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Inejirō Asanuma

Inejiro Asanuma (浅沼 稲次郎, Asanuma Inejirō, 27 December 1898 – 12 October 1960) was a Japanese politician and leader of the Japan Socialist Party. During World War II, Asanuma was aligned with the Imperial Rule Assistance Association and advocated for war in Asia. Asanuma later became a forceful advocate of socialism in post-war Japan. He was noted for his support of the newly established People's Republic of China (PRC) as well as the criticism of United States–Japanese relations, making him a polarizing figure.

Inejirō Asanuma
浅沼 稲次郎
Asanuma in 1948
1st General Secretary of the Japan Socialist Party
In office
13 October 1955 – 23 March 1960
Preceded byPosition created
Succeeded byJōtarō Kawakami
3rd Chairman of the Japan Socialist Party
In office
23 March 1960 – 12 October 1960
Preceded bySuzuki Mosaburō
Succeeded byJōtarō Kawakami
Member of the Japanese House of Representatives from Tokyo 1st district
In office
11 April 1946 – 12 October 1960
In office
21 February 1936 – 30 April 1942
Personal details
Born(1898-12-27)27 December 1898
Miyake-jima, Tokyo, Empire of Japan
Died12 October 1960(1960-10-12) (aged 61)
Chiyoda, Tokyo, Japan
Manner of deathAssassination (stab wound)
Resting placeTama Cemetery,
Tokyo, Japan
Political partyJapan Socialist Party
Alma materWaseda University
OccupationPolitician

Asanuma was assassinated with a wakizashi, a traditional short sword,[1] by far-right ultranationalist Otoya Yamaguchi while speaking in a televised political debate in Tokyo. His violent death was seen in graphic detail on national television by millions of Japanese, causing widespread public shock and outrage, although far-right groups celebrated his death and considered Yamaguchi a martyr after his suicide while in police custody.

Early life and education

Asanuma was born on the island of Miyake-jima, a remote volcanic island that is administratively part of Tokyo, on 27 December 1898. His mother died during his birth, leaving him to be raised by his father, who later died of cancer, leaving Asanuma an orphan.[2] After completing high school, Asanuma entered Waseda University, graduating in 1923.[3] While still in college, Asanuma joined the newly formed Farmer-Labor Party and took part in various forms of leftist activism.[3][4] Among other activities, he founded the "Builders League," which studied the works of English socialists, worked for Russian famine relief, and protested against military-related research being conducted at Waseda.[5] In 1924, Asanuma left the Farmer-Labor Party after the party became divided into three different factions and became involved in tenant organizing and the Labor-Farmer movement.[6][7]

Political career

In 1926, Asanuma was one of the main founders of the Japan Labour-Farmer Party, as part of his efforts to link urban labor movements with rural peasant's movements.[8] In 1929, Asanuma began running for Tokyo City Council, representing Fukagawa ward,[5] but was not elected until 1933. In 1936, Asanuma was elected to the National Diet of Japan for the first time as a member of the newly-formed Social Masses Party, which merged into the Imperial Rule Assistance Association in 1940. Asanuma would serve in the Diet for a total of 20 years.[3]

As a member of the Diet, Asanuma pivoted from his earlier anti-imperialist views and became a vocal supporter of Japan's "holy war" in East Asia, claiming that it was necessary to "liberate" Asia from the forces of western imperialism.[6] He even led the drive to censure Saitō Takao and expel him from the Social Masses Party following the latter's anti-war speech on the floor of the Diet in 1940.[9] However, Asanuma himself decided not to run for reelection in 1942, following his failure to secure a "recommendation" from the Imperial Rule Assistance Association.[10] In the immediate aftermath of Japan's defeat in World War II, Asanuma was one of the founders of the Japan Socialist Party (JSP), and would eventually rise to become its secretary-general (1955-1960) and eventually, party chairman (1960).[3] As a politician, Asanuma cultivated an "everyman" image.[11] He lived modestly in public housing his entire life, and was particularly popular among ordinary laborers, small shopkeepers, and other members of the working class.[3][12]

In contrast to his pro-war stance during World War II, in the postwar period, Asanuma spearheaded the JSP's staunch opposition to revising Article 9 of Japan's postwar constitution and remilitarizing Japan.[12] However, historian Andrew Gordon argues that Asanuma was consistent in his antipathy to western imperialism and a desire for Asia to chart its own course in world affairs.[12]

