logo
Silent Victims of Abduction by North Korea

Silent Victims of Abduction by North Korea

Japan Forward17 hours ago
このページを 日本語 で読む
JAPAN Forward has launched "Ignite," a series where students in Japan share their voices in English. What do they see beyond our obvious differences, disabilities, and insecurities? Individually and collectively, today's students have the power to shape our global future. The Kagoshima student who wrote this ninth essay of the series wants to engage many people to address the issue of the silent victims abducted by North Korea.
Annually, the Headquarters for the Abduction Issue holds a North Korean Human Rights Violations Awareness Week Essay Contest for junior and senior high school students across the country. (The Government of Japan established the Headquarters, an organization led by the Prime Minister and composed of all the Ministers of State to resolve the abductions issue.) It aims to raise awareness of the abduction issue through viewing films and stage plays, reading books related to the issue, and other opportunities to help the students understand the feelings of abduction victims and their families.
These students often use the essay contest to think deeply about what they can and should do to resolve the abduction issue. Some, like Uta Fuchiwaki, also take on the challenge to directly communicate their thoughts and ideas to others in English. Let's listen.
Ninth in the Series, 'Ignite' Minister for the Abductions and Chief Cabinet Minister Yoshimasa Hayashi presents the High School English Essay Certificate of Excellence Award to Uta Fuchiwaki. (Screenshot)
Imagine a family member telling you they are going to the beach to watch the sunset, but they never return.
This happened to Shuichi Ichikawa and Rumiko Masumoto in 1978 in my hometown, Kagoshima, when they were abducted by North Korean agents. Not only were their lives changed, but also the lives of their families, friends and relatives.
Since then, their families have been campaigning, collecting signatures and appealing to the government to get them home. However, sadly, in 2002, the North Korean government admitted and apologized for abducting Japanese citizens. They confirmed that eight of the victims including Shuichi and Rumiko had already passed away. Despite hearing this shocking news and the lack of North Koreaʼs transparency, the families still believe their loved ones are alive and continue to fight for the truth or bring them home.
I actually had the chance to talk with Mr [Kenichi] Ichikawa, the brother of Shuichi Ichikawa. He has gone through innumerable tough times, but the situation hasnʼt really changed. When I talked to my classmates about the abduction issue, many of them werenʼt even aware of this problem and thatʼs when I realized that this could be because of the younger generation, and our lack of understanding, cooperation and help. I feel even more strongly about this issue now because I am the younger generation. [And] I feel compelled to stand up more for this cause and take action to make sure Mr Ichikawa will suffer less. I am taking this opportunity to share with you two solutions. North Korean agents abducted Shuichi Ichikawa and Rimiko Masumoto from Fukiage Beach. (©Kagoshima Prefectural Police, Hioki Police Station)
First, my generation seems to be unaware about these abductions. Mr Ichikawa told me that he is afraid of the abduction issues fading away. He also mentioned that, currently the youth are not interested in petitions and ignore flyers. Ignorance is a major concern and must be acknowledged as one of the biggest problems. So, we must continue to debate, discuss and deepen our understanding among the younger generations. I am sure that Mr Ichikawa would be pleased if we are more willing to work on this issue.
Second, Mr Ichikawa said that he desperately wants to hold a summit with North Korea to directly discuss and negotiate, aiming to change the situation and reach the truth. But to make this happen, all generations must cooperate with the signature campaign. If people have a strong will, diplomacy will spread, Mr Ichikawa said.
Mr Ichikawaʼs mother passed away without seeing her son and could never wear the kimono Shuichi gave to her. Also, Mr Ichikawa said when it is Shuichiʼs birthday the family canʼt talk about him and keeps silent. While their voices are silent, their house is filled with frog memorabilia from supporters around Japan. So, he always remains in their hearts as the meaning of frog in Japanese is to return.
The least we can do is sign a petition, keep negotiations open and finally keep engaging the youth to give the silent victims a voice. Please, let us help keep Mr Ichikawaʼs will alive.
Silent Victims.
When she wrote this essay, Uta Fuchiwaki was an 11th-grade student at Kagoshima Joho High School in Kagoshima Prefecture, near where two abduction victims were taken by North Korean agents. She delivered this comment upon receiving the Excellence Award for her English essay by a high school student:
Comment from the winner: English essays have the power to reach people all over the world. I sincerely hope that Mr and Mrs Ichikawa will be reunited with Shuichi.
(Read the essay, which is also translated into Japanese)
Author: Uta Fuchiwaki
Student, Kagoshima Joho High School , Kagoshima Prefecture
このページを 日本語 で読む
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

