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Leadership, ‘The Last Samurai’ and the Bushido code | Philstar.com
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Leadership, ‘The Last Samurai’ and the Bushido code

- Wilson Lee Flores -
What lessons on leadership, character and business success can we learn from Asian civilization, especially its ethics and philosophies? What old-fashioned tenets and wisdom should we relearn from the mystical Orient that the modern-day Ivy League MBA courses and countless Western management books like The One-Minute Manager cannot impart to us?

One of the most beautiful and inspiring new films from Hollywood is The Last Samurai starring Tom Cruise, directed by Edward Zwick from a screenplay by John Logan, Marshall Herskovitz and Edward Zwick.

In a Japanese society heavily influenced by Confucian values of loyalty and fidelity, the admirable system of chivalry upheld by the ancient samurai warriors was called Bushido – emphasizing loyalty, courage, fortitude and sacrifice.
Character, Loyalty, Honor, Discipline For True Leadership
The Last Samurai celebrates the Bushido code, which should be a stern reminder and wake up call to many of our political, economic and other leaders in Philippine society. It is tragic that the Philippine economy has lagged behind most of East Asia despite our wealth of human and natural resources simply because many of our leaders have no moral scruples, no character, absolutely no sense of loyalty, no guts, no spiritual fortitude, no personal discipline, no true love for country and no sense of self-sacrifice.

Japan’s ancient samurai culture also showed that in Asian culture, violence and compassion exist side by side, that poetry, beauty and art are as much a part of a warrior’s training as swordsmanship and physical strength.

Hopefully, Filipinos will be able to appreciate the priceless lessons from this epic movie, especially in this country described by Monark Equipment/Caterpillar/AutoMechanika Chairman Jose Antonio "Jan-B" Banson as suffering from a crisis of credibility:

"Nothing is believable anymore. We have become a republic of fake birth certificates, fake marriage certificates, COMELEC anomalies, Jose Pidal, Jose Velarde… People are still asking whether Rico Yan died of bangungot or drugs – because they do not trust police reports.

"People ask whether Mico Sotto fell off the ledge because he was really playing – because they do not trust police reports. It is sad that for a nation of so much human talents and resources, truth has disappeared from our national psyche. That’s why there is pessimism. For a better Philippine economy, we should uphold truth and honor."

At the recent special preview by Warner Bros. led by general manager Francis G. Soliven and SM Group led by cinema manager Steve Uy at The Podium, we were impressed with this fictional saga of how US military officer Captain Nathan Algren had reclaimed his lost soul, courage and honor after overcoming the lures of pragmatism, greed and self-interest. The American soldier’s encounter with Japanese samurai rebel chief Katsumoto (played by Ken Watanabe) – whose life exemplified Asia’s ideals of loyalty to country, tradition and honor – changes both of them.
Samurais And Values
Why has modern-day Japan lost much of its economic strength in recent years? Is it due to its people becoming too Westernized that they have forgotten a lot of the old-fashioned Confucian values and the Bushido spirit of their ancestors? Why are many overly Westernized spoiled brats and laid-back youngsters of our local Chinese community becoming soft, effete and uncompetitive in entrepreneurial leadership? Is it due to the gradual loss of the traditional Confucian values of our hardy and tough-minded immigrant ancestors?

In recent years, Harvard-trained economist Dr. Bernardo Villegas, SGV Group founder Washington SyCip, Philippine STAR business columnist Boo Chanco and others had publicly lamented the gradual loss of traditional Confucian values and culture by many younger members of the Chinese community in the Philippines, thus making the Philippine economy less efficient, less entrepreneurial and less globally competitive than our Asian neighbors Malaysia, Singapore, Taiwan, China and others.

How do we keep alive the fire in the belly, the spiritual and moral fortitude of Asia’s past, in order to nourish entrepreneurial drive, rugged character, courageous risk-taking, discipline, frugality and leadership for the 21st century?

In The Last Samurai, Captain Nathan Algren (Tom Cruise) cited the inspiring battle between 300 disciplined Greeks versus one million Roman soldiers for three days. In China’s Romance of the Three Kingdoms, there were also similar inspiring battles with disciplined, fearless, cunning and honorable knights vanquishing their numerically superior and better-armed adversaries.

Perhaps the seven Bushido codes of Japan’s ancient samurai warriors – concepts that are expressed in Japanese kanji words based on Chinese calligraphy and words – can inspire all of us to aspire for higher standards of moral values, discipline, honor and great leadership.
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Thanks very much for all your messages to wilson_lee_flores@hotmail.com or wilson_lee_flores@newyork.com or wilson_lee_flores@yahoo.com or P.O. Box 14277, Ortigas Center, Pasig City.

BOO CHANCO

CAPTAIN NATHAN ALGREN

CENTER

CHAIRMAN JOSE ANTONIO

DISCIPLINE FOR TRUE LEADERSHIP

DR. BERNARDO VILLEGAS

EAST ASIA

EDWARD ZWICK

LAST SAMURAI

TOM CRUISE

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