In 1959, Asanuma was widely criticized for an incident in which he visited the People's Republic of China and called the United States of America "the shared enemy of China and Japan" during a speech in front of the Chinese Communist Party in Beijing.[3] When he returned from this trip he wore a Mao suit while disembarking from a plane in Japan, sparking criticism even from Socialist leaders.[2][page needed] At this time, Japan, its ally the United States, and many other countries recognized the Republic of China as the legitimate government of China.[13] Under Asanuma's leadership, the JSP played a leading role in the massive Anpo protests against revision of the U.S.-Japan Security Treaty in 1960, which also led to the resignation of prime minister Nobusuke Kishi, angering rightists and ultranationalists who supported the treaty.[12]

Assassination

 
Pulitzer Prize-winning photograph by Yasushi Nagao. The photo was taken directly after Yamaguchi stabbed Asanuma and is here seen attempting a second stab, although he was restrained before that could happen.

On 12 October 1960, Asanuma was assassinated by 17-year-old Otoya Yamaguchi, a right-wing ultranationalist, during a televised political debate ahead of upcoming elections for the House of Representatives.[1] While Asanuma spoke from the lectern at Tokyo's Hibiya Hall, Yamaguchi rushed onstage and ran his wakizashi (a traditional samurai short sword)[1] through Asanuma's ribs on the left side, fatally wounding him. Japanese public broadcaster NHK was videorecording the debate for later transmission and the tape of Asanuma's assassination was shown many times to millions of viewers.[14][15] The photograph of Asanuma's assassination won its photographer Yasushi Nagao both the Pulitzer Prize and World Press Photo of the Year.

Yamaguchi was captured at the scene of the crime, and a few weeks afterwards committed suicide by hanging himself while in police custody.[1]

Commemoration

Asanuma's assassination shocked Japan's political establishment. Shortly after his death, conservative prime minister erstwhile electoral rival Hayato Ikeda captured the mood of his fellow lawmakers when he gave a heartfelt eulogy for Asanuma on the floor of the Diet. Commemorating Asanuma as a "speech-giving everyman" (enzetsu hyakushō), Ikeda declared:

You made service to the people the core of your political principles. Literally running from east to west, you were constantly appealing directly to the people with unrivaled eloquence and unmatched passion.

’Numa truly is a speech-giving everyman
With his soiled clothes and tattered briefcase;
Today in this public hall,
Tomorrow at a roadside temple in Kyoto.

This is what Asanuma’s comrades used to sing about him back in the 1920s, when they were founding the Japan Labour-Farmer Party. Even after he became Chairman [of the JSP], this “speech-making everyman” spirit never showed the least sign of flagging. Even now, we all still have vivid recollections of you giving all those speeches in every corner of this nation.[16]

According to reportage at the time, Ikeda's short speech was met with thunderous applause and left many lawmakers in tears.[11]

Legacy

The Japan Socialist Party had been an unhappy marriage between far left socialists, centrist socialists, and right socialists, who had been forced together in order to oppose the consolidation of conservative parties into the Liberal Democratic Party in 1955. Asanuma was a charismatic figure who had been able to hold many of these mutually antagonistic factions together through the force of his personality.[17] Under Asanuma's leadership, the party had won an increasing amount of seats in the Diet in every election over the latter half of the 1950s and seemed to be gathering momentum.

Asanuma's untimely death deprived the party of his adroit leadership, and thrust Saburō Eda into the leadership role instead.[17] A centrist, Eda rapidly took the party in a more centrist direction, far faster than the left socialists were ready to accept.[17] This led to growing infighting within the party, and drastically damaged its ability to present a cohesive message to the public. Over the rest of the 1960s and going forward, the number of seats the Socialists held in the Diet continued to decline until the party's extinction in 1996.[18]