WWII Through the Eyes of Hideki Tojo's Great-Grandson
WWII Through the Eyes of Hideki Tojo's Great-Grandson

Japan Forward

time14 hours ago

  • Japan Forward

WWII Through the Eyes of Hideki Tojo's Great-Grandson

For many, the 80th anniversary of the end of WWII is an exercise in remembrance. Recalling dates, paging through black-and-white photographs, or watching grainy footage in history documentaries. Surviving combat veterans, Holocaust survivors, and others who lived through the 1940s mark the day with a weight few of us can fully grasp. For the descendants of wartime leaders, however, the anniversary carries a different burden — what one might call an imposed representation. Born long after the guns fell silent, they inherit not the actions, but the legacies, of those in power. The challenge is to transcend inherited enmity and help build a better world from the rubble of history. Hidetoshi Tojo, great-grandson of wartime Prime Minister Hideki Tojo, knows this struggle well. Speaking to JAPAN Forward ahead of the August 15 anniversary, he reflected on his journey from keeping silent about his family history to confronting it openly. "It was difficult for the Tojo family after the war," he recalled. "Even though I knew from a young age that the man in the history books wearing that uniform was my great-grandfather, I kept quiet for a long time." A family photograph of Hideki Tojo. (©SBS Insight screenshot) That changed in 2015, during the 70th anniversary of the war's end. Tojo agreed to a series of interviews, including one for Insight , a talk show on Australia's SBS network. The program brought together an unlikely group: the son of an Australian POW, Josef Stalin's great-grandson, Harry Truman's grandson, a Polish couple who had survived Auschwitz, and Niklas Frank, son of Nazi official Hans Frank. The filming took place before a live audience under hot studio lights. "Truman's grandson couldn't be there in person, but we spoke remotely," Tojo recalled. "It was important for me to meet one of President Truman's descendants," he said. "I found him to be a man of great understanding. He has visited the sites of the atomic bombings, met survivors, and you could feel in him a kind of pang of conscience over their suffering." Hidetoshi Tojo (center) appears on the Australian TV program Insight in 2015 alongside John Dunlop (right), son of Australian surgeon and POW Weary Dunlop, and Niklas Frank, son of German Nazi politician Hans Frank. (©SBS Insight Screenshot) Clifton Truman Daniel, the eldest grandson of former US President Harry Truman, appears on Insight via remote video. (©SBS Insight screenshot) That encounter shaped Tojo's view of history. "Of course, the United States was a victor in World War II. But when you think about Hiroshima and Nagasaki, and sense in someone like Truman's grandson the moral weight of that, then you realize there were no real winners in that war." Over the years, his exchanges with other descendants of wartime leaders gave him a broader perspective. "In many ways, not much has changed since then," he reflected. "The cast of characters is different, but the structural exploitation from the colonial period has simply been repackaged as global capital. That's neo-colonialism." While he values studying history, Tojo believes the future must take priority. "History is important, but the world hasn't moved much beyond eighty years ago. I've decided to leave the fine details to the professional historians. As citizens, our role is to move forward." Part of that forward motion came from unexpected affirmation. During the Insight taping, Tojo mentioned two acts by his great-grandfather that he views positively. The first was the 1943 Declaration for Greater East Asian Co-operation, issued at the Greater East Asia Conference in Tokyo. Framed as a call for Asian self-rule free from Western colonial domination, it was promoted as a vision of mutual prosperity among Asian nations. Hidetoshi Tojo (front row, fourth from right), great-grandson of former Prime Minister Hideki Tojo, meets Pope Leo XIV at the Vatican on June 18, 2025. (ⓒVatican Media/Kyodo) The second was the Otpor Incident of 1938–1940, when Lieutenant General Kiichiro Higuchi, supported by then-Kwantung Army commander Hideki Tojo, helped thousands of Jewish refugees escape Nazi persecution by allowing them safe transit through Japanese-occupied territories. "After the filming, the Polish Auschwitz survivors told me, with tears in their eyes, that my great-grandfather had done a wonderful thing in helping to save Jews," Tojo said. "That moment began to change my relationship with my family's past." His reflections are also shaped by the work of Shinsho Hanayama, a philosopher and Buddhist priest who served as chaplain at Sugamo Prison and was present at Hideki Tojo's execution in December 1948. Hanayama recounted to younger Tojo that his great-grandfather shook hands with prison guards before being led to the gallows. It's a gesture the priest saw as "a handshake of friendship between former enemies, a symbol of peace to be told to future generations." Former Prime Minister Hideki Tojo listens as his death sentence is pronounced at the Tokyo Trials in November 1948. For Hidetoshi Tojo, Hanayama's message was clear: reconciliation is not a passive state but a deliberate choice, even in the most bitter of circumstances. Carrying the Tojo name in modern Japan has not been without challenges. Some people regard him with skepticism, assuming he must defend every action of his great-grandfather. Others avoid the topic altogether. Yet Tojo insists that descendants must be allowed to engage with history in their own way. Today, his focus is on cultural preservation. He is involved in a project to connect people with Japan's Shinto heritage, including an online platform that helps users locate local shrines. For him, reconnecting with cultural roots is not about nostalgia but about grounding society in values that can endure beyond political conflict. Author: Jason Morgan, Kenji Yoshida

