Wednesday, March 17, 2021

SAMURAI, KOBAYAKAWA and the HISTORY OF JAPAN

Chance? 

The itinerary of my first trip to Japan was a study tour and engineered perfection crafted by JFMF the Japan Fulbright Memorial Fund

I was assigned to Ohda, one of 10 groups each destined for a unique study adventure in Japan. We would come together at the end of 20 days to share our experiences.  

First day, last announcement:  “The bus departs at 7:03 am.” It was delivered without the typical warning: “Don’t be late.”  It was shared more as an invitation, rather than the implicit command: “Be there on time.” In a polychronic culture, people come before deadlines. It felt good. This is the way life ought to be.

We learned immediately the next morning that the white gloved driver would roll away from the hotel at exactly 7:03. 

I tried to get to Okayama (origin of my mother’s parents) but I was on a JFMF itinerary and soon learned that Okayama would have to wait for another time. Only later did I realize that the family I was to meet and stay with was selected specifically for me. I was operating in a monochronic frame of mind and soon, soon I’d become aware of a polychronic sway of Japanese life hidden but not, in a world that on the outside looked like the precision gears and springs of the finest time keeping device ever crafted.


That time came 10 years later as I singularly crafted a personal itinerary based on an inner quest to find the Japanese family my mother never met and walk the land of her ancestors. I first stepped onto the ground at Narita International Airport and made my way to Asuka Village the next day.

So was it by chance that my personal quest would begin at a family home stay in Asuka Village? Chance that I’d stay at the center of what I’d later learn as the Asuka Period when the term samurai first came into broad use? Chance that I’d soon meet one of the most eminent sword smiths in all of Japan? A Living Japanese National Treasure. Chance? Destiny? Questions with answers about to unfold with each new step in ancestral lands.

A perfect reflection of the words of anthropologist Fosco Maraini:

You are about to embark upon “a journey where the signposts are unfamiliar, and where the new worlds you see reveal elements in yourself that you never even knew existed.”

Maraini was talking about Japan. See Tip #32  His insight prescient, his prediction intimate, a perfect fit, like the inside of my skin.




Historical Prelude:

When I sit with my family to work on a 1,000 piece jigsaw puzzle (a winter sport), we commonly start by assembling the perimeter.  So too have I now begun to frame my experiences in Japan by gluing down the names, places, culture and history in a way that allows for experience to interlock with Japanese history.

 



縄文 30,000 BC to 538 Jōmon Period: Japanese prehistory.
縄文, Jōmon, means “cord” and refers to pottery decorated by pressing cord onto wet clay. Epiphany: Archaeological interest in pottery stems from its appearance in an archaeological record as evidence of the transition from a former nomadic hunter gatherer life to living in one place permanently which requires food preservation and storage technologies like pottery, which allows for fermentation of food. 



飛鳥時代  538-710 Asuka Period.  Long before the age of samurai there existed the high nobility after which the rest were farmers, fishermen, charcoal makers, artisans, metal smiths, carpenters, weavers, armorers, potters, paper makers, and ritual specialists. My grandfather Jotaro Kobayakawa was a charcoal maker for 20 years before he left Japan in 1906. 

During the Asuka Period, 7 empresses reigned from the fifth to the eighth centuries, but after 770 succession was restricted to males. It was during this time that the term samurai came into use.

The Taihō Code of 702 classified most of the Imperial bureaucrats into 12 ranks, each divided into two sub-ranks, 1st rank being the highest adviser to the emperor. Those of 6th rank and below were referred to as "samurai" and dealt with day-to-day affairs. Although these "samurai" were civilian public servants, the modern word is believed to have derived from this term. Military men, however, would not be referred to as "samurai" for many more centuries.

Samurai were initially civil public servants beginning in 702 and for over 400 years would not carry military responsibilities until The Kamakura Period (1185-1333) which “saw the rise of samurai under shogun rule as they were entrusted with the security of the estates...” They “became the symbols of the ideal warrior and citizen.”


奈良平安時代 710-1185 Nara and Heian Periods. The new imperial capital is established at Heian-kyō, Kyoto in 794
Fujiwara family controls the political scene via occupation of all Kyoto political offices and strategic marriages with the imperial family. This peaks in 1016 but comes to an end in 1068. Now, the power of the central government slowly shifts to large independent land owners known as daimyōs.  https://www.japan-guide.com/e/e2132.html  

1068 Previously, samurai were public servants. 

To maintain order diamyōs enlist warrior samurai to protect their lands. Some of the former samurai public civil servant class now become samurai of the warrior class. As more power shifts to land owners the need for a warrior samurai class grows.

