Kyōko Asanuma
Kyōko Asanuma | |
|---|---|
Kyōko Asanuma in February 1936 | |
| Member of the House of Representatives | |
| In office 1960–1963 | |
| Constituency | Tokyo 1st district |
| Personal details | |
| Born | Kyōko Takeda February 1, 1904 |
| Died | March 10, 1981 (aged 77) |
| Party | Japan Socialist Party |
| Spouse | Inejirō Asanuma (m. 1928) |
| Children | Kinue Asanuma (adopted daughter) |
| Occupation | Politician |
| Known for | Widow and successor of Inejirō Asanuma; Japan–China friendship advocate |
Kyoko Asanuma (浅沼 享子, Asanuma Kyōko; 1 February 1904 – 10 March 1981) was a Japanese politician of the Shōwa era. She served one term as a member of the House of Representatives and was the wife of Inejirō Asanuma, chairman of the Japan Socialist Party (JSP).
Biography
Kyōko Asanuma, née Kyōko Takeda (武田 享子), was born on 1 February 1904, in Hita, Ōita Prefecture, on the island of Kyushu, as the daughter of dentist Tsuneichi Takeda.[1] She graduated from the upper division of Hita Elementary School. At age 17, she married but could not adapt to the overly feudal customs of her husband's family and divorced soon after. She left Kyushu for Tokyo, intending to study dressmaking to support herself.[2]
She initially worked at the Kyodokai-kan cafeteria, a gathering spot for socialists, before moving to a café where she met Inejirō Asanuma, then a regular customer and future chairman of the Japan Socialist Party, in 1927. She married him in the fall of 1928.[3][4][2][5]
The couple had no biological children but adopted Kinue, a distant relative of Inejirō Asanuma.[2][5][6][7]
In 1945, she joined the Japan Socialist Party and became a permanent administrator of the Women's Issues Research Committee. However, on 12 October 1960, her husband, then party chairman, was assassinated by Otoya Yamaguchi during a speech at Hibiya Public Hall.
At Inejirō Asanuma's funeral on 20 October 1960, held at Hibiya Public Hall and attended by over 2,600 representatives, Kyōko Asanuma delivered a reply speech during the ceremony, where condolences from Chinese Premier Zhou Enlai and other international groups were also read.[8][7]
In her speech, she expressed deep sorrow over the circumstances of the assassination and gratitude for the condolences:
So many people must have been present on that day, yet why, in my husband's final moments, could no one step in to protect him? When I think of this, my heart breaks, and I feel so sorry for my husband. I feel so sorry for Asanuma. That is what I have been thinking, but... Today, receiving such heartfelt words of condolence from so many of you, I truly thank you all very much.[9]
On 2 November 1960, Otoya Yamaguchi committed suicide in detention. The next day, 3 November Kyōko Asanuma held a press conference to respond to the news. She stated that she learned of the suicide from the morning newspapers and expressed pity rather than hatred toward the young man, while strongly condemning the forces behind him that incited the act:
I learned of young Yamaguchi's suicide for the first time this morning in the newspapers. Rather than hating him, I feel more pity for him. Against the forces behind the scenes that instilled such ideas in a 17-year-old boy and drove him to assassination, a deep and burning hatred rises again from the bottom of my heart.
She implicitly invoked the principle of "hating the crime but not the person," noting that it is difficult to fully apply.[10][11]
In November of the same year, she ran in the general election in Tokyo's 1st district under the Socialist label. She won her first election, placing second behind former Tokyo Governor Seiichirō Yasui and ahead of Yoshikata Asō of the Democratic Socialist Party (Japan). Archived documents from the National Diet Library include election reports, speech drafts, and posters from her successful run in the 29th House of Representatives election, as well as related correspondence.[7]She served only one term and retired from politics before the elections of 1963. She attended the 5th anniversary memorial at her husband's tomb in Tama Cemetery on 12 October 1965, alongside JSP Chairman Kōzō Sasaki and others.[3]
After retiring from politics, Kyōko Asanuma engaged in promoting friendship between Japan and China. In 1964, she attended the 15th anniversary celebrations of the People's Republic of China in Beijing. On 9 October 1964, she participated in the signing ceremony of a joint statement between the China-Japan Friendship Association and the Japan-China Friendship Association, signed by Liao Chengzhi and Matsumoto Jiichiro, aiming to strengthen mutual support against common enemies, and attended by figures like Guo Moruo.[12]In 1970, she visited China twice: in October, she sent a message read at the rally commemorating the 10th anniversary of her husband's assassination, expressing her determination to continue his anti-imperialist spirit and strengthen Japan–China ties, she also traveled to Beijing to personally attend the memorial rally on 12 October 1970, alongside JSP delegation leader Kuroda Hisao and others.[13]In December, she visited Beijing with her son-in-law Norikuni Nakano (a journalist specializing in pollution issues), where they met Premier Zhou Enlai and Vice Chairman Guo Moruo. Nakano presented Japan's environmental problems (Minamata disease, lead pollution, etc.), contributing to early environmental exchange between the two countries.[14][15]
Kyoko Asanuma was one of the key initiators for the formation of the "Women's Liaison Committee to Promote Japan-China Diplomatic Normalization and Friendship" (日中国交回復と友好をすすめる婦人連絡会), alongside figures like Tanaka Sumiko, Yamakawa Kikue, Ishigaki Ayako, Sata Ineko, Kubushiro Ochimi, and Sugimura Haruko. This group conducted advocacy activities toward the government to advance normalization.[16]
Kyōko Asanuma also met Deng Xiaoping during his state visit to Japan in October 1978. At a reception at the Akasaka State Guest House in Tokyo, she was received alongside Liao Chengzhi (vice chairman of the Standing Committee of the National People's Congress) and Foreign Minister Huang Hua. Deng thanked the families of deceased "old friends" of Japan–China friendship, including Asanuma's widow.[17]On 31 May 1978, she met with Deng Yingchao, Vice Chairperson of the National People's Congress Standing Committee.[3]
In May 1980, she was invited to a meeting in Tokyo with Chinese Premier Hua Guofeng honoring families of deceased Japanese friends of China but was unable to attend due to old age and frailty.[3]She died in Tokyo on 10 March 1981, at the age of 77. The specific cause of death is not publicly documented.[3]She is buried at Tama Cemetery.
