialism, and to  diminish as far as possible the contrast between ancient and modern  conditions. The same is true of the instruction given to army and navy  recruits. Thus, though Shinto is put in the forefront, little stress is  laid on its mythology, which would be apt to shock even the Japanese mind  at the present day. To this extent, where a purpose useful to the ruling  class is to be served, criticism is practised, though not avowedly. Far  different is the case with so-called "historical facts," such as the  alleged foundation of the Monarchy in 660 B.C. and similar statements  paralleled only for absurdity by what passed for history in mediaeval  Europe, when King Lear, Brute, King of Britain, etc., etc., were accepted  as authentic personages. For the truth, known to all critical  investigators, is that, instead of going back to a remote antiquity, the  origins of Japanese history are recent as compared with that of European  countries. The first glimmer of genuine Japanese history dates from the  fifth century AFTER Christ, and even the accounts of what happened in the  sixth century must be received with caution. Japanese scholars know this  as well as we do; it is one of the certain results of investigation. But  the Japanese bureaucracy does not desire to have the light let in on this  inconvenient circumstance. While granting a dispensation re the national  mythology, properly so called, it exacts belief in every iota of the  national historic legends. Woe to the native professor who strays from the  path of orthodoxy. His wife and children (and in Japan every man, however  young, has a wife and children) will starve. From the late Prince Ito's  grossly misleading "Commentary on the Japanese Constitution" down to  school compendiums, the absurd dates are everywhere insisted upon. This  despite the fact that the mythology and the so-called early history are  recorded in the same works, and are characterised by like miraculous  impossibilities; that the chronology is palpably fraudulent; that the  speeches put into the mouths of ancient Mikados are centos culled from the  Chinese classics; that their names are in some cases derived from Chinese  sources; and that the earliest Japanese historical narratives, the  earliest known social usages, and even the centralised Imperial form of  Government itself, are all stained through and through with a Chinese dye,  so much so that it is no longer possible to determine what percentage of  old native thought may still linger on in fragments here and there. In the  face of all this, moral ideals, which were of common knowledge derived  from the teaching of the Chinese sages, are now arbitrarily referred to  the "Imperial Ancestors." Such, in particular, are loyalty and filial  pietythe two virtues on which, in the Far-Eastern world, all the  others rest. It is, furthermore, officially taught that, from the earliest  ages, perfect concord has always subsisted in Japan between beneficent  sovereigns on the one hand, and a gratefully loyal people on the other.  Never, it is alleged, has Japan been soiled by the disobedient and  rebellious acts common in other countries; while at the same time the  Japanese nation, sharing to some extent in the supernatural virtues of its  rulers, has been distinguished by a high-minded chivalry called Bushido,  unknown in inferior lands.  

Such is the fabric of ideas which the official class is busy building up  by every means in its power, including the punishment of those who presume  to stickle for historic truth.  


The sober fact is that no nation probably has ever treated its sovereigns  more cavalierly than the Japanese have done, from the beginning of  authentic history down to within the memory of living men. Emperors have  been deposed, emperors have been assassinated; for centuries every  succession to the throne was the signal for intrigues and sanguinary  broils. Emperors have been exiled; some have been murdered in exile. From  the remote island to which he had been relegated one managed to escape,  hidden under a load of dried fish. In the fourteenth century, things came  to such a pass that two rival Imperial lines defied each other for the  space of fifty-eight yearsthe so-called Northern and Southern  Courts; and it was the Northern Court, branded by later historians as  usurping and illegitimate, that ultimately won the day, and handed on the  Imperial regalia to its successors. After that, as indeed before that, for  long centuries the government was in the hands of Mayors of the Palace,  who substituted one infant Sovereign for another, generally forcing each  to abdicate as soon as he approached man's estate. At one period, these  Mayors of the Palace left the Descendant of the Sun in such distress that  His Imperial Majesty and the Imperial Princes were obliged to gain a  livelihood by selling their autographs! Nor did any great party in the  State protest against this condition of affairs. Even in the present reignthe  most glorious in Japanese historythere have been two rebellions,  during one of which a rival Emperor was set up in one part of the country,  and a republic proclaimed in another.  