Silent Victims of Abduction by North Korea
Silent Victims of Abduction by North Korea

Japan Forward

time17 hours ago

  • Japan Forward

Silent Victims of Abduction by North Korea

このページを 日本語 で読む JAPAN Forward has launched "Ignite," a series where students in Japan share their voices in English. What do they see beyond our obvious differences, disabilities, and insecurities? Individually and collectively, today's students have the power to shape our global future. The Kagoshima student who wrote this ninth essay of the series wants to engage many people to address the issue of the silent victims abducted by North Korea. Annually, the Headquarters for the Abduction Issue holds a North Korean Human Rights Violations Awareness Week Essay Contest for junior and senior high school students across the country. (The Government of Japan established the Headquarters, an organization led by the Prime Minister and composed of all the Ministers of State to resolve the abductions issue.) It aims to raise awareness of the abduction issue through viewing films and stage plays, reading books related to the issue, and other opportunities to help the students understand the feelings of abduction victims and their families. These students often use the essay contest to think deeply about what they can and should do to resolve the abduction issue. Some, like Uta Fuchiwaki, also take on the challenge to directly communicate their thoughts and ideas to others in English. Let's listen. Ninth in the Series, 'Ignite' Minister for the Abductions and Chief Cabinet Minister Yoshimasa Hayashi presents the High School English Essay Certificate of Excellence Award to Uta Fuchiwaki. (Screenshot) Imagine a family member telling you they are going to the beach to watch the sunset, but they never return. This happened to Shuichi Ichikawa and Rumiko Masumoto in 1978 in my hometown, Kagoshima, when they were abducted by North Korean agents. Not only were their lives changed, but also the lives of their families, friends and relatives. Since then, their families have been campaigning, collecting signatures and appealing to the government to get them home. However, sadly, in 2002, the North Korean government admitted and apologized for abducting Japanese citizens. They confirmed that eight of the victims including Shuichi and Rumiko had already passed away. Despite hearing this shocking news and the lack of North Koreaʼs transparency, the families still believe their loved ones are alive and continue to fight for the truth or bring them home. I actually had the chance to talk with Mr [Kenichi] Ichikawa, the brother of Shuichi Ichikawa. He has gone through innumerable tough times, but the situation hasnʼt really changed. When I talked to my classmates about the abduction issue, many of them werenʼt even aware of this problem and thatʼs when I realized that this could be because of the younger generation, and our lack of understanding, cooperation and help. I feel even more strongly about this issue now because I am the younger generation. [And] I feel compelled to stand up more for this cause and take action to make sure Mr Ichikawa will suffer less. I am taking this opportunity to share with you two solutions. North Korean agents abducted Shuichi Ichikawa and Rimiko Masumoto from Fukiage Beach. (©Kagoshima Prefectural Police, Hioki Police Station) First, my generation seems to be unaware about these abductions. Mr Ichikawa told me that he is afraid of the abduction issues fading away. He also mentioned that, currently the youth are not interested in petitions and ignore flyers. Ignorance is a major concern and must be acknowledged as one of the biggest problems. So, we must continue to debate, discuss and deepen our understanding among the younger generations. I am sure that Mr Ichikawa would be pleased if we are more willing to work on this issue. Second, Mr Ichikawa said that he desperately wants to hold a summit with North Korea to directly discuss and negotiate, aiming to change the situation and reach the truth. But to make this happen, all generations must cooperate with the signature campaign. If people have a strong will, diplomacy will spread, Mr Ichikawa said. Mr Ichikawaʼs mother passed away without seeing her son and could never wear the kimono Shuichi gave to her. Also, Mr Ichikawa said when it is Shuichiʼs birthday the family canʼt talk about him and keeps silent. While their voices are silent, their house is filled with frog memorabilia from supporters around Japan. So, he always remains in their hearts as the meaning of frog in Japanese is to return. The least we can do is sign a petition, keep negotiations open and finally keep engaging the youth to give the silent victims a voice. Please, let us help keep Mr Ichikawaʼs will alive. Silent Victims. When she wrote this essay, Uta Fuchiwaki was an 11th-grade student at Kagoshima Joho High School in Kagoshima Prefecture, near where two abduction victims were taken by North Korean agents. She delivered this comment upon receiving the Excellence Award for her English essay by a high school student: Comment from the winner: English essays have the power to reach people all over the world. I sincerely hope that Mr and Mrs Ichikawa will be reunited with Shuichi. (Read the essay, which is also translated into Japanese) Author: Uta Fuchiwaki Student, Kagoshima Joho High School , Kagoshima Prefecture このページを 日本語 で読む

