Munekazu Tachibana | COURTESY OF TOMBSTONE PRESERVATION GROUP / VIA KYODOMunekazu Tachibana | COURTESY OF TOMBSTONE PRESERVATION GROUP / VIA KYODO

On the day of the service, many participants who approached to read the inscription on the epitaph showed their sorrow for the father who had lost the boy to such violence.

Following the service, Yutaka Osugi, a son of Sakae's younger brother, who is now 83, talked about his uncle's ideas in a speech in front of the participants.

"I am grateful since many people are still interested and participate in this service. It is a meaningful gathering that reminds us to never forget the tyranny of authority," he said.

Following public backlash, Amakasu was court-martialed and sentenced to 10 years in prison, but was released on parole in 1926. Afterward, he traveled to northeastern China and is said to have been involved in the founding of Manchuria under the Imperial Japanese Army. He killed himself after Japan surrendered in World War II.

The Amakasu Incident was one of the more prominent instances of Japanese authorities using the chaotic situation following the catastrophic earthquake to kill anarchists and socialists and other minorities, including ethnic Koreans, in what was later labeled the Kanto Massacre.

Takeuchi is the sole survivor of the 14 people who founded the volunteer group to preserve Munekazu's gravestone. There is no telling how long the group can remain active as many members are elderly.

"I hope we can continue the service until the 100th anniversary of the (Amakasu) incident in 2023," Takeuchi said.

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