Gen Z Conflict Fatigue: How Omote’s conflict witness practice interrupts reactive fear
Peace Conflict
You can feel public violence entering private life through one notification. The body knows it before language does — and the oni grows when what is seen is never honestly faced.
You saw the update in a group chat. Your jaw and breath locked. You put the phone down. Then you picked it up again because reality is still there.
Omote Sensei teaches from the Japanese tradition. He has seen in retreat spaces how students and young people arrive already carrying conflict alerts — and the tradition holds that the oni is not only personal but collective: when a community or nation fails to face its grief, shame, or responsibility honestly, the oni grows and expresses as aggression and violence. Peace work begins with purification.
He has watched that sequence — the notification arrives, the chest or jaw holds, the device goes down, and then the mind goes back. The tradition holds that peace work begins with the purification of collective inner affliction — not by pretending it does not exist, but by creating the conditions in which it can be honestly faced and released.
The latest wave of Russian attacks across Ukraine have reportedly killed and injured civilians and damaged critical infrastructure in Dnipro, Odesa, Poltava, Zaporizhzhia and other regions.
<p>The latest wave of Russian attacks across Ukraine have reportedly killed and injured civilians and damaged critical infrastructure in Dnipro, Odesa, Poltava, Zaporizhzhia and other regions.</p>
<p>Omote is framed here as offering a clear response to the pressure many young people feel around peace conflict. The article layout is generated from the active Pearl News template with a deterministic teacher pack.</p>
676 million women and girls. 50 kilometers from active conflict.
Youth peacebuilders are hosting workshops, organizing coalitions, and documenting cases to treat purification and service as part of the response to conflict.
The numbers measure harm and response. They do not measure what happens when a young person finally has a practice that faces the collective oni — not by denying it but by creating the ritual and communal conditions in which grief, shame, and responsibility can be honestly faced and released. That capacity is what the next protector or witness needs. Omote Sensei's tradition holds that conflict persists when each party believes its survival requires the diminishment of the other — and that this belief is the oni itself. Genuine security comes from purification and service.
Omote Sensei would not tell young people to calm down as if fear were the mistake. The oni is not only a personal affliction; it is a collective one. When a community or a nation fails to face its grief, its shame, or its responsibility honestly, the oni grows at the collective level and expresses itself as aggression, scapegoating, and ultimately violence. The tradition holds that peace work begins with the purification of collective inner affliction — not by pretending it does not exist, but by creating the ritual and communal conditions in which it can be honestly faced and released.
From there he turns to Yamato-gokoro — the sincere heart-mind that does not look away from what is painful. In the context of armed conflict, this means that young people who witness violence and injustice are called not to numb themselves or to perform outrage but to hold what they see with the full weight of moral feeling. The tradition distinguishes between reaction — which perpetuates cycles — and sincere witness, which creates the conditions for transformation.
Omote Sensei teaches a 4-minute Purification and Service Practice for when the alert has landed and the collective oni needs to be faced rather than denied. It is in the sidebar, short enough to use before the next check or after the next update.
Omote has seen this shift in practice rooms. It may help you as well.
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