Hokuto Iboshi
   HOME

TheInfoList



OR:

was an
Ainu Ainu or Aynu may refer to: *Ainu people, an East Asian ethnic group of Japan and the Russian Far East *Ainu languages, a family of languages **Ainu language of Hokkaido **Kuril Ainu language, extinct language of the Kuril Islands **Sakhalin Ainu la ...
waka poet and social activist. He devoted his life to improving the standing of the Ainu people, expressing his ideas as tanka in newspapers and magazines and influencing the Ainu youth of the time. He also circulated around the Ainu ''kotan'' (villages) of Hokkaido, preaching of the need for unity and the formation of an Ainu identity. Along with
Yaeko Batchelor was an Ainu waka poet and evangelist. Life Yaeko Batchelor was born on June 13, 1884, in Usu, Date City, Hokkaido. Her name was entered into the family register as , and her childhood name was Fuchi. Her father was , a member of a powerful ...
and , Iboshi is counted as one of the . He has been called the " Takuboku of the Ainu".


Life


Childhood

Hokuto was born in 1901 in the first district of Ōgawa-chō in the town of Yoichi, the third son of his father Jinsaku and mother Haru. Jinsaku made his living fishing for
herring Herring are forage fish, mostly belonging to the family of Clupeidae. Herring often move in large schools around fishing banks and near the coast, found particularly in shallow, temperate waters of the North Pacific and North Atlantic Oceans, i ...
, but was also an accomplished bear hunter. The Iboshi family name dated back to the time of Hokuto's grandfather Manjirō. Manjirō went in 1872 to study in Tokyo on the grounds of Zōjō-ji, at the "Aborigine Education Facility" associated with the Kaitakushi (Hokkaido Development Commission). With excellent grades, he remained in Tokyo as an official of the Kaitakushi. Manjirō was one of the first Ainu permitted to adopt a
Japanese name in modern times consist of a family name (surname) followed by a given name, in that order. Nevertheless, when a Japanese name is written in the Roman alphabet, ever since the Meiji era, the official policy has been to cater to Western expecta ...
. His family possessed a hereditary symbol called an — something like a Japanese kamon crest — consisting of two lines crossed in an "X" and two round dots to the top and bottom, situated between the lines (like ※ without the left and right dots). From the special terminology of kamon, which refers to the cross shape as and the dots as , he derived the name . In the course of usage, though, the name took on the shorter reading of "Iboshi". Hokuto's official name in the family register was thus – but the first name was a misprint by the scribe, who had been told the boy's name was . His friends called him Takejirō or just Take, and he himself wrote his name either way, or even as "竹二郎". When Hokuto was young he was a ringleader for the local children. In 1908, though, his education-minded mother Haru sent him to the 6-year , rather than the 4-year "Former Aborigine School" most of the local Ainu children attended. With only a few Ainu peers at the school, he endured severe discrimination. When he was in his fifth year, his mother died, and he abandoned aspirations for educational advancement, instead beginning to work upon his graduation in 1914. In addition to helping with his father's fishing work, he did manual labor away from home in forestry and agriculture, but continued to meet with societal discrimination as an Ainu.


Teenage years

Perhaps from the severe pressure of demanding manual labor and discriminatory treatment, the already frail Iboshi fell seriously ill at 17, and from this point on came to take an interest in more ideological pursuits. Around the same time, he saw two tanka in the ''Hokkai Times'' that showed disdain for the Ainu, further increasing his bitterness towards the Japanese. Around this time, though, he was deeply moved by some small words a Japanese school principal he sat beside spoke to him at a meeting. As minor a thing as it was, this event completely changed his opinion of the Japanese he'd seen as cold-blooded. Influenced by his old schoolteacher Naoya Nara, Iboshi became interested in ideas of culture and character. He became involved in youth groups and made an effort to get along with the Japanese, coming to believe that the Ainu needed to develop their own cultural awareness, as well as a consciousness of their status as Japanese nationals, and develop both people and a society of splendid character that would contribute to society alongside the Japanese. During this time he was also conscripted, in 1923, as a logistics officer in the 7th division of the Imperial Japanese Army, but after a little more than a month he was discharged, perhaps for illness. From this time on, Iboshi formed the culture group with other Ainu youth from Yoichi, including his childhood friend , under the guidance of his teacher Nara. Holding study sessions and publishing a bulletin called , they held various activities to raise awareness. By Nara's introduction, Iboshi became a devoted reader of Mitsujirō Nishikawa's culture magazine and met Nishikawa in person when the latter visited Hokkaido. It was also around this time that Iboshi began producing haiku under the tutelage of Nara and the newly appointed teacher Kenji Yoshida. He participated in gatherings of haiku poets in Yoichi and began submitting his work to the Tokyo poetry magazine ''Nihihari''.