鎌倉時代 1185 Kamakura: Minamoto Yoritomo succeeds as the new leader of Japan, is appointed Shogun, and establishes his home city Kamakura as the center of the new government.

室町時代 1333-1568 Muromachi Period
Oda Nobunaka begins the first attempt to unify Japan.

 


安土桃山時代 1568-1600 Azuchi-Momoyama Period
Oda Nobunaga assassinated 1582 by Akechi Missuhide

After 120 years of civil war, the daimyō and samurai Toyotomi Hideyoshi unifies Japan in 1590. His father Kinoshita Yaemon, a peasant foot soldier (ashigaru), to a samurai. Hideyoshi rose from peasant class to retainer to distinguished samurai general to lord Oda Nobunaka whom he succeeded.

Tokugawa leyasu was the richest and strongest of all daimyōs at the time of Nobunaga’s death and fights alongside Ishida Mitsunari to help bring Hideyoshi to power.

Ishida Mitsunari was a minor daimyō at this time but very loyal to Hideyoshi who appoints Mitsunari Inspector General for Tokugawa’s ill conceived invasion of Korea and China. Ishida is a commander of an unwinnable war.

Enter Kobayakawa Takakage, who was one of these daimyōs fighting in Korea.

Once ordered, daimyōs were forced to fight for Tokugawa in two Korean campaigns, eventually coming to realize the madness in Tokugawa’s vision of ruling all of Asia. The war would never be won and only these daimyōs would suffer the losses of samurai and resources. 

This is perhaps why Mitsunari became disliked by many of the daimyo supporting Tokugawa.  

While Inspector General in Korea, Mitsunari sends Tokugawa a scathing criticism of Kobayakawa’s performance. Tokugawa leyasu strips Kobayakawa from many of his rights, privileges and lands, a terrible reward for loyally fighting for Tokugawa. This is why at a most critical battle Hideake Kobayakawa joins forces with Tokugawa leyasu to defeat Mitsunari at the Battle of Sekigahara, October 21, 1600.  In short, Hideake Kobayakawa with 15,600 samurai turns history to install Tokugawa leyasu as the Shogun who finally unifies the country ending hundreds of years of civil war in Japan.

Tokugawa leyasu(Eastern clans) vs. Ishida Mitsunari (Western clans) at the October 21, 1600 Battle Of Sekigahara. 



Mitsunari recruits Kobayakawa Hideake* who with 5 other daimyōs switch their allegiance to Tokugawa leyasu at the Battle of Sekigahara. What is it about Mistunari that leads to the defection of 6 diamyōs giving Tokugawa leyasu a decisive victory? It may be that Mitsunari in executing Tokugawa’s ill conceived war in Korea, forcing loyal daimyōs to fight a war in a foreign land against their better judgements, leading to the unnecessary loss of thousands of samurai and the resources of many daimyōs in fighting an unwinnable war. 
*Docudrama: Age Of Samurai, Episode 6 at 16:25.


徳川時代 1603-1868  Tokugawa Shogunate at Edo

In part, Daimyōs were ranked by the value of the land under their administration, kokukada. One koku was the amount of rice required to feed one person for a year.
In the year 1650, Japan’s total kokudaka was 26 million koku. 4.2 million koku directly controlled by the Shogun.

This web page was inspired by my long time friend Lloyd Kajikawa who mentioned in is last email: “You may be directly descendant in the Kobayakawa line. Who knows?”
Similarly, when Patricia and I visited the Samurai Museum in Shinjuku the owner became very animated when Patricia said I had Kobayakawa lineage. He had made the leap that my Kobayakawa family was descendant from Hideake Kobayakawa.

Not so fast. Is my Kobayakawa family descendant from Hideake Kobayakawa? 
Let’s do the research.

Hideake was adopted into the Kobayakawa family by Takakage Kobayakawa who himself was a Morī adopted by Kobayakawa, so both of these figures are not ancestral. Since these prominent historical Kobayakawa’s were adoptees, I will instead follow the DNA.


If there is a common lineage it would bridge Hideake’s Kobayakawa clan to my earliest Kobayakawa ancestors.  At the Battle of Sekigahara, October 21, 1600 Hideake led 15,600 samurai of the  Kobayakawa clan into battle. How many of these men had married into the family? How many were unrelated farmers living on Daimyō Hideyaki’s land?  And how many were familial Kobayakawa? It is this last group that may provide the ancestral bridge to my recently found Kobayakawa family in Niimi, Okayama.

