Sakatayama Double Suicide
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Sakatayama double suicide ( ja, 坂田山心中, さかたやましんじゅう, Sakatayama Shinjū) is the 1932 double suicide incident and subsequent theft of a female corpse in Japan. This affected a number of young men and women who committed double suicide.


Incident


Double suicide of a man and a woman

The incident was reported in the evening edition of the '' Tokyo Nichi Nichi Shimbun'' dated May 10, 1932, as follows :At about 11:00 a.m. on May 9, a man and a woman were found dead after drinking sublimated water at the top of Mt ''Sakata'' in
Ōiso 260px, Ōiso Long Beach resort is a town located in Kanagawa Prefecture, Japan. , the town had an estimated population of 31,101 and a population density of 1800 persons per km². The total area of the town is . Geography Ōiso is located on t ...
town, Shōnan . The man was 25-26 years old, wearing a
Keio University , mottoeng = The pen is mightier than the sword , type = Private research coeducational higher education institution , established = 1858 , founder = Yukichi Fukuzawa , endowmen ...
uniform and cap, and the woman was 21-22 years old, looking like a young lady. Both were lying in a wooded area in good manners, with a bowl of nameless flowers beside their pillows. The name "Mt. Sakata" was added for convenience at this time by the reporter, as he could not find it after research. ''The Tokyo Nichi Nichi Shimbun'' dated November 11 published a photo of the two taken with a self-timer. It further explained the background of the two men. These were all of interest to the Japanese public at the time; *The man is Zusho Goro, and the woman is Yuyama Yaeko. *Both were members of the Anglican Church in Japan. *The Goro's father had promised to marry Yaeko and build a house for their after Goro graduated from college. *Yaeko was the daughter of a wealthy man in
Shizuoka Prefecture is a prefecture of Japan located in the Chūbu region of Honshu. Shizuoka Prefecture has a population of 3,637,998 and has a geographic area of . Shizuoka Prefecture borders Kanagawa Prefecture to the east, Yamanashi Prefecture to the northea ...
. *The woman's parents were opposed to the marriage and proceeded to arrange a marriage between the woman and another man. *Yaeko's sister also died an unusual death.


Woman's body disappears

The next day, a surprising story was reported in the evening edition newspapers. The ''Tokyo Nichi Nichi Shimbun'' reported, :A strange occurrence at the Oiso cemetery. A woman's corpse is stolen. She's the one who had a double suicide with a Keio University student. Is the culprit a pervert? Revenge? The two wills were clearly written at this stage. At this time, the man's suicide note was revealed. The suicide note was dated May 5. :If I do not return tomorrow night, the 6th, please consider me dead. I regret that I cannot repay even one ten-thousandth of what many people have done for me. I did not talk to anyone because I did not want Yaeko-san to think I was a coward. I visited the grave of my birth mother. Soon I will be able to be near her. Goodbye everyone. I need to get up early tomorrow.


Finding the body

The Oiso Police Station conducted a large-scale search and found the body on the morning of the 11th. In the evening edition of the 12th, each newspaper carried an article with a sensational title. The ''Tokyo Asahi'', for example, reported, ''Not a stitch of clothing on. Discovered at Oiso Beach. Who buried her in the sand? A woman's black hair crawling on the sand''. The doctor and police chief who performed the autopsy on the woman's body told journalists that the woman was a virgin, which further sensationalized the story in various newspapers. The ''Tokyo Nichinichi Shimbun'', for example, reported, ''The fragrance of purity is high, and love tied to heaven''. On the 13th, there was a young man and woman who jumped onto a
Chūō Main Line The , commonly called the Chūō Line, is one of the major trunk railway lines in Japan. It connects Tokyo and Nagoya, although it is the slowest direct railway connection between the two cities; the coastal Tōkaidō Main Line is slightly faste ...
train outside Kofu City and committed suicide, carrying a photo of Goro and Yaeko that appeared in the newspaper.