As for Bushido, so modern a thing is it that neither Kaempfer, Siebold,  Satow, nor Reinall men knowing their Japan by heartever once  allude to it in their voluminous writings. The cause of their silence is  not far to seek: Bushido was unknown until a decade or two ago! THE VERY  WORD APPEARS IN NO DICTIONARY, NATIVE OR FOREIGN, BEFORE THE YEAR 1900.  Chivalrous individuals of course existed in Japan, as in all countries at  every period; but Bushido, as an institution or a code of rules, has never  existed. The accounts given of it have been fabricated out of whole cloth,  chiefly for foreign consumption. An analysis of medieval Japanese history  shows that the great feudal houses, so far from displaying an excessive  idealism in the matter of fealty to one emperor, one lord, or one party,  had evolved the eminently practical plan of letting their different  members take different sides, so that the family as a whole might come out  as winner in any event, and thus avoid the confiscation of its lands.  Cases, no doubt, occurred of devotion to losing causesfor example,  to Mikados in disgrace; but they were less common than in the more  romantic West.  

Thus, within the space of a short lifetime, the new Japanese religion of  loyalty and patriotism has emerged into the light of day. The feats  accomplished during the late war with Russia show that the simple ideal  which it offers is capable of inspiring great deeds. From a certain point  of view the nation may be congratulated on its new possession.  


The new Japanese religion consists, in its present early stage, of worship  of the sacrosanct Imperial Person and of His Divine Ancestors, of implicit  obedience to Him as head of the army (a position, by the way, opposed to  all former Japanese ideas, according to which the Court was essentially  civilian); furthermore, of a corresponding belief that Japan is as far  superior to the common ruck of nations as the Mikado is divinely superior  to the common ruck of kings and emperors. Do not the early history-books  record the fact that Japan was created first, while all other countries  resulted merely from the drops that fell from the creator's spear when he  had finished his main work? And do not the later annals prove that true  valour belongs to the Japanese knight alone, whereas foreign countriesChina  and Europe alikeare sunk in a degrading commercialism? For the  inhabitants of "the Land of the Gods" to take any notice of such creatures  by adopting a few of their trifling mechanical inventions is an act of  gracious condescension.  

To quote but one official utterance out of a hundred, Baron Oura, minister  of agriculture and commerce, writes thus in February of last year:  
   That the majesty of our Imperial House towers high
   above everything to be found in the world, and that
   it is as durable as heaven and earth, is too well
   known to need dwelling on here......  If it is
   considered that our country needs a religious faith,
   then, I say, let it be converted to a belief in the
   religion of patriotism and loyalty, the religion of
   Imperialism—in other words, to Emperor-worship.

The Rev. Dr. Ebina,(2) one of the leading lights of the Protestant  pastorate in Japan, plunges more deeply still into this doctrine,  according to which, as already noted, the whole Japanese nation is, in a  manner, apotheosised. Says he:  
   Though the encouragement of ancestor-worship cannot
   be regarded as part of the essential teaching of
   Christianity (!), it (3) is not opposed to the
   notion that, when the Japanese Empire was founded,
   its early rulers were in communication with the
   Great Spirit that rules the universe.  Christians,
   according to this theory, without doing violence
   to their creed, may acknowledge that the Japanese
   nation has a divine origin.  It is only when we
   realise that the Imperial Ancestors were in close
   communion with God (or the Gods), that we understand
   how sacred is the country in which we live.  (Dr.
   Ebina ends by recommending the Imperial Rescript on
   Education as a text for Christian sermons.)

     (Note 2)  We quote from the translation given
     by Mr. Walter Dening in one of the invaluable
     "Summaries of Current Japanese Literature,"
     contributed by him from time to time to the
     columns of the "Japan Mail," Yokohama.