If there is an ancestral link between the Kobayakawa clan of Kideake’s time it would be found within the 185 years span leading to the birth of my Grandfather’s grandfather, Jouemon Kobayakawa, who was born circa 1785. His son Kitaro was born May 28, 1830.  To answer Lloyd’s question, the answer will be found by researching the Kobayakawa’s between 1600 and 1785.





小早川氏 Kobayakawa Clan 
Family Heads  https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kobayakawa_clan


  • Kobayakawa Tohira (小早川遠平, ?–1237), founder of the clan.
  • Kobayakawa Kagehira (小早川景平, ?–1244)
  • Kobayakawa Shigehira (小早川茂平, ?–1264) - his two sons Masahira and Masakage made two branches of the clan.

Numata-Kobayakawa clan (沼田小早川氏):

  1. Kobayakawa Masahira (小早川雅平, ?–?) - 3rd son of Shigehira.
  2. Kobayakawa Tomohira (小早川朝平, ?–1348)
  3. Kobayakawa Nobuhira (小早川宣平, ?–?)
  4. Kobayakawa Sadahira (小早川貞平, ?–1375)
  5. Kobayakawa Haruhira (小早川春平, ?–1402)
  6. Kobayakawa Norihira (小早川則平, ?–?)
  7. Kobayakawa Hirohira (小早川煕平, 1416–1473)
  8. Kobayakawa Takahira (小早川敬平, 1452–1499)
  9. Kobayakawa Sukehira (小早川扶平, 1485–1508)
  10. Kobayakawa Okihira (小早川興平, 1505–1527
  11. Kobayakawa Masahira (小早川正平, 1523–1543)
  12. Kobayakawa Shigehira (小早川繁平, 1542–1574)
  13. Kobayakawa Takakage (小早川隆景, 1533–1597) - 3rd son of Mōri Motonari.
  14. Kobayakawa Hideaki (小早川秀秋, 1582–1602) - nephew of Toyotomi Hideyoshi.

Takehara-Kobayakawa clan (竹原小早川氏):

  1. Kobayakawa Masakage (小早川政景, ?–?) - 4th son of Shigehira.
  2. Kobayakawa Kagemune (小早川景宗, ?–?)
  3. Kobayakawa Sukekage (小早川祐景, ?–1338)
  4. Kobayakawa Shigekage (小早川重景, ?–?)
  5. Kobayakawa Shigemune (小早川重宗, ?–?)
  6. Kobayakawa Saneyoshi (小早川実義, ?–1364)
  7. Kobayakawa Yoshiharu (小早川義春, ?–?)
  8. Kobayakawa Nakayoshi (小早川仲義, ?–?)
  9. Kobayakawa Hirokage (小早川弘景, ?–?)
  10. Kobayakawa Morikage (小早川盛景, ?–?)
  11. Kobayakawa Hirokage (小早川弘景, ?–?)
  12. Kobayakawa Hirohira (小早川弘平, ?–?)
  13. Kobayakawa Okikage (小早川興景, 1519–1541)
  14. Kobayakawa Takakage (小早川隆景, 1533–1597) - 3rd son of Mōri Motonari.

Significant Members[edit]

See also[edit]




Friday, March 12, 2021

Gallery

 

Patricia found an Instagram account: “japanoninsta”, a few months ago and has been forwarding screenshots to me that are so beautiful they beg to be included in this photo gallery.

“japanoninsta” appears to be a community of contributors which explains the many extraordinary photos gathered in one place.


I must share these photographs with you, they are that good!  At the base of each post is the photo’s location.  This one is from Osaka’s Katsuo-ji Temple, “also called the Winning Temple.

It might happen to you as well.  We’ll see a photo and reflexively say:  “I wanna go there!”

I quickly ran a Google search on Katsuo-ji .... and placed this temple on the top of our list! 

For reference, this is the full screen shot. But I’ll post cropped photos for aesthetic appeal. All the photo credits go to japanoninsta unless otherwise stated.


Kyoto: Byodoin Temple 











 


Kyoto: One cherry blossom viewing option is aboard the Jikkokubune.  
Photo Source: japanoninsta


Tiny Shirakawa Village deep in the Japanese Alps near Takayama
Photo credit:  Japan Talk



Miyajima Fireworks Festival.   

