Английская Википедия:Akira Shimada

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Шаблон:Short description Шаблон:Family name hatnote Шаблон:Infobox Officeholder

Шаблон:Nihongo was the last governor of Okinawa Prefecture before Japan's defeat in 1945. He died during the Battle of Okinawa.

Early years

Born in Suma-ku, Kobe in 1901, Akira Shimada was the first-born son of a physician. He studied in the Department of Law at Tokyo University. In college, he was a baseball star and rugby player. After graduating, he joined the Ministry of Interior Affairs as a law enforcement official.

Before being governor, Shimada became the top police official in Saga Prefecture. He attended study meetings at Nishibori Shōin, where he was deeply interested in the book Hagakure and the teachings of Saigō Takamori on the chivalric code of Japanese warriors, bushido. These teachings ultimately motivated Shimada to run for governor.

Governor of Okinawa

On January 10, 1945, he was appointed governor of Okinawa Prefecture, leaving his position as Chief of the General Affairs Department in Osaka Prefecture. The previous governor, Шаблон:Nihongo, was appointed Governor of Kagawa Prefecture. It was the height of World War II, with intervention by the American forces regarded as inevitable. When accepting the offer, he was noted to say: "If someone must go, it should be me. I can't ask someone else to (possibly die) do this." He took a Japanese sword and potassium cyanide with him to Okinawa.

On the mainland of Okinawa

On January 31, he arrived in Okinawa and immediately tried to improve relations between the Thirty-Second Army and Okinawa Prefecture. He first evacuated the inhabitants into northern Okinawa, which had been delayed under the previous governor. Next, he placed stockpiles of food in various parts of the prefecture. In the latter part of February, he flew to Taiwan and secured 3000 koku of Taiwan rice, which was sent to Naha.[1] In March, violent air-raids began and the Okinawan local government moved from Naha to a cave in Shuri, the previous capital of Okinawa. As the situation worsened, he moved from one cave to another, keeping close relations with the army. He was friendly even to female workers. When asked to wash his face, he said that he could not use precious water. Water was brought at great risk. He used the water after it was used to wash rice. He was against the Army's aiming at southern parts of Okinawa, since many inhabitants were there and might be affected. He said that it would be absurd to discard the well-equipped Shuri and that they should die in honor at Shuri. General Mitsuru Ushijima (the commanding general of the 32nd Army), on the contrary, concluded the meeting saying that the aim of the army would be to delay American attacks on the mainland of Japan as much as possible.[2] On June 9, Shimada ordered the dissolution of the prefecture and police staff, with his desire of preserving their life. On June 26, Shimada left the cave called Todorokino Gō with Taizo Arai, the police chief and, after that, their whereabouts were unknown.

Admiral Minoru Ōta and Shimada

Admiral Minoru Ōta and Shimada were close friends in Okinawa. In place of Shimada, Ota sent a telegram to the Vice-Admiral of mainland Japan reporting on the tragic conditions of Okinawans.

Suicide

In an article in the Okinawa Times, a local Okinawa newspaper, Hatsuo Yamamoto, who was the chief of a machine gun group, said: Шаблон:Quotation [3][4]

The cave where he died is now called Todorokino Gō, also known as the last Okinawa Prefectural Office.

Legacy

After the death of Shimada, Interior Minister Genki Abe gave him an Interior Minister Award and praised him as a good example of government officials. In 1951, the tower of Shimamori was constructed as a memorial to Shimada and 453 officials of the Okinawa Prefectural Office. The Shimada Cup is now given to the winning team of the high school baseball tournament in Okinawa.

Footnotes

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References

External links

Шаблон:Governors of Okinawa Prefecture Шаблон:Authority control

  1. Ota [1977]. The rice reached Naha, according to Masahide Ota
  2. Ota [1977]
  3. Tamura [2003]
  4. Okinawa Times, September 1, 1971