Noboru Kikuta
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Noboru Kikuta (菊田昇) (May 31, 1926 August 21, 1991) was a Japanese gynecologist. He is best known for circumventing Japanese adoption law in the 1970's by falsifying birth certificates so that children could be adopted anonymously.


Early life and education

Kikuta was born in
Ishinomaki is a city located in Miyagi Prefecture, Japan. , the city has an estimated population of 138,538, and a population density of 250 persons per km2 in 61,919 households. The total area of the city is . Geography Ishinomaki is in northeastern Miya ...
, Japan on May 31, 1926. He graduated from
Tohoku University , or is a Japanese national university located in Sendai, Miyagi in the Tōhoku Region, Japan. It is informally referred to as . Established in 1907, it was the third Imperial University in Japan and among the first three Designated National ...
in 1949. He did his residency at the Tohoku University Hospital, then earned a doctorate there. He worked at Akita City Hospital for a while, then opened a clinic in his hometown of Ishinomaki.


Career

Early in his career, Kikuta performed many abortions. The
koseki A or family register is a Japanese family registry. Japanese law requires all Japanese households (basically defined as married couples and their unmarried children) to make notifications of their vital records (such as births, adoptions, dea ...
law at the time made the idea of adopting infants unattractive to prospective parents because the adoption would be recorded on the koseki, and the child could easily find out about the adoption and their birth parents, and suffer the stigma of being adopted. Pregnant women would instead give their newborns to
midwives A midwife is a health professional who cares for mothers and newborns around childbirth, a specialization known as midwifery. The education and training for a midwife concentrates extensively on the care of women throughout their lifespan; co ...
, who would find a family to adopt the child "off the books", recording the child as their own on the koseki. Physicians were required to fill out a birth certificate, making it impossible for a child to be adopted in the way in which midwives could carry this out. Kikuta created false birth certificates in order to circumvent the law, and had arranged 100 adoptions. This fact was discovered in 1973, when he put advertisements in local newspapers looking for people to adopt children and raise them as their own. His medical license was revoked. He appealed the revocation, but the court maintained that his action could have created a
gray market A grey market or dark market (sometimes confused with the similar term " parallel market") is the trade of a commodity through distribution channels that are not authorized by the original manufacturer or trade mark proprietor. Grey market pr ...
in babies, and caused people to lose faith in the integrity of the koseki system. Kikuta proposed changes to the koseki and adoption laws such as listing adoptive parents rather than birth parents on the child's koseki, allowing both parties to maintain their anonymity. He also proposed not allowing abortions after the seventh month of pregnancy. The movement caused by his actions and proposed changes to abortion laws eventually failed; a new special adoption law that recorded adopted children in the same way as birth children passed in 1987. He also converted to Christianity in 1987. He was interested in the religion as a medical student, but did not practice it after he had a disagreement with a pastor. He started to change his mind after meeting
Mother Teresa Mary Teresa Bojaxhiu, MC (; 26 August 1910 – 5 September 1997), better known as Mother Teresa ( sq, Nënë Tereza), was an Indian-Albanian Catholic nun who, in 1950, founded the Missionaries of Charity. Anjezë Gonxhe Bojaxhiu () was ...
and Shigeki Chiba in 1981, and being approached by in 1985. Kikuta was awarded the International Right to Life Federation’s Award for Life in April 1991. He died on August 21, 1991.


References

1926 births 1991 deaths Japanese obstetricians Tohoku University alumni {{DEFAULTSORT:Kikuta, Noboru Japanese anti-abortion activists