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Title: Noe, Ito, 1895â1923 Author: Anarchist Federation Language: en Topics: anarchist biography, biography, Japan, japanese anarchists Source: From Organise! 59 by the Anarchist Federation. https://libcom.org/history/articles/1895-1923-ito-noe Notes: A short biography of Ito Noe, a courageous Japanese woman who broke with her social conditioning and became a champion of both womenâs liberation and anarchism.
Ito Noe
Born 1895 â Kyushu, Japan, died 1923 â Tokyo, Japan
Ito was born in 1895, to a family of landed aristocracy, on the southern
island of Kyushu. After graduating from Ueno Girls High School, she was
forced against her will into an arranged marriage in her native village.
She soon ran away to Tokyo.
In Tokyo, women had been developing progressive ideas since the 1870s.
Hiratsuka Raicho founded the Seitosha (Blue Stocking Society) and
brought out its magazine Seito (Blue Stocking) which gave space to women
to develop their literary, aesthetic and political capabilities. Ito
joined this group in 1913, at the age of 18, and became one of its
editors from 1915 to 1916. Skilled in several languages, including
English, she translated articles by the anarchist, Emma Goldman, on the
situation of women.
Ito later married the writer Tsuji Jun (1884â1944), who had taught her
at school in 1912, but left him to have a passionate love affair with
the charismatic anarchist firebrand Osugi Sakae in 1916.
Ito and Osugi believed in the concepts of free love. Osugi at this time
was conducting an affair with the leading woman anarchist, Ichiko
Kamachiko. Unfortunately, the theoretical concepts of free love collided
with human jealousy and Kamachika attacked Osugi with a knife and
severely wounded him. The mass media used this incident to attack Ito,
Osugi and Kamachika for their âimmoralityâ and the anarchist movement in
general. This caused problems in the anarchist group in which Ito and
Osugi were involved and many comrades split with them.
Ito worked with Osugi in promoting the anarchist movement, as well as
developing her ideas on womenâs liberation. She helped found the
socialist womenâs group Sekirankai in 1921. She produced over 80
articles for different publications, as well as translating the work of
European anarchists like Peter Kropotkin and Emma Goldman. In addition,
she produced several autobiographical novels, which charted her life
from adolescence, through breaking with tradition, to reaching her
emancipated and anarchist outlook. They included Zatsuon(Noises) in 1916
at the age of 21, and Tenki(Turning Point) in 1918.
In 1919, with Osugi, Wada Kyutaro and Kondo Kenji, she brought out the
first Rodo Undo (Labour Movement) magazine, which sought to link
anarchism to the industrial working class and many branches of an
organisation with the same name were set up.
Two years later, in September 1923, shortly after the birth of her
seventh child, the Great Kanto Earthquake hit Japan.
As often happens in the aftermath of an earthquake, many fires broke out
and more people were killed by these than by the quake. A total of
100,000 died and as many as two million were left homeless.
Rumours began to spread, encouraged by the authorities, that various
âunpopularâ groups were responsible for starting fires and causing other
mischief to aggravate the situation. As a result, mobs attacked many
immigrant Korean and Chinese workers, and the police used the
opportunity to murder anarchist and socialist militants. Thousands were
killed. Among them were ten socialists in Kameido in Tokyo, as well as
Ito Noe, Sakae Osugi and his six year old nephew, Tachebana Munekazu.
They were taken into custody on 16 September and all were
beaten and strangled in the cells of the dreaded Kempei-tai secret
police. Osugi had been No. 1 on their death list for a long time.
Several days later, the bodies were found in a well, where they had been
left to decompose. At the trial which followed the discovery of the
murderer, a secret policeman, Amakasu Masahiko, on orders from Emperor
Hirohito, was given just ten yearsâ gaol. Released by personal order of
Hirohito, four years later, and assigned to âspecial dutiesâ in
Manchuria, he finally committed suicide in 1945, before his crimes could
be avenged by the many anarchists after his blood.
Earlier in 1924, Wada Kyutaro, a comrade of Ito and Osugi, had attempted
to kill Fukuda Masataro, the general in charge of the military district
where they had been murdered, who had passed on orders from Hirohito to
the secret policeman.
Ito was well aware of the consequences of being an anarchist in Japan at
that time. In 1911, Kotoku Shusui, the leading woman anarchist, Kanno
Suga, and ten other anarchists were framed on flimsy charges of
attempting to kill the Emperor and subsequently executed.
In his autobiography, Bertrand Russell recounts how he met Ito Noe in
Japan in 1921. âShe was young and beautiful... Dora [Bertrand Russellâs
wife] said to her: âAre you not afraid that the authorities will do
something to you?â She drew her hand across her throat, and said, âI
know they will sooner or laterâ.