References

  1. ^ a b c d Kapur 2018, p. 254.
  2. ^ a b 鶴崎友亀『浅沼稲次郎小伝』(たいまつ新書、1979年)1998年に新時代社より復刻。ISBN 4167209047(復刻版)
  3. ^ a b c d e f Hoover 2018, p. 31.
  4. ^ 私の履歴書 (浅沼 稲次郎 日本経済新聞社 ) (in Japanese).
  5. ^ a b Hastings 1995, p. 183.
  6. ^ a b Huffman 2013, p. 15.
  7. ^ "资讯_凤凰网". news.ifeng.com. Retrieved 11 November 2021.
  8. ^ Victoria 2020, p. 16.
  9. ^ Huffman 2013, pp. 15–16.
  10. ^ Drea 1979, p. 79.
  11. ^ a b Kapur 2018, p. 86.
  12. ^ a b c d Huffman 2013, p. 16.
  13. ^ Michael Y.M. Kao, "Taiwan's and Beijing's Campaigns for Unification," in Harvey Feldman, Michael Y.M. Kao, eds., Taiwan in a Time of Transition (New York: Paragon House, 1988), 188.
  14. ^ Chun, Jayson Makoto (2006). A Nation of a Hundred Million Idiots?: A Social History of Japanese Television, 1953–1973. Routledge. pp. 184–185. ISBN 978-0-415-97660-2. Retrieved 22 March 2014.
  15. ^ Langdon, Frank (1973). Japan's Foreign Policy. Vancouver: University of British Columbia Press. p. 19. ISBN 0774800151. Retrieved 18 August 2012.
  16. ^ Kapur 2018, pp. 85–86.
  17. ^ a b c Kapur 2018, p. 127.
  18. ^ Kapur 2018, pp. 125–126.

Works cited

  • Drea, Edward J. (1979). "The 1942 Japanese General Election: Political Mobilization in Wartime Japan". International Studies East Asian Series Research Publication. Center for East Asian Studies, University of Kansas. 11.
  • Hastings, Sally Ann (1995). Neighborhood and Nation in Tokyo, 1905–1937. Pittsburg, PA: University of Pittsburg Press. ISBN 978-0822938842.
  • Hoover, William D. (2018). Historical Dictionary of Postwar Japan. Lanham, MD: Rowman and Littlefield. ISBN 978-1538111567.
  • Huffman, James L., ed. (2013). Modern Japan: An Encyclopedia of History, Culture, and Nationalism. Routledge. ISBN 978-0815325253.
  • Kapur, Nick (2018). Japan at the Crossroads: Conflict and Compromise after Anpo. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press. ISBN 978-0674984424.
  • Victoria, Brian Daizen (2020). Zen Terror in Prewar Japan: Portrait of an Assassin. Rowman & Littlefield. ISBN 978-1538131664.

External links

  • Inejirō Asanuma at Find a Grave
  • Video of Inejiro Asanuma assassination (Warning: may disturb some viewers) on YouTube
Party political offices
Preceded by Chair of the Japan Socialist Party
1960
Succeeded by
Preceded by
N/A
General Secretary of the Japan Socialist Party
1955–1960
Preceded by
New post
General Secretary of the Farmer-Labour Party
1925
Succeeded by
Party banned

