Emperor's Visit to Mongolia Reawakens History, Heals Old Wounds www.japan-forward.com
The Emperor's visit to Mongolia stirred historical memory, cultural pride, and deepened bonds between two nations shaped by empire, trauma, and resilience.
From July 6 to 13, Their Majesties the Emperor and Empress paid a state visit to Mongolia. It was a journey rich in historical symbolism.
The visit has sparked renewed interest in the title "Khaan (Khan)" among Mongolian communities not only in Mongolia itself, but also in China's Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region.
This resurgence has also reached Russia's Buryatia and Kalmykia republics and the global diaspora. Notably, the Mongolian honorific "Zevkholant Ezen Khaan," meaning "Sovereign Lord of Reiwa," has begun to circulate organically as a term of deep respect for His Majesty the Emperor.
This linguistic revival carries profound weight. For Mongolians, the word "Khaan" evokes not only the grandeur of their historical past. It also carries the weight of modern traumas — centuries of subjugation, cultural erasure, and a persistent yearning for dignity and unity.
Since its founding in 1206, the Mongol Empire, rooted in the legacy of Genghis Khan, maintained its authority through the guiding principle known as the "Chinggis Principle." In the vast expanse of Eurasia, the title of "Khaan" was far more than an honorific. It was a sacred designation reserved for those who inherited both the bloodline and the spirit of the great conqueror. For the Mongol and Turkic peoples, the name Khaan was inseparable from their sense of pride, sovereignty, and identity.
Suppression and Revival of the Khaan Legacy
In the 20th century, the rise and spread of communism, beginning with the Russian Revolution, sought to dismantle this tradition. From the early 1920s, purges began in northern Mongolia and Central Asia.
By 1949, they had spread to Southern Mongolia, where countless descendants of the Khaan lineage were physically eliminated under Soviet and Chinese Communist Party (CCP) rule.
Nowhere was this more stark than in the Mongolian People's Republic. There, Genghis Khan himself was recast as a "feudal aggressor" and stripped of his place as a revered national figure.
In 1962, the Mongolian People's Republic government made a tentative effort to commemorate the 800th anniversary of Genghis Khan's birth with a modest ceremony. However, one of the politicians involved in the planning died under mysterious circumstances, and the subject was swiftly buried.
For decades afterward, any public reverence for Genghis Khan remained taboo. The episode became emblematic of how communist regimes actively suppressed national history and severed ties to cultural identity.
Chinese Appropriation
At the same time, China began appropriating the legacy of Genghis Khan to serve its own political narrative. From the 1960s onward, the CCP promoted propaganda recasting Inner Mongolia's past as an extension of Chinese history. Genghis Khan was reframed as a "hero of the Chinese people." In the author's hometown of Ordos, a lavish state-sponsored celebration took place that same year, with officials lauding Genghis Khan as "a Chinese who led a military expedition to Europe."
For Mongolians, such developments amounted to nothing less than the theft of their national history. Even in recent years, this erasure has continued. In 2020, an exhibition on Genghis Khan and the Mongol Empire was planned in Nantes, France. However, it was postponed after pressure from the Chinese government forced organizers to remove the name "Genghis Khan" entirely.
Mongolia’s break from socialism in 1992 marked a turning point. Only then was Genghis Khan reinstated as the symbolic “founding father” of the Mongolian nation within a liberal democratic framework. His name now adorns banknotes, airports, and textbooks, reclaiming its rightful place in national consciousness.
Today, even younger generations are calling for a revival of the Khaan tradition. They don't see it as a return to hereditary rule. Instead, they consider it a powerful emblem of spiritual unity, cultural pride, and national identity.
One of the most moving moments of Their Majesties' visit was their prayer offering at the memorial dedicated to Japanese detainees. Following World War II, more than 10,000 Japanese civilians and soldiers were forcibly relocated to Mongolia by the Soviet Union. Many of them had been stationed in Manchuria or Southern Mongolia at the time.
There, under brutal conditions and subzero temperatures, they were subjected to hard labor. Landmarks still standing in Ulaanbaatar today. These include parts of the opera house and the presidential residence, which were built through their toil.
The suffering of these detainees echoes the hardships endured by the Mongolian people, caught in the vice grip of competing great powers. Before 1945, Southern Mongolia had developed a special relationship with Imperial Japan through structures such as Manchukuo and the Mongolian Autonomous Federation. Yet when Japan withdrew after the war, Mongolian hopes for national unification were quietly extinguished. They were sacrificed on the altar of geopolitical compromise, most notably through the Yalta Agreement.
Although Mongolia emerged from World War II as a nominal victor, it was forced to swallow a bitter reality. Half of its ethnic population remained trapped within the borders of the newly formed People's Republic of China. Japan, too, suffered its own postwar blow, with the Soviet Union seizing its Northern Territories. In this shared historical experience, being marginalized by the geopolitical maneuvers of major powers, Mongolia and Japan find a quiet, unspoken kinship.
Yet out of this tragic legacy, a bond of trust began to take root. Before the war, a number of Japanese intellectuals, military officers, and scholars working in Southern Mongolia engaged deeply with Mongolian language and culture, cultivating genuine respect and understanding.
In the decades that followed, as Mongolia struggled through economic hardship, Japan extended a helping hand time and again. These acts of goodwill were grounded not merely in diplomacy but in the enduring thread of shared history.
The true significance of Their Majesties' visit to Mongolia lies in the act of remembering, of jointly honoring the pain of the past, and reaffirming a bond built on sincerity, respect, and healing. This was not merely a gesture of goodwill, but a historic moment of shared reflection, a conscious step toward overcoming the weight of history together.
Just as the Mongolian people continue to place their hopes in the enduring spirit of the Khaan, Japan must also look inward. It must honor the strength found in its own traditions and historical memory, and advance steadfastly as a truly independent nation.
Author: Haiying Yang
Published Date:2025-08-06