Sen Katayama
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Script error: No such module "Nihongo"., born Script error: No such module "Nihongo"., was an early Japanese Marxist political activist and journalist, one of the original members of the American Communist Party and co-founder, in 1922, of the Japanese Communist Party. After 1884, he spent most of his life abroad, especially in the United States and the Soviet Union, where he was very active in the international socialist community, and after 1920, the communist community. Katayama had a weak base inside Japan, and was little known there. However, in the rest of the world, he was widely hailed as a leading spokesman for the Japanese socialist and communist movements.[1]
Early life and education
Sugataro Yabuki was the second son born to Kunizo and Kichi Yabuki in 1859 in the Hadeki district of what would later become Japan's Okayama Prefecture. He was adopted by the Katayama family at nineteen and took the name Sen Katayama, becoming the Katayamas' "first son" after his birth mother was deserted by her husband. The adoption avoided Katayama's conscription and allowed him to continue his education. In his autobiography, Script error: No such module "Nihongo"., Katayama admitted that he was fortunate not to have been the first born in his birth family, as it saved him from some of the responsibilities that burdened some of his acquaintances.
In 1878, Katayama travelled to Tokyo to apprentice as a printer while studying at a small preparatory school, the Oka-Juku, where he formed a friendship with Script error: No such module "Nihongo"., nephew of one of the founders of Mitsubishi. Iwasaki's departure for Yale University inspired Katayama to work his way to the United States, where he attended Maryville College in Maryville, Tennessee and Grinnell College, from which he graduated in 1892, proceeding to the Andover Theological Seminary and then to Yale Divinity School. During this period, Katayama became a Christian and a socialist.
Career
Katayama returned to Japan in 1896 and from 1897 to 1901 edited Script error: No such module "Nihongo"., the organ of the Script error: No such module "Nihongo". and Script error: No such module "Nihongo"..
Katayama was a founding member of the Social Democratic Party, Japan's first socialist party, in 1901, but was forced to disband by the government one day later.Template:Sfn He returned to America in 1903 at the urging of Iwasaki to look into rice-farming opportunities. During this trip he attended the Second International Socialist Congress in Amsterdam where he gained recognition for shaking hands with the Russian delegate, G. V. Plekhanov, in a gesture of amity between the Russian and Japanese peoples, despite the then-ongoing Russo-Japanese War.
In 1904, he attended an American Socialist Party convention in Chicago. He settled in Texas and his main business became rice farming. When his crop failed he became employed by a Japanese restaurant owner in Houston, Tsunekichi Okasaki, who bought Script error: No such module "convert". of land in Texas with the plan that Katayama farm it. In late 1905, the two borrowed $100,000 from Iwasaki to fund the rice harvest, together forming a "Nippon Kono Kabushiki-gaisha" (Japan Farming Company) to develop the project, with Katayama as managing director. However, the company quickly dissolved, reputedly over Katayama's socialist leanings, and he returned to Japan in 1907, rejoined the socialist movement, and pursued a career in journalism.
He was arrested and jailed for his participation in the Tokyo Streetcar Strike of 1912, and after his release he left for California. Attracted by the success of the Bolshevik Revolution of 1917–1918, Katayama became an active communist and an officer for the Communist International. He travelled to Mexico and later to Moscow, where he was hailed as a leader of the Japanese communist movement. He remained in the Soviet Union until his death on November 5, 1933, and his ashes buried in the Kremlin Wall Necropolis in Red Square.
Personal life
Katayama had two children by his first wife, Fude, who died in 1903, and another daughter by his second wife, Hari Tama, whom he married in 1907.
Works
- The Labor Movement in Japan. Chicago: Charles H. Kerr & Co., 1918.
- Japan and Soviet Russia, The People's Russian Information Bureau, 1919.
See also
References
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- ↑ James C. Doherty, Historical Dictionary of Socialism (1997) pp. 140–141.
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Works cited
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Further reading
- Kublin, Hyman; Asian Revolutionary: The Life of Sen Katayama, (Princeton University Press, 1964).
- Orii, Kazuhiko and Conroy, Hilary; "Japanese Socialist in Texas: Sen Katayama, 1904–1907", Amerasia Journal 8 (1981).
- Handbook of Texas Short Biography
- Sawada, Mitziko; Tokyo Life, New York Dreams: Urban Japanese Visions of America, 1890–1924, (University of California Press, 1996) chapter
External links
- Pages with script errors
- Pages with broken file links
- 1859 births
- 1933 deaths
- Japanese emigrants to the United States
- Stalinism
- Anti-revisionists
- Japanese revolutionaries
- American communists
- American human rights activists
- American Marxists
- Christian communists
- Maryville College alumni
- Yale Divinity School alumni
- Executive Committee of the Communist International
- Grinnell College alumni
- Japanese expatriates in the Soviet Union
- Japanese expatriates in the United States
- American civil rights activists of Japanese descent
- Japanese adoptees
- Japanese Christian socialists
- Japanese journalists
- Illinois socialists
- Iowa socialists
- Massachusetts socialists
- Texas socialists
- American male journalists
- American journalists of Asian descent
- American writers of Japanese descent
- Marxist journalists
- Burials at the Kremlin Wall Necropolis
- Japanese Communist Party politicians
- People from Okayama Prefecture
- People granted political asylum in the Soviet Union
- Meiji socialists