Photo credit: https://en.japantravel.com/hiroshima/miyajima-fireworks-hiroshima/6043








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Thursday, March 11, 2021

Japan Fulbright Program

Senator J. William Fulbright from Arkansas was the longest serving chairman in the history of the United States Committee on Foreign Relations. He is widely admired for the creation of the Fulbright International Fellowship Program in 1946 established to “increase mutual understanding between the peoples of the United States and other countries through the exchange of persons, knowledge, and skills. It is considered one of the most prestigious award programs and operates in 155 countries.”

Among the earliest participants were recognized leaders and academics from war ravaged Japan where in September of 1945 Douglas MacArthur began the work of rebuilding Japan.  Those Japanese leaders came to America and returned with knowledge that would lead their country to future prominence.

In gratitude The JFMF Japan Fulbright Memorial Fund was established to return the favor by providing American Educators a similar experience designed to increase mutual understanding through the exchange of educational leaders.  That’s how I found myself in Japan in 2005. That JFMF experience changed the course of my life though I wouldn’t know it for another decade.



https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/J._William_Fulbright#U.S._Senator_(1945%E2%80%9374)


https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fulbright_Program


Wednesday, March 10, 2021

Charles Thomas Tokyo to Kyoto

Chucky (Charles Thomas) CEO of Outward Bound Adventures Arrived Tokyo March 28, to meet his wife Sharon (already here for a City Building Conference). Then he boarded a bullet train to Kyoto where I suggested a home stay with my Asuka Village friend Megumi and her 3 generations in one household Tanaka family.













Chucky is in Nara today


Monday, March 8, 2021

Timeline of People in Japan

Sunday, November 20, 2005  Like footprints along a lifetime journey, the people we meet leave us with enduring, sometimes long lived stirring  impressions that open doors to worlds we never imagined. Each person I met in Japan could be a chapter in this little book. That’s it! I’d like to write a book about each person I met. 

These are the remarkable people I met once upon a time in Japan. In gratitude the Japan Fulbright Memorial Fund which sponsored my first trip to Japan.

2:30 pm. Kyoko Jones was the first Japanese official to speak to our group of 200 American Educators, a total of 600 this year alone.  Kyoko was the JFMF Program Director of our 20 day fellowship. We were clueless, she was patient, a model of good teaching. 

At one of her many engagements with us she picked up the microphone to assist our learning of correct Japanese pronunciation:
“these words end with a long e sound like in Edward:  karyoke, sake, karate.”    

9:30 am Friday, November 25, 2005, 3rd Floor Tokyo Prince Hotel: Peace Education Seminar in the Golden Cup Meeting room.   
                                                                                Tomoko Yanagi, Teacher, Hiroshima Misuzugaoka High School.

It would take me 10 years to finally arrive in Hiroshima but it all started with Tomoko and Koji Ikeda’s presentations on Peace Education.

When I posted my Hiroshima video to YouTube I said: “Every politician in the world must visit Hiroshima Peace Park before taking office.” 

Click on the video below.

                                                                                            Mr. Koji Ikeda
10:40 am. Since I was seated in the first row and since tears were streaming down my cheeks, I wanted to turn around to see if I was the only one crying.  So I did. 

8:16:02 am August 6, 1945  
Koji Ikeda had just picked up his crying and always hungry baby. His wife had gone into the city, on her morning walk for groceries, she’d be back soon. It was August 6th, that moment a blast wave shattered his Hiroshima home.  When he regained consciousness... “Where’s my baby?” “What happened to the house?” and “How long was I out?” and  All that remained was piles of splinters and chards of wood where once stood his home.  “Where is my baby?” Searching through the broken timber, Koji finally found his baby, but the hillside was a neighborhood of rubble.

Koji Ikeda Hiroshima Survivor, Keynote Speaker.


List of Articles to Read:

 


2005 Family Stay:  200 Japanese families host Japan Fulbright participants overnight providing American visitors with an enlightening experience with a Japanese family.

My first Family Stay was in Ohda Japan with Miyuki Hadano and her family.

Miyuki is an Anatomy Professor and Nurse, seen here with her children Kanae and Kazushi.  Looking back at the 20 days of my first journey to Japan, the most memorable part of my experience was my stay with her family.

Miyuki arrived at our Japan Fulbright Family meeting in Ohda. Kyoko made announcements, and introductions were made. I was teamed with Miyuki because she taught anatomy to nurses and I taught Anatomy and Physiology at the high school level. It seemed we were all about to do something strange and new... seasoned with wonder.   In a few minutes we were on our way to her home. For the first time in Japan I felt a sense of the unknown I’d never felt before. At that moment, Miyuki pulled off the street:  “First we must stop to for sweet pastries.”