Announcement of movie adaptation

On May 14, four days after the incident, Shochiku's film department announced that it would make a film about the incident and begin shooting within a few days. The film was released as early as June 10, as noted below. On May 18, police announced that the body snatcher was a 65-year-old crematorium employee. ''The Tokyo Asahi Shimbun'' reported this on May 19: ''A 65-year-old crematorium employee finally confessed on the 10th day. He caressed the corpse very much on a dusky moonlit night. It was his curiosity after he heard that the corpse was beautiful," it reported. However, the alleged perpetrator stated years later that this was not true.


Film adaptation

The headline ''The fragrance of purity is high, and love tied to heaven'' written by '' Tokyo Nichi Nichi Shimbun'' became the talk of the masses who believed the incident was platonic love. Shochiku's film department released a film on June 10 titled ''Love Tied to Heaven''.


Influence

The film caused quite a sensation, and many men and women committed suicide while watching the film with sublimated water, or listening to the film's theme song. In addition, there were 20 couples of men and women who committed suicide at Sakata Mountain, where the incident took place, in 1932 alone. By 1935, the number of suicides (including attempted suicides) numbered approximately 200. In Oiso Town, where the incident took place, local residents made money by selling "married couple buns" and "Sakatayama memorial postcard". A more factual film was also made, but it was not as popular. In the month following the incident, Count Katsu Kuwashi, the adopted son of Katsu Kaishū and the tenth son of
Tokugawa Yoshinobu Prince was the 15th and last ''shōgun'' of the Tokugawa shogunate of Japan. He was part of a movement which aimed to reform the aging shogunate, but was ultimately unsuccessful. He resigned of his position as shogun in late 1867, while aiming ...
, committed suicide with his love concubinage. The Sakatayama double suicide incident and the hit movie triggered the mass media to be flooded with words such as "double suicide," "emotional death," and "heaven." The following year, in February 1933, two female students jumped to their deaths in Mount Mihara. Although no one involved in the Mt. Mihara incident has said about the ''Sakatayama Shinjū'', many commentaries in later years believe that influence by the positive media coverage of the incident. As a result of Mt. Mihara incident, 804 men and 140 women jumped to their deaths on Mount Mihara in 1933. This made Mount Mihara a tourist attraction, and the Yomiuri Shimbun organized a tour to take a gondola down to the crater for a photo shoot.


Later years

In 1950, 28 years after the incident, a newspaper reporter who accompanied the doctor who performed the autopsy at the top of the mountain said that the doctor made a remark on his way down that smacked of the woman not actually being a virgin. Some books consider the identity of Zusho Goro, one of the main characters in the incident, to be the great-grandson of Zusho Hirosato.


See also

* Shinjū *
Platonic love Platonic love (often lowercased as platonic love) is a type of love in which sexual desire or romantic features are nonexistent or has been suppressed or sublimated, but it means more than simple friendship. The term is derived from the nam ...
* Copycat suicide


References

* *


Notes

{{Reflist, refs= {{Cite book, url=, title=にっぽん心中考, trans-title=A Study of Double Suicide in Japan, author=佐藤 清彦, date=1998-11-30, year=, publisher=青弓社, pages=23–33, isbn=978-4-7872-3157-4 {{Cite web, url=https://bunshun.jp/articles/-/22527, title=「坂田山心中」で考える、なぜ1932年の日本はこれほどまでに猟奇事件を求めたのか, author=小池 新, date=2019-12-29, publisher=文春オンライン, access-date=2023-12-16 {{Cite book, url=, title=日本の歴史24 ファシズムへの道, trans-title=Japanese History 24: The Road to Fascism, author=大内 力, date=1974-09-10, year=, publisher=中央公論社, pages=463–466, isbn=4122001404 {{Cite journal, url=https://cir.nii.ac.jp/crid/1050282677921885312, title=観光地と自殺 : 昭和八年、伊豆大島・三原山における投身自殺の流行を中心に, trans-title=Tourist Attractions and Suicide : Focusing on the Epidemic of Suicide Throwing at Mount Mihara, Izu Oshima, in 1933, author=今防人, year=1994, publisher=流通経済大学, journal=流通問題研究, volume=23, issue=, pages=1–51, doi=, access-date=2023-12-16 Joint suicides Ōiso 1932 in Japan