inejirō, asanuma, inejiro, asanuma, 浅沼, 稲次郎, asanuma, inejirō, december, 1898, october, 1960, japanese, politician, leader, japan, socialist, party, during, world, asanuma, aligned, with, imperial, rule, assistance, association, advocated, asia, asanuma, later. Inejiro Asanuma 浅沼 稲次郎 Asanuma Inejirō 27 December 1898 12 October 1960 was a Japanese politician and leader of the Japan Socialist Party During World War II Asanuma was aligned with the Imperial Rule Assistance Association and advocated for war in Asia Asanuma later became a forceful advocate of socialism in post war Japan He was noted for his support of the newly established People s Republic of China PRC as well as the criticism of United States Japanese relations making him a polarizing figure Inejirō Asanuma浅沼 稲次郎Asanuma in 19481st General Secretary of the Japan Socialist PartyIn office 13 October 1955 23 March 1960Preceded byPosition createdSucceeded byJōtarō Kawakami3rd Chairman of the Japan Socialist PartyIn office 23 March 1960 12 October 1960Preceded bySuzuki MosaburōSucceeded byJōtarō KawakamiMember of the Japanese House of Representatives from Tokyo 1st districtIn office 11 April 1946 12 October 1960In office 21 February 1936 30 April 1942Personal detailsBorn 1898 12 27 27 December 1898Miyake jima Tokyo Empire of JapanDied12 October 1960 1960 10 12 aged 61 Chiyoda Tokyo JapanManner of deathAssassination stab wound Resting placeTama Cemetery Tokyo JapanPolitical partyJapan Socialist PartyAlma materWaseda UniversityOccupationPoliticianAsanuma was assassinated with a wakizashi a traditional short sword 1 by far right ultranationalist Otoya Yamaguchi while speaking in a televised political debate in Tokyo His violent death was seen in graphic detail on national television by millions of Japanese causing widespread public shock and outrage although far right groups celebrated his death and considered Yamaguchi a martyr after his suicide while in police custody Contents 1 Early life and education 2 Political career 3 Assassination 4 Commemoration 5 Legacy 6 References 6 1 Works cited 7 External linksEarly life and education EditAsanuma was born on the island of Miyake jima a remote volcanic island that is administratively part of Tokyo on 27 December 1898 His mother died during his birth leaving him to be raised by his father who later died of cancer leaving Asanuma an orphan 2 After completing high school Asanuma entered Waseda University graduating in 1923 3 While still in college Asanuma joined the newly formed Farmer Labor Party and took part in various forms of leftist activism 3 4 Among other activities he founded the Builders League which studied the works of English socialists worked for Russian famine relief and protested against military related research being conducted at Waseda 5 In 1924 Asanuma left the Farmer Labor Party after the party became divided into three different factions and became involved in tenant organizing and the Labor Farmer movement 6 7 Political career EditIn 1926 Asanuma was one of the main founders of the Japan Labour Farmer Party as part of his efforts to link urban labor movements with rural peasant s movements 8 In 1929 Asanuma began running for Tokyo City Council representing Fukagawa ward 5 but was not elected until 1933 In 1936 Asanuma was elected to the National Diet of Japan for the first time as a member of the newly formed Social Masses Party which merged into the Imperial Rule Assistance Association in 1940 Asanuma would serve in the Diet for a total of 20 years 3 As a member of the Diet Asanuma pivoted from his earlier anti imperialist views and became a vocal supporter of Japan s holy war in East Asia claiming that it was necessary to liberate Asia from the forces of western imperialism 6 He even led the drive to censure Saitō Takao and expel him from the Social Masses Party following the latter s anti war speech on the floor of the Diet in 1940 9 However Asanuma himself decided not to run for reelection in 1942 following his failure to secure a recommendation from the Imperial Rule Assistance Association 10 In the immediate aftermath of Japan s defeat in World War II Asanuma was one of the founders of the Japan Socialist Party JSP and would eventually rise to become its secretary general 1955 1960 and eventually party chairman 1960 3 As a politician Asanuma cultivated an everyman image 11 He lived modestly in public housing his entire life and was particularly popular among ordinary laborers small shopkeepers and other members of the working class 3 12 In contrast to his pro war stance during World War II in the postwar period Asanuma spearheaded the JSP s staunch opposition to revising Article 9 of Japan s postwar constitution and remilitarizing Japan 12 However historian Andrew Gordon argues that Asanuma was consistent in his antipathy to western imperialism and a desire for Asia to chart its own course in world affairs 12 In 1959 Asanuma was widely criticized for an incident in which he visited the People s Republic of China and called the United States of America the shared enemy of China and Japan during a speech in front of the Chinese Communist Party in Beijing 3 When he returned from this trip he wore a Mao suit while disembarking from a plane in Japan sparking criticism even from Socialist leaders 2 page needed At this time Japan its ally the United States and many other countries recognized the Republic of China as the legitimate government of China 13 Under Asanuma s leadership the JSP played a leading role in the massive Anpo protests against revision of the U S Japan Security Treaty in 1960 which also led to the resignation of prime minister Nobusuke Kishi angering rightists and ultranationalists who supported the treaty 12 Assassination EditMain article Assassination of Inejirō