SIPPING TEA WITH BUDDHA
Miyuki’s Parents: Tokuji-san and Okuko-san were a authentically welcoming experience. I was seated warm and cozy on the floor, under their “kotatsu” at their family dinner table.  (View an example of a kotatsu in the photo below. Now imagine it's heated fabric draped over your lap, inviting all to stay and bask in it's warmth.)
Tokuji-san motioned for me to follow his movements. He took a sip of tea. Then a nibble of pastry.  I did the same.  He said: “Tea bitter,” and another bite of pastry. He repeated the pairing. “Bitter... sweet. Like life.” Ah... so this is having tea with Buddha. I'd never imagined Buddha at home with a complete family, but it makes sense.
 

Photo credit: https://japanobjects.com/features/kotatsu
こたつ Kotatsu is a heated futon covering on a table. The room was chilly. The kotatsu gave the table gathering a deeper sense of belonging, a sense of family.  I wanted to stay longer to enjoy it’s warmth.





Miuki’s dad Tokuji-san with his grandson son


Miyuki Black Belt


Yoshihiro Morita, Science Teacher at Nara Super Science High School and ____ _____ also at the same school.




2006 Akiko Murakami 

2015 Yoshio and Akiko Murikami 
It was Akiko who I asked if she knew how I might find a Home Stay near Nara.  She mentioned my request to her father Yoshio (photo left) who knew exactly where I should go for my home stay.
They picked me up at the Nara train station and drove me to the Tanaka Family Stay in Asuka Village about 40 minutes south of Nara station. The city scape becomes the country side, moves more fluid like. We pull up to a large home even though I’ve been told that Japanese homes are tiny. This home is not.

Takako and Yuji Tanaka move at the center of this family and when their daughter got married, they built an adjoining home so the grandchildren are part of a three generation household.  Across the lane is their families vegetable garden.  I will see Yuji and Takako tending to their garden in the years to come.  That’s the way life ought to be.  
Starting with my HomeStay in Asuka Village near Nara Japan.
Megumi Matsukawa (seated), and her dad Yuji Tanaka (standing), receive me with an earnest and warm welcome. She teaches junior high school, he’s on the board of education. The family gathers, they listen closely as I share my mother’s story and my quest to find the land of her ancestors.  

After dinner I show their family my mother’s family tree. At the end of the evening Yuji asks to borrow that document.

In the morning, over breakfast Yuji Tanaka gives me a brilliant conceived introductory document written in Japanese, with an infographic showing me and my mother and Jotaro and Taka Kobayakawa, whose families I’m hoping to find.  It’s a long shot at best, but as I was soon to discover, it was an amazing key for my quest. You see, my command of Japanese is so scant, making genealogical headway would be one millimeter short of impossible. Instead Yuji-san and given be the clearest single page document in Japanese that all I had to do is hand it to the clerk at the counter or anyone else and they would instantly know what I needed without me stumbling through a linguistically foggy explanation.  If you know of someone tracing their geneaology in Japan show them this page, Finding Your Japanese Ancestors.



The next morning Takako Tanaka drives me to Asuka Train Station and I’m off for Niimi, in the prefecture of Okayama, the land of my ancestors via the city of Okayama where I find the hotel Shinichi has reserved in my name just a short walk from the Okayama Station.

Documents in hand, I board a train. All I know is that the next step of my quest requires a visit to Niimi and the word 市役所 shiyakusho.

Shiyakusho is the Japanese word for City Hall where I hope to find geneaological links to my ancestral family. I present my family document to a clerk who points me to the correct window where I present it again. Soon Sohji Ishihara is called from upstairs because his English is excellent. He tells me right away that his Ishihara family is not related to my mother’s Ishihara family here in Niimi. His ancestors are the Okinawa Ishiharas.

It takes four hours to find a connection.
I want to thank the four researchers, but it would be impolite to invite the three ladies to dinner. So I turn to Sohji and tell him I want to take him to dinner.  He pauses for a few seconds and says: “No.”

“I’ll take you home, we’ll have dinner with my father.” A door to my future was about to open.