Kyōko Asanuma published a personal memoir titled Together with My Husband Inejirō Asanuma (夫 浅沼稲次郎とともに) in the magazine Fujin Kōron in December 1960, recounting 34 years of marriage, shared struggles, and her recovery after the assassination. The text was reprinted in 2010 in a selection of the magazine's archives.[2]
Bibliography
- One Hundred Years of the Parliamentary System – Dictionary of Members of the House of Representatives, House of Representatives of Japan, 1990.
See also
References
- ^ "浅沼家(衆議院議員・浅沼稲次郎・浅沼享子の家系図)" [Asanuma Family (Genealogy of House of Representatives member Inejirō Asanuma and Kyōko Asanuma)]. Keibatsugaku (in Japanese). Retrieved February 21, 2026.
- ^ a b c d "浅沼享子の生涯について知りたい。" [I would like to know about the life of Kyōko Asanuma.]. Reference Cooperative Database, National Diet Library (in Japanese). Retrieved February 21, 2026.
- ^ a b c d e "浅沼享子". Kotobank (in Japanese). Retrieved 2026-02-24.
- ^ "浅沼稲次郎関係文書(その2)". National Diet Library (in Japanese). Retrieved 2026-02-24.
- ^ a b 鶴崎友亀 (1979). 浅沼稲次郎小伝 [Short Biography of Inejirō Asanuma] (in Japanese). たいまつ社. p. 212. ISBN 4167209047.
- ^ "浅沼稲次郎関係文書(その1)". National Diet Library (in Japanese). Retrieved 2026-02-24.
- ^ a b c "浅沼稲次郎関係文書(その2)". National Diet Library (in Japanese). Retrieved 2026-02-24.
- ^ "人民日報 historical archive, 1960-10-21". Renmin Ribao via zhouenlai.info (in Japanese). 1960-10-21. Retrieved 2026-02-24.
- ^ 10 - 浅沼稲次郎暗殺事件 - 1960. YouTube (in Japanese). rosamour909. 13 May 2010. Retrieved 7 March 2026.
Kyōko Asanuma's funeral reply speech
- ^ "浅沼稲次郎・社会党委員長刺殺事件 容疑者の少年自殺 故浅沼氏夫人が記者会見" [Chairman Inejirō Asanuma of the Japan Socialist Party Assassination Case: Suspect Boy's Suicide – Widow Holds Press Conference]. AFLO Images (in Japanese). Retrieved February 21, 2026.
- ^ "下町っ子の上の空 : 丸の内 きじ 7th". Splash Blog (in Japanese). Retrieved February 21, 2026.
- ^ "人民日報 historical archive, 1964 coverage". Renmin Ribao via zhouenlai.info (in Japanese). Retrieved 2026-02-24.
- ^ "人民日報 historical archive, 1970 coverage". Renmin Ribao via zhouenlai.info (in Japanese). Retrieved 2026-02-24.
- ^ "周恩来总理、郭沫若副委员长会见浅沼稻次郎夫人浅沼享子" [Premier Zhou Enlai and Vice Chairman Guo Moruo Meet with Widow of Inejirō Asanuma, Kyōko Asanuma]. Renmin Ribao (in Chinese). Retrieved February 21, 2026.
- ^ "周总理"逼"出了新中国第一代环保人" [Premier Zhou "Forced Out" China's First Generation of Environmentalists]. China News (in Chinese). Retrieved February 21, 2026.
- ^ "Japan Socialist Party and Japan–China friendship women's groups historical notes". syamin.chesuto.jp (in Japanese). Retrieved 2026-02-24.
- ^ "From left, Liao Chengzhi, Vice-Chairman of the Standing Committee of the National People's Congress, Deng Xiaoping, Vice Premier, Kyoko Asanuma, wife of the late Inejiro Asanuma, former chairman of the Japan Socialist Party, and others". AFLO Images. Retrieved February 21, 2026.
External links
- Media related to Kyōko Asanuma at Wikimedia Commons