Asanuma Pulitzer Prize winning photograph by Yasushi Nagao The photo was taken directly after Yamaguchi stabbed Asanuma and is here seen attempting a second stab although he was restrained before that could happen On 12 October 1960 Asanuma was assassinated by 17 year old Otoya Yamaguchi a right wing ultranationalist during a televised political debate ahead of upcoming elections for the House of Representatives 1 While Asanuma spoke from the lectern at Tokyo s Hibiya Hall Yamaguchi rushed onstage and ran his wakizashi a traditional samurai short sword 1 through Asanuma s ribs on the left side fatally wounding him Japanese public broadcaster NHK was videorecording the debate for later transmission and the tape of Asanuma s assassination was shown many times to millions of viewers 14 15 The photograph of Asanuma s assassination won its photographer Yasushi Nagao both the Pulitzer Prize and World Press Photo of the Year Yamaguchi was captured at the scene of the crime and a few weeks afterwards committed suicide by hanging himself while in police custody 1 Commemoration EditAsanuma s assassination shocked Japan s political establishment Shortly after his death conservative prime minister erstwhile electoral rival Hayato Ikeda captured the mood of his fellow lawmakers when he gave a heartfelt eulogy for Asanuma on the floor of the Diet Commemorating Asanuma as a speech giving everyman enzetsu hyakushō Ikeda declared You made service to the people the core of your political principles Literally running from east to west you were constantly appealing directly to the people with unrivaled eloquence and unmatched passion Numa truly is a speech giving everyman With his soiled clothes and tattered briefcase Today in this public hall Tomorrow at a roadside temple in Kyoto This is what Asanuma s comrades used to sing about him back in the 1920s when they were founding the Japan Labour Farmer Party Even after he became Chairman of the JSP this speech making everyman spirit never showed the least sign of flagging Even now we all still have vivid recollections of you giving all those speeches in every corner of this nation 16 According to reportage at the time Ikeda s short speech was met with thunderous applause and left many lawmakers in tears 11 Legacy EditThe Japan Socialist Party had been an unhappy marriage between far left socialists centrist socialists and right socialists who had been forced together in order to oppose the consolidation of conservative parties into the Liberal Democratic Party in 1955 Asanuma was a charismatic figure who had been able to hold many of these mutually antagonistic factions together through the force of his personality 17 Under Asanuma s leadership the party had won an increasing amount of seats in the Diet in every election over the latter half of the 1950s and seemed to be gathering momentum Asanuma s untimely death deprived the party of his adroit leadership and thrust Saburō Eda into the leadership role instead 17 A centrist Eda rapidly took the party in a more centrist direction far faster than the left socialists were ready to accept 17 This led to growing infighting within the party and drastically damaged its ability to present a cohesive message to the public Over the rest of the 1960s and going forward the number of seats the Socialists held in the Diet continued to decline until the party s extinction in 1996 18 References Edit a b c d Kapur 2018 p 254 a b 鶴崎友亀 浅沼稲次郎小伝 たいまつ新書 1979年 1998年に新時代社より復刻 ISBN 4167209047 復刻版 a b c d e f Hoover 2018 p 31 私の履歴書 浅沼 稲次郎 日本経済新聞社 in Japanese a b Hastings 1995 p 183 a b Huffman 2013 p 15 资讯 凤凰网 news ifeng com Retrieved 11 November 2021 Victoria 2020 p 16 Huffman 2013 pp 15 16 Drea 1979 p 79 a b Kapur 2018 p 86 a b c d Huffman 2013 p 16 Michael Y M Kao Taiwan s and Beijing s Campaigns for Unification in Harvey Feldman Michael Y M Kao eds Taiwan in a Time of Transition New York Paragon House 1988 188 Chun Jayson Makoto 2006 A Nation of a Hundred Million Idiots A Social History of Japanese Television 1953 1973 Routledge pp 184 185 ISBN 978 0 415 97660 2 Retrieved 22 March 2014 Langdon Frank 1973 Japan s Foreign Policy Vancouver University of British Columbia Press p 19 ISBN 0774800151 Retrieved 18 August 2012 Kapur 2018 pp 85 86 a b c Kapur 2018 p 127 Kapur 2018 pp 125 126 Works cited Edit Drea Edward J 1979 The 1942 Japanese General Election Political Mobilization in Wartime Japan International Studies East Asian Series Research Publication Center for East Asian Studies University of Kansas 11 Hastings Sally Ann 1995 Neighborhood and Nation in Tokyo 1905 1937 Pittsburg PA University of Pittsburg Press ISBN 978 0822938842 Hoover William D 2018 Historical Dictionary of Postwar Japan Lanham MD Rowman and Littlefield ISBN 978 1538111567 Huffman James L ed 2013 Modern Japan An Encyclopedia of History Culture and Nationalism Routledge ISBN 978 0815325253 Kapur Nick 2018 Japan at the Crossroads Conflict and Compromise after Anpo Cambridge MA Harvard University Press ISBN 978 0674984424 Victoria Brian Daizen 2020 Zen Terror in Prewar Japan Portrait of an Assassin Rowman amp Littlefield ISBN 978 1538131664 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Inejiro Asanuma Inejirō Asanuma at Find a Grave Video of Inejiro Asanuma assassination Warning may disturb some viewers on YouTubeParty political officesPreceded byMosaburō Suzuki Chair of the Japan Socialist Party1960 Succeeded bySaburō EdaPreceded byN A General Secretary of the Japan Socialist Party1955 1960Preceded byNew post General Secretary of the Farmer Labour Party1925 Succeeded byParty banned Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Inejirō Asanuma amp oldid 1167224235, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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