     (Note 3)  "It" means Christianity.

It needs no comment of ours to point out how thoroughly the nation must be  saturated by the doctrines under discussion for such amazing utterances to  be possible. If so-called Christians can think thus, the non-Christian  majority must indeed be devout Emperor-worshippers and Japan-worshippers.  Such the go-ahead portion of the nation undoubtedly isthe students,  the army, the navy, the emigrants to Japan's new foreign possessions, all  the more ardent spirits. The peasantry, as before noted, occupy themselves  little with new thoughts, clinging rather to the Buddhist beliefs of their  forefathers. But nothing could be further removed from even their minds  than the idea of offering any organised resistance to the propaganda going  on around them.  

As a matter of fact, the spread of the new ideas has been easy, because a  large class derives power from their diffusion, while to oppose them is  the business of no one in particular. Moreover, the disinterested love of  truth for its own sake is rare; the patience to unearth it is rarer still,  especially in the East. Patriotism, too, is a mighty engine working in the  interests of credulity. How should men not believe in a system that  produces such excellent practical results, a system which has united all  the scattered elements of national feeling into one focus, and has thus  created a powerful instrument for the attainment of national aims?  Meanwhile a generation is growing up which does not so much as suspect  that its cherished beliefs are inventions of yesterday.  

The new religion, in its present stage, still lacks one important itema  sacred book. Certain indications show that this lacuna will be filled by  the elevation of the more important Imperial Rescripts to that rank,  accompanied doubtless by an authoritative commentary, as their style is  too abstruse to be understanded of the people. To these Imperial Rescripts  some of the poems composed by his present Majesty may be added. In fact, a  volume on the whole duty of Japanese man, with selected Imperial poems as  texts, has already appeared. (4)  
     (Note 4)  For over a thousand years the composition
     of Japanese and Chinese verse has formed part of a
     liberal education, like the composition of Latin
     verse among ourselves.  The Court has always
     devoted much time to the practice of this art.
     But the poems of former Emperors were little
     known, because the monarchs themselves remained
     shut up in their palace, and exercised no
     influence beyond its walls.  With his present
     Majesty the case is entirely different.  Moreover,
     some of his compositions breathe a patriotism
     formerly undreamt of.



One might have imagined that Japan's new religionists would have  experienced some difficulty in persuading foreign nations of the truth of  their dogmas. Things have fallen out otherwise. Europe and America evince  a singular taste for the marvellous, and find a zest in self-depreciation.  Our eighteenth-century ancestors imagined all perfections to be realised  in China, thanks to the glowing descriptions then given of that country by  the Jesuits. Twentieth-century Europe finds its moral and political  Eldorado in distant Japan, a land of fabulous antiquity and incredible  virtues. There is no lack of pleasant-mannered persons ready to guide  trustful admirers in the right path. Official and semi-official Japanese,  whether ambassadors and ministers-resident or peripatetic counts and  barons, make it their business to spread a legend so pleasing to the  national vanity, so useful as a diplomatic engine. Lectures are delivered,  books are written in English, important periodicals are bought up, minute  care is lavished on the concealment, the patching-up, and glossing-over of  the deep gulf that nevertheless is fixed between East and West. The  foreigner cannot refuse the bolus thus artfully forced down his throat. He  is not suspicious by nature. How should he imagine that people who make  such positive statements about their own country are merely exploiting his  credulity? HE has reached a stage of culture where such mythopoeia has  become impossible. On the other hand, to control information by consulting  original sources lies beyond his capacity.  