Life in Tokyo

In February 1925, through the kind offices of Mitsujirō Nishikawa, Iboshi obtained a job as a clerk with the and was thrilled to move to the capital. The Market Association managed a public market, and its offices were then located in Yotsuya ward (now in
Shinjuku is a special ward in Tokyo, Japan. It is a major commercial and administrative centre, housing the northern half of the busiest railway station in the world (Shinjuku Station) and the Tokyo Metropolitan Government Building, the administration ...
, in the vicinity of Golden Gai). When he arrived in
Asagaya is a residential area of Tokyo located in Suginami ward (one of the 23 wards or boroughs of Tokyo) west of Shinjuku. Main access to Asagaya is via the Chūō-Sōbu Line, 12 minutes by train from Shinjuku station. Geography At present the Asagay ...
, where Nishikawa lived, off of a steam train ride taking a full two days, Nishikawa's wife was shocked to hear that Iboshi had drunk only one cup of milk during the entire trip. Iboshi visited the linguist
Kyōsuke Kindaichi was a Japanese linguist, chiefly known for his dictations of yukar, or sagas of the Ainu people, as well as his study of the Matagi dialect. He is the author of the dictionary ''Meikai Kokugo Jiten''. Biography Kindaichi was born in Morioka, I ...
shortly after his arrival, and was impacted by the story of
Yukie Chiri was a Japanese transcriber and translator of Yukar (Ainu epic tales). Life Yukie Chiri was born into an Ainu people, Ainu family in Noboribetsu, Hokkaidō during the Meiji (era), Meiji era. At the time, increasing immigration of Japanese peopl ...
, an Ainu girl who wrote before dying at the age of 19. The picture she book painted of Hokkaido as a lost paradise of the Ainu impressed Iboshi, and that vision had a great influence on his later work. Speaking with Kindaichi also gave him his first knowledge his fellow Ainu and future compatriots, the adopted daughter of the Anglican missionary John Batchelor Yaeko Batchelor and Yukie Chiri's younger brother
Mashiho Chiri Mashiho Chiri () (February 24, 1909 June 9, 1961) was an Ainu people, Ainu linguist and anthropologist. He was best known for creating Ainu-Japanese dictionaries. Biography Chiri was born on February 24, 1909 in what is now Noboribetsu, Hokka ...
. Kindaichi invited Iboshi to the , where he gave lectures to scholars of some standing, including the
folklorist Folklore studies, less often known as folkloristics, and occasionally tradition studies or folk life studies in the United Kingdom, is the branch of anthropology devoted to the study of folklore. This term, along with its synonyms, gained currenc ...
Tarō Takayama and the "father of Okinawaology" Iha Fuyū. His association with Kindaichi's connections also let him meet authors and publishers. Meanwhile, he became deeply involved with Nishikawa's ''Jidō Dōwa'' magazine, and deepened his inquiry into culture and religion by visiting then-influential groups like Seikō Gotō's ''Kibōsha'' and
Tanaka Chigaku was a Japanese Buddhist scholar and preacher of Nichiren Buddhism, orator, writer and ultranationalist propagandist in the Meiji, Taishō and early Shōwa periods. He is considered to be the father of Nichirenism, the fiercely ultranationalist ...
's
Nichiren Buddhist Nichiren Buddhism ( ja, 日蓮仏教), also known as Hokkeshū ( ja, 法華宗, meaning ''Lotus Sect'') is a branch of Mahayana Buddhism based on the teachings of the 13th-century Japanese Buddhist priest Nichiren (1222–1282) and is one of ...
group ''
Kokuchūkai The is a lay-oriented Nichiren Buddhist group. It was founded by Tanaka Chigaku in 1880 as and renamed in 1884 before adopting its current name in 1914. History The lay Nichiren Buddhist organization''Britannica Kokusai Dai-hyakkajiten'' arti ...
''. Life in Tokyo gave Iboshi a steady job and chances to meet various celebrities and personages, as well as knowledge and experience from participating in various academic and lecture groups. Furthermore, he was free of the discrimination that had plagued him in Hokkaido and could live out productive days in peace. Even so, these happy days did not last. Realizing that he was now being pampered because of his status as an Ainu, which had brought him prejudice back home, troubled Iboshi. Finally, he decided that he could not be spoiled by people's kindness, and that the Ainu needed to revive themselves with their own hands. He left behind a prosperous year and a half in Tokyo to return to his birthplace of Hokkaido, resolved to save his fellows from poverty and discrimination.


In Horobetsu and Biratori

On July 5, 1926, Hokuto boarded a night train out of Ueno Station and left Tokyo, sent off by many people. On July 7 he arrived in Horobetsu, now the town of Noboribetsu. He first headed to Horobetsu's Anglican church to meet Yaeko Batchelor. Remaining a few days in Horobetsu, he visited the home of Yukie Chiri and met Mashiho Chiri. After visiting the surrounding ''kotan'', including Shiraoi, he went on the 14th to
Biratori ( ain, ピラ・ウトゥル, translit=pira-utur) is a town located in Hidaka Subprefecture, Hokkaido, Japan. The name of the town means 'between the rocky cliffs' in the Ainu language. As of September 2016, the town has an estimated population ...
with the intention of learning more about Ainu culture. Supported by Seikō Gotō of ''Kibōsha'', he helped out in a kindergarten managed by John Batchelor. However, conflict broke out between these two sponsors during Hokuto's stay, including Gotō's cutting funding to the kindergarten, and Iboshi was caught between them. Working day jobs, including construction work, Iboshi traveled the ''kotan'' of
Hidaka Subprefecture is a subprefecture of Hokkaido Prefecture, Japan. The west side of the Hidaka mountains occupies most of the area. Hidaka is sparsely populated and has many of Hokkaido's natural resources. The governmental office is located in Urakawa. Hi ...
, distributing copies of ''Jidō Dōwa'', meeting his fellow Ainu, and continuing his awareness campaign. He also submitted Ainu folklore to , a magazine run by Nishikawa's wife. Since returning to Hokkaido, he began vigorously producing tanka instead of haiku poetry.