Yuji and Sohji Ishihara, his colleagues and family



After dinner, Yuji Ishihara examined my nascent geneaology document and the next morning he shared his plan. Click HERE for more about the Genius of Niimi

Yuji knew that we could find land ownership historical documents at Niishi City Hall in the next little town. After breakfast, and a short drive, Yuji presented The city clerk with my genealogy documents who was quick to bring out out archival large format property maps books from the early 1900’s. We found Jotaro and Taka Kobayakawa’s land and were given directions.  The house had been replaced by a large rice field but this was definitely the land where my grandparents walked. This photo captured Yuji saying: “This is the land of your ancestors.” I looked up at the forest covered mountains surrounding the valley and thought: “This is what my grandparents saw when they lived on this land. This is the land I came to find.”

Yuji also knew of a ancient Niimi Buddhist priest at a temple up in the hills about 20 minutes away. “This priest has been here for a very long time. He knows all the old families.”

Yuji Ishihara was a genius who like Sherlock Holmes knew how to introduce me to this man who would literally point me to the building where I’d find the first member of my ancestral family living in Japan

Click below for Yuji’s short documentary.




Kyoko Kobayakawa listens as Yuji explains our visit.
My friend Yuji Ishihara shows Kyoko Kobayakawa my geneaology document.  It takes a few moments for the information to register. Then her eyes widen quickly recognizing that we are second cousins! She picks up her phone, dials her brother to spread the news. Before I know it we have a date to have dinner with him at his Niimi restaurant that night.  She also calls her uncle Masuo Kobayakawa in Tokyo to let him know that I’d love to meet him before I leave Japan in a few days. He will be the ninth.



Kyoko Kobayakawa (lower right) and family
Kyoko was the first member of my mother’s family I found in Japan.  She invites me to her home to meet her family.  You’ll see her and her family in the documentary: My Friend Yuji.

Today I met eight descendants of my mother’s ancestral family. “Where ever buddhists go, where ever she is, she’s happy to meet them with me.”



In a few days I will meet Mio in Hiroshima and Kimiko Nakada in Tokyo. She will introduce me to Masuo Kobayakawa and family



Ninjaologist Hiroshi Ikeda joined us at the Tanaka’s Home Stay in Asuka Village. From him we learned about the real side of Ninja’s.
Hollywood ninja images  are incomplete and therefore off the mark. For example: “only the inept ninjas fight, the good one’s are invisible, they slip into your village unheard and never seen” and are gone without a breeze.  This episode of Japanology Plus features Hiroshi. Click HERE for an informative 27 minute Ninja video.









2019












Ginza Book Fair, exit Jimbocho Station.






2020




Nine trip summary.
  • Japan 1. November 20-December 8, 2015 Japan Fulbright Fellowship (20 days in Japan) Tokyo, Ohda schools, and first ryokan.
  • Japan 2. July 2006 International High School Science Collaboration with Nara Super Science High School. Kyoto and Nara where we meet Akiko Murakami.
  • Japan 3. August 19-September 8, 2015 The Ancestral Journey. Narita, Nara, Akido, Asuka Village, Okayama City, Hiroshima, and Niimi where I meet Sohji, Yuji and their family and 9 descendants of our ancestral family.
  • Japan 4. October 21-October 30, 2015 Tokyo, Asuka Village, Niimi, Ishihara stay, Tatara Samurai Festival.
  • Japan 5. January 18-27, 2016 Pre Honeymoon Trip with Patricia to Tokyo, Shinjuku Kabukicho, Mori & Nezu Museums, Akiko and Tonpopo, Miwa Mountain of 1,000 shrines, Asuka Village, Atami and on to Sydney.
  • Japan 6 March 30-April 8, Tokyo, Okayama, Niimi Kobayakawas, Kurashiki, Ueno and Tokyo where Kimiko Nakada introduces me to Masuo, the 9th descendant of our ancestral family.
  • Japan 7. March 17, 2017 Proposal Trip with Patricia, Osaka Mokumeganea Ring, Asuka Kimono, Nara Knife Store, Kyoto Heian Shrine, Kurashiki and last visit with Yuji Ishihara and the new baby, back to Tokyo to visit Tama and Musashino Universities. Second Masuo family visit with luncheon, resized engagement ring from Kyoto finds us in Tokyo.
  • Japan 8 April 2018 with Patricia to Tokyo 8 days, + Niimi visit Yuji’s graveside w Buddhist priest. and visit w Futoshi Kobayakawa and family.
  • Japan 9. March 30-April 9, 2019 Wedding trip Patricia, Chuckie, Jim, Bill, Alexandra, Sakura Shinto Wedding with Megumi, Sohji and Masuo’s family.