For consider this peculiar circumstance: the position of European  investigators vis-a-vis Japan differs entirely from that of Japanese  vis-a-vis Europe. The Japanese possess every facility for studying and  understanding Europe. Europeans are warded off by well-nigh insuperable  obstacles from understanding Japan. Europe stands on a hill-top, in the  sunlight, glittering afar. Her people court inspection. "Come and see how  we live"such was a typical invitation which the present writer  recently received. A thousand English homes are open to any Japanese  student or traveller who visits our shores. An alphabet of but  six-and-twenty simple letters throws equally wide open to him a literature  clearly revealing our thoughts, so that he who runs may read. Japan lies  in the shadow, away on the rim of the world. Her houses are far more  effectually closed to the stranger by their paper shutters than are ours  by walls of brick or stone. What we call "society" does not exist there.  Her people, though smiling and courteous, surround themselves by an  atmosphere of reserve, centuries of despotic government having rendered  them suspicious and reticent. True, when a foreigner of importance visits  Japansome British M.P., perhaps, whose name figures often in the  newspapers, or an American editor, or the president of a great American  collegethis personage is charmingly received. But he is never left  free to form his own opinion of things, even were he capable of so doing.  Circumstances spin an invisible web around him, his hosts being keenly  intent on making him a speaking-trumpet for the proclamation of their own  views.  

Again, Japan's non-Aryan speech, marvellously intricate, almost defies  acquisition. Suppose this difficult vernacular mastered; the would-be  student discovers that literary works, even newspapers and ordinary  correspondence, are not composed in it, but in another dialect, partly  antiquated, partly artificial, differing as widely from the colloquial  speech as Latin does from Italian. Make a second hazardous supposition.  Assume that the grammar and vocabulary of this second indispensable  Japanese language have been learnt, in addition to the first. You are  still but at the threshold of your task, Japanese thought having  barricaded itself behind the fortress walls of an extraordinarily  complicated system of writing, compared with which Egyptian hieroglyphics  are child's play. Yet next to nothing can be found out by a foreigner  unless he have this, too, at his fingers' ends. As a matter of fact,  scarcely anyone acquires itonly a missionary here and there, or a  consular official with a life appointment.  

The result of all this is that, whereas the Japanese know everything that  it imports them to know about us, Europeans cannot know much about them,  such information as they receive being always belated, necessarily meagre,  and mostly adulterated to serve Japanese interests. International  relations placedand, we repeat it, inevitably placedon this  footing resemble a boxing match in which one of the contestants should  have his hands tied. But the metaphor fails in an essential point, as  metaphors are apt to dothe hand-tied man does not realise the  disadvantage under which he labours. He thinks himself as free as his  opponent.  

Thus does it come about that the neo-Japanese myths concerning dates, and  Emperors, and heroes, and astonishing national virtues already begin to  find their way into popular English text-books, current literature, and  even grave books of reference. The Japanese governing class has willed it  so, and in such matters the Japanese governing class can enforce its will  abroad as well as at home. The statement may sound paradoxical. Study the  question carefully, and you will find that it is simply true.  


What is happening in Japan to-day is evidently exceptional. Normal  religious and political change does not proceed in that manner; it  proceeds by imperceptible degrees. But exceptions to general rules occur  from time to time in every field of activity. Are they really exceptions,  using that term in its current senseto denote something arbitrary,  and therefore unaccountable? Surely these so-called exceptions are but  examples of rules of rarer application.  

The classic instance of the invention of a new national religion is  furnished by the Jews of the post-exilic period. The piecing together,  then, of a brand-new system under an ancient name is now so well  understood, and has produced consequences of such world-wide importance,  that the briefest reference to it may suffice. Works which every critic  can now see to be relatively modern were ascribed to Moses, David, or  Daniel; intricate laws and ordinances that had never been practisedcould  never be practisedwere represented as ancient institutions; a whole  new way of thinking and acting was set in motion on the assumption that it  was old. Yet, so far as is known, no one in or out of Palestine ever saw  through the illusion for over two thousand years. It was reserved for  nineteenth-century scholars to draw aside the veil hiding the real facts  of the case.  