Back in Yoichi

In February 1927, Iboshi's older brother Umetarō's son died of illness, and Iboshi returned to his hometown. There, he helped with the fishing, but on top of a poor catch, he fell ill again and recuperated in Yoichi. In the meantime, he worked with his old friend Nakazato to make a mimeograph fan magazine, named ''Kotan'', which they completed in August. They also conducted investigations of the ruins in the area and interviewed elderly local residents. On October 3, he was recognized by Bonsei Namiki and one of his tanka was published in the ''Otaru Shimbun'' for the first time. After this, he published a continuous stream of tanka, essays, and research in that newspaper. On November 3, he attended a gathering of poets in Yoichi, where he met the poets of Otaru, including Bonsei Namiki and Shōji Inabata. Meeting with praise and admiration, he struck up a friendship with them. He also began contributing heavily to their new poetry periodical, . From December 1927 to January 1928, Iboshi released a series called . In response to an opinion piece by the local professor Shōzō Nishida regarding the then-recent discovery of stone walls and dolls appearing to bear ancient lettering, which had been entitled , Iboshi argued that these were not Ainu relics, and were more likely fakes. Takeichi Moritake, who lived in Shiraoi and would later be counted among the three great Ainu poets with Iboshi and Yaeko Batchelor, first encountered Hokuto's work at this point. He was greatly moved, and the two would later strike up a friendship.


Peddler

From the end of 1927 on, Iboshi began traveling around ''kotan'' all over Hokkaido as a peddler selling hemorrhoid medicine. This too was a vehicle for him to meet fellow Ainu and advocate the improvement of Ainu standing by self-awareness, unity, and culture. He circled Otaru, Chitose, Muroran, Shiraoi, and Horobetsu. In Muroran he was welcomed as an ethnological researcher, in Shiraoi he met with Takeichi Moritake, and in Horobetsu he met again with Mashiho Chiri. He did not always travel alone: he was joined for a time by , and then by , who shared his ideals and who he dubbed the . In the spring of 1928, Iboshi returned home to Yoichi to gather funds working with the family fishing. He continued to draw attention as a poet, publishing tanka almost every week in the ''Otaru Shimbun'' and having a special edition of the Sapporo poetry magazine dedicated to a collection of his works. This issue represents the only reasonably collected set of his works released during his lifetime.


Illness

Despite his poetic success, the hard work of fishing was once again putting stress on Iboshi's body. On April 25, 1928, he had a lung hemorrhage and entered a period of fighting the illness at his older brother's house. The disease was tuberculosis. Iboshi did not give up, and on his sickbed arranged an anthology of his poetic works entitled . He also continued sending poems about fighting the illness to the ''Otaru Shimbun''. The sickness continued to eat away at his body and spirit regardless, and on January 26, 1929, at 9 A.M, he died at the age of 27. He left behind three death poems.


Legacy

Seikō Gotō, who Iboshi had looked up to since his time in Tokyo, grieved at Iboshi's death and planned to release a posthumous collection of his manuscripts. The haiku poet Kenji Yoshida, who had been close to Iboshi, organized the manuscripts that had been in a traveling bag by his pillow and sent them to the ''Kibōsha''. After editing, ''Kibōsha'' released the collection in May 1930, a year after Iboshi's death, entitled In July 1931, the first unified association of Hokkaido was formed, fittingly called the
Ainu Association of Hokkaido The is an umbrella group of which most Hokkaidō Ainu people, Ainu and some other Ainu are members. Originally controlled by the Politics of Japan, government with the intention of speeding Ainu assimilation and integration into the Japanese nati ...
. Many of its primary members had been influenced by Iboshi, and the movement on which he had gambled his life finally took form. Hokuto Iboshi was forgotten for years until 1954, when Toshihiko Hiroko established the with others connected to the deceased poet. Gathering and collecting his works, they pushed for the construction of monuments and creation of a radio drama about him. In 1959 Kisaku Yumoto introduced Iboshi alongside Yaeko Batchelor and Takeichi Moritake in . ''Kotan'' was included in the 1972 compilation from , and in Rippū Shōbō Publishing's , volume 11. In 1984 Sofukan republished ''Kotan'', making Hokuto's works much easier to obtain.


References

* *


External links


Hokuto Iboshi.com (fan page)


{{DEFAULTSORT:Iboshi, Hokuto Japanese Ainu people People from Yoichi, Hokkaido 1901 births 1929 deaths 20th-century Japanese poets Ainu artists Imperial Japanese Army officers