Fusae Ichikawa
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Fusae Ichikawa (市川 房枝 Ichikawa Fusae?, 1893 - 1981) was a Japanese feminist, politician and women's suffrage leader.[1] Ichikawa was a key supporter of Women's Suffrage in Japan, and her activism was partially responsible for the extension of the franchise to women in 1945.
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[edit] Early Life
Born in Aichi Prefecture in 1893, Ichikawa attended the Aichi Women's Teacher Academy with the intention of becoming a primary school teacher. Upon her relocation to Tokyo in the 1910s, however, she became exposed to the women's movement. Returning to Aichi in 1917, she became a reporter with the Nagoya Shimbun, and in 1920 co-founded the New Women's Association (新婦人協会, Shin-fujin kyokai) together with pioneering Japanese feminist Hiratsuka Raicho.
[edit] Women's Suffrage
The New Women's Association was the first Japanese organization formed expressly for the improvement of the status and welfare of women. The organization, under Ichikawa's leadership, campaigned for changes in Japanese laws prohibiting the participation of women in politics. As women were barred from this sort of campaign (by the very law the organization sought to overturn), the organization held events known as "lecture meetings" to further their campaign. The law was eventually overturned by the Imperial Diet in 1922, after which the association disbanded.
Two years later, Ichikawa traveled to the United States with a view to making contact with American women's suffrage leader Alice Paul. Returning to Japan in 1924 to work for the Tokyo branch office of the International Labour Organization, she founded Japan's first women's suffrage organization, the Women's Suffrage League of Japan (日本婦人有権者同盟, Nippon fujin yuken domei), which in 1930 held the country's first ever national convention on the enfranchisement of women in Japan. [2]
The postwar occupation period saw Ichikawa play an important role in ensuring that women's suffrage was enshrined in Japan's postwar constitution, arguing that the political empowerment of women might have prevented Japan's entry into such a destructive war. The New Japan Women's League began its operation as an organization dedicated to winning suffrage for women, and Ichikawa was named the organization's first president.
Ichikawa's efforts, coupled with the requirements of the Potsdam Declaration, resulted in the granting of full suffrage for women in November 1945. [3]
[edit] Other Activism
Other campaigns included efforts to curb the corruption of elections, which led to the 1933 Women's Association to Clean Tokyo Politics and the creation of an official government office, the Central Association to Clean Up Elections, to which Ichikawa was appointed as one of five female trustees. During World War II, Ichikawa was appointed secretary of the Central Association for National Spiritual Mobilization, an organization formed by the Japanese government for the purpose of increasing popular support for the Japanese war effort. She also served as trustee of the Great Japan Women's Association, which coordinated the efforts of private support organizations.
A tireless champion of women's issues, she would organize and participate in women's conferences in Japan and internationally, and in 1980 emerged as the leading voice in urging the Japanese government to ratify the Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination against Women.
[edit] Political Career
Ishikawa was elected to the Diet in 1952 as a representative of Tokyo. She continued to focus on issues important to Women, as well as electoral reforms. She was re-elected twice, but failed in her next re-election bid, leaving office in 1971.
In 1974, however, the then 81-year old Ishikawa was asked to run again, and earned a fourth term in the Diet. She was re-elected to the House of Councillors in 1980, with the highest number of votes from the national constituency. [4]
[edit] Awards
Ichikawa was awarded the Ramon Magsaysay Award for Community Leadership in 1974 for her efforts in support of social equality. [3]
[edit] Resources
- ^ Fusaye Ichikawa. Biography.com. Retrieved on 2008-01-14.
- ^ (1978) 父が子に送る一億人の昭和史:人物現代史(One Hundred Million People's Showa History, from Father to Child: Modern Historical Biographies). Mainichi Shimbun Press.
- ^ a b 1974 Ramon Magsaysay Award for Community Leadership. Retrieved on 2008-01-15.
- ^ Alan Warwick Palmer (1996). Who's Who in World Politics: From 1860 to the Present Day. Routledge.