Modern times supply another instance, less important than the first, but  remarkable enough. Rousseau came in the middle of the eighteenth century,  and preached a doctrine that took the world by storm, and soon  precipitated that world in ruins. How did he discover his gospel? He tells  us quite naively:  
   All the rest of the day, buried in the forest, I
   sought, I found there the image of primitive ages,
   whose history I boldly traced.  I made havoc of men's
   petty lies; I dared to unveil and strip naked man's
   true nature, to follow up the course of time and of
   the circumstances that have disfigured it, and,
   comparing man as men have made him with man as
   nature made him, to demonstrate that the so-called
   improvements (of civilisation) have been the source
   of all his woes, etc. (5)

     (Note 5)  "Confessions," Book VIII., year 1753.

In other words, he spun a pseudo-history from his own brain. What is  stranger, he fanatically believed in this his pure invention, and, most  extraordinary of all, persuaded other people to believe in it as  fanatically. It was taken up as a religion, it inspired heroes, and  enabled a barefoot rabble to beat the finest regular armies in the world.  Even now, at a distance of a century and a half, its embers still glow.  

Of course, it is not pretended that these various systems of thought were  ARBITRARY inventions. No more were they so than the cloud palaces that we  sometimes see swiftly form in the sky and as swiftly dissolve. The germ of  Rousseau's ideas can be traced back to Fenelon and other  seventeenth-century thinkers, weary of the pomp and periwigs around them.  Rousseau himself did but fulfil the aspiration of a whole society for  something simpler, juster, more true to nature, more logical. He gave  exactly what was needed at that moment of historywhat appeared  self-evident; wherefore no one so much as thought of asking for detailed  proofs. His deism, his statements concerning the "state of nature" and the  "social contract," etc., were at once recognised by the people of his day  as eternal verities. What need for discussion or investigation?  

The case of Judaea is obscure; but it would seem that something analogous  must have happened there, when the continuity of national life had been  snapped by the exile. A revolutionised and most unhappy present involved a  changed attitude towards the past. Oral tradition and the scraps of  written records that had survived the shipwreck of the kingdom fell, as it  were, naturally into another order. The kaleidoscope having been turned,  the pattern changed of itself. A few gifted individuals voiced the  enthusiasm of a whole community, when they adopted literary methods which  would now, in our comparatively stable days, be branded as fraudulent.  They simply could not help themselves. The pressing need of constructing a  national polity for the present on the only basis then possibleYahwe  worshipFORCED them into falsifying the past. The question was one  of life and death for the Jewish nationality.  


Europeans there are in JapanEuropeanised Japanese likewisewho  feel outraged by the action of the Japanese bureaucracy in the matter of  the new cult, with all the illiberal and obscurantist measures which it  entails. That is natural. We modern Westerners love individual liberty,  and the educated among us love to let the sunlight of criticism into every  nook and cranny of every subject. Freedom and scientific accuracy are our  gods. But Japanese officialdom acts quite naturally, after its kind, in  not allowing the light to be let in, because the roots of the faith it has  planted need darkness in which to grow and spread. No religion can live  which is subjected to critical scrutiny.  

Thus also are explained the rigours of the Japanese bureaucracy against  the native liberals, who, in its eyes, appear, not simply as political  opponents, but as traitors to the chosen peoplesacrilegious  heretics defying the authority of the One and Only True Church.  

"But," you will say,this indignation must be mere pretence. Not even  officials can be so stupid as to believe in things which they have  themselves invented.We venture to think that you are wrong here. People  can always believe that which it is greatly to their interest to believe.  Thousands of excellent persons in our own society cling to the doctrine of  a future life on no stronger evidence. It is enormously important to the  Japanese ruling class that the mental attitude sketched above should  become universal among their countrymen. Accordingly, they achieve the  apparently impossible. "We believe in it," said one of them to us recently"we  believe in it, although we know that it is not true." Tertullian said  nearly the same thing, and no one has ever doubted HIS sincerity.  











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