More English school boards join legal challenge to Quebec budget cuts
More English school boards join legal challenge to Quebec budget cuts

Montreal Gazette

time19 hours ago

  • Montreal Gazette

More English school boards join legal challenge to Quebec budget cuts

Quebec Politics Eight school boards have now joined a legal challenge to cuts in Quebec's education sector imposed by the province earlier this year. The boards are challenging the validity of $570 million in cuts announced by the province in June, as well as a $530-million budgetary envelope added in recent weeks, because that envelope dictates to boards how they can spend their money. The Quebec English School Boards Association filed two legal challenges in court on Friday: one to challenge the province's actions and the other to force a pause on the cuts while their validity is decided in court. The QESBA confirmed that eight boards have now signed on to join the legal challenges. They are: English Montreal School Board Lester B. Pearson School Board New Frontiers School Board Sir Wilfrid Laurier School Board Eastern Townships School Board Riverside School Board Central Quebec School Board Western Quebec School Board Earlier this week, the EMSB announced it would join the action. On Thursday evening, the LBPSB voted to also join the challenge. LBPSB chairperson Judy Kelley said in a phone interview on Friday that the cuts make it difficult for her board to balance its estimated $417-million budget. However, the board is more concerned that the new rules violate the constitutional rights of the province's English-speaking community to govern its public education system. 'We feel it is important for us to stand our ground and defend our minority rights,' Kelley said. She added that the new money isn't guaranteed by the province, because there are staffing targets imposed to access that money, so boards that don't meet those staffing targets would be penalized. 'It's very specific how you can use the money, and if you can't show you can fit that criteria, you don't receive the money,' she said. The new rules also impose that boards put in place cost-sharing mechanisms with other boards. Sir Wilfrid Laurier School Board chairperson James Di Sano said the cuts amount to roughly $1 million in a $250 million annual budget for his board, but he's concerned that the new provincial money dictates the staffing decisions of each school board. 'It's more that we're joining in principle and in unity with our sister boards,' Di Sano said. 'We're going to fight for our right to govern our respective institutions.' QESBA president Joe Ortona, who is also the chairperson of the EMSB, said Friday he welcomed the other boards joining the challenge. 'I think it shows that we're all united and sending the same message to the minister that these cuts would be impossible to maintain without slashing services,' he said. He said QESBA has made numerous appeals to Education Minister Bernard Drainville to reverse the cuts, but has not had its calls returned. 'It's unfortunate it had to come to this.' Reacting to the news, the lobby group Uni-es pour l'école said it admired the courage of the boards. 'The budget cuts that were called for by Bernard Drainville in June already have had consequences in our schools,' group spokesperson Adam Pétrin wrote in an emailed statement. 'Even though the minister said he would roll them back somewhat, the schools already made the cuts. We can see it in the number of teachers that are still missing a couple of days from the start of the school year. There are some 20,000 more students and 1,400 fewer teacher positions. Our public schools need massive investments if we are to meet every student's needs.' The group is organizing a week of action from Aug. 25-29 and a protest day on Sept. 7. This story was originally published August 15, 2025 at 3:37 PM.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store