Inthesixteenth
century,Portuguese
missionariestriedfor
years
tocon
vertthe
peopleofjapan
to
Catholicism,
whileatthesametime
Portugal
hada
monopoly
ontradebetween
japan
and
Europe.Although
themis-
sionariesdidhavesome
success,
they
never
got
far
among
the
ruling
elite;
by
the
beginning
oftheseventeenth
century,
in
fact,
their
proselytizing
had
completelyantagonized
the
JapaneseemperorIeyasu.
WhentheDutch
began
to
arrivein
japan
in
great
numbers,
Ieyasu
wasmuch
relieved.
He
needed
Europeans
fortheirknow-howin
guns
and
navigation,
andhereat
lastwere
Europeans
whocared
nothing
for
spreadingreligion——the
Dutch
wanted
only
totrade.
Ieyasuswiftly
movedtoevictthe
Portuguese.
From
then
on,
he
would
only
dealwiththe
practicalminded
Dutch.
Japan
andHollandwere
vastly
different
cultures,
buteach
shared
a
timelessanduniversalconcern:selfiinterest.
Everypersonyou
dealwithis
likeanother
culuire,
analienlandwitha
past
thathas
nothing
todowith
yours.
Yet
you
can
bypass
thedifferencesbetween
you
andhim
byappeal-
ing
tohisself—interest.Donotbesubtle:Youhavevaluable
knowledge
to
share,
you
willfillhiscofferswith
gold,you
willmakehimlive
longer
and
happier.
This
isa
language
thatallofus
speak
andunderstand.
A
keystep
inthe
process
istounderstandtheother
person’spsychol~
ogy.
Ishevain?Isheconcernedabouthis
reputation
orhissocial
standing?
Doeshehave
enemies
you
could
help
him
vanquish?
Ishe
simply
mod»
vated
bymoney
and
power?
Whenthe
Mongols
invadedChinainthe
twelfth
century,they
threab
erredtoobliterateaculturethathadthrivedforovertwothousand
years.
Their
leader,
Genghis
Khan,
saw
nothing
inChina.buta
country
that
lacked
pasturing
forhis
horses,
andhedecidedto
destroy
the
place,
IeveI~
ing
all
its
cities,
for“it
wouldbebetter
to
exterminatetheChinese
andlet
the
grassgrow.”
Itwasnota
soldier,
a.
general,
ora
king
whosavedthe
Chinesefrom
devastation,
butamannamedYeluCh’u—Ts’ai.A
foreigner
himself,
Ch’u«Ts’aihadcometo
appreciate
the
superiority
ofChinesecul-
ture.He
managed
tomakehimselfatrustedadviserto
Genghis
Khan,
and
persuaded
himthathewould
reap
richesoutofthe
place
if,
insteadofde
straying
it,
he
simply
taxed
everyone
wholivedthere.Khansawthewis-
dominthisanddidasCh’u—Ts‘a.iadvised.
WhenKhantookthe
city
of
Kaifeng,
aftera
longsiege,
anddecidedto
massaxtre
itsinhabitants
(as
he
hadin
other
citiesthathadresisted
him),
Ch’u~Ts’ai
toldhim
thatthefinestcraftsmenand
engineers
in
Chinahad
fled
to
Kaifeng,
and
it
would
be
better
to
put
themtouse.
Kaifeng
was
spared.
Neverbeforehad
Genghis
Khanshownsuch
mercy,
butthenit
really
wasn’t
mercy
thatsaved
Kaifeng.
Ch‘u—Ts’aiknewKhanwell.Hewas
abarbaric
peasant
whocared
nothing
for
culuire,
orindeedfor
anything
otherthan
warfare
and
practical
results.Ch’u—Ts’ai
choseto
appeal
tothe
only
emotionthatwouldworkonsuchaman:
greed.
Self-interestistheleverthatwillmove
people.
Once
you
makethem
seehow
you
caninsome
way
meettheirneedsoradvancetheir
cause,
theirresistance
to
yourrequests
for
help
will
magically
fall
away.
Ateach
step
onthe
way
to
acquiringpower,you
musttrain
yourself
tothink
your
LAW 13 99