Memorials continue for child victim of 1923 massacres in Japan
Participants in Munekazu Tachibana's memorial service examine his tombstone on Sept. 11 in Nagoya. | KYODO
BY TORU HORIGUCHI
KYODO
Sep 29, 2022
NAGOYA – A memorial service for a 6-year-old boy murdered by Japanese military police nearly 100 years ago in what became known as the "Amakasu Incident" has been held annually for almost half a century at his tombstone in Nagoya.
Amid the turmoil in the wake of the devastating Great Kanto Earthquake that struck Tokyo and neighboring prefectures on Sept. 1, 1923, a squad of military police led by Capt. Masahiko Amakasu arrested and murdered anarchist Sakae Osugi, women's liberation activist Noe Ito and Osugi's young nephew Munekazu Tachibana.
This year's ceremony for Munekazu was held on Sept. 11, with about 60 people gathering to burn incense and mourn the boy's death while a monk recited a sutra. "The same mistake must never be repeated," was the common refrain.
According to the local volunteer group that preserves the boy's tombstone, Munekazu was born to a merchant trader, who was born in Aichi Prefecture and emigrated to the United States, and Osugi's younger sister.
On Sept. 16, 1923, Osugi, a well-known anarchist who had been marked as a dissident of the state and was in Tokyo along with Ito, who lived with him, and Munekazu, were taken away by Amakasu and his subordinates and beaten to death. Their bodies were reportedly tossed into an abandoned well. The incident occurred while martial law was imposed to maintain public order in the aftermath of the quake.
The young boy was killed to "keep his mouth shut," said Hirokazu Takeuchi, 81, head of the volunteer group.
An inscription on the back of Munekazu Tachibana’s tombstone in Nagoya reads, in part, “brutally murdered by lapdogs.” | KYODO
The tombstone was installed by Munekazu's father in 1927 in the compound of a Buddhist temple called Nittaiji in Nagoya's Chikusa Ward. On the back of the dark vertical slab are inscribed the words, "brutally murdered by lapdogs."
"At that time, Japan was shifting toward militarism and people were finding it increasingly difficult to say what they wanted to," Takeuchi said. These words expressed the father's outrage and "proof of his protest" against his son's victimization in such a callous act by Japanese authorities, although "he would have been severely punished if police had found out," he added.
The gravestone lay long-forgotten until 1972 when a woman who lived in the neighborhood came upon it in a grassy area of Nittaiji while out on a stroll. It became public knowledge after she wrote about it in a letter to a newspaper. The memorial services by the group have occurred annually since 1975.
Takashi Yamada, 49, a local stonemason, cleaned the tombstone in August ahead of the ceremony. Yamada, who took over from his father in assisting with Munekazu's memorial services, said, "My hope is the tombstone will continue to be cherished."
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