Bombing of the Fusetsu no Gunzo and Institute of Northern Cultures explained

Bombing of the Fusetsu no Gunzo and Institute of Northern Cultures
Location:Monument: Tokiwa Park, Asahikawa, Japan
Institute: Hokkaido University, Kita-ku, Sapporo, Hokkaido, Japan
Target:The Fusetsu no Gunzo monument and Institute of Northern Cultures building
Coordinates:Monument: 43.7745°N 142.3563°W
Institute:
Date:October 23, 1972
Type:Bombing
Perpetrators:East Asia Anti-Japan Armed Front
Motive:To eliminate symbols of historical Japanese imperialism

The was a terrorist bombing that occurred on 23 October 1972. It was undertaken by a group which would soon be known as the East Asia Anti-Japan Armed Front, though this name was not decided on until later in the same year.

The targets

The Fusetsu no Gunzo, literally the Wind and Snow Group, is a bronze monument produced by the Japanese sculptors Shin Hongo and Meiji Honda located in Tokiwa Park in Asahikawa, Hokkaido. It depicts four Japanese colonists surrounding an elderly Ainu and was a project marking the 80th anniversary of the city and the 100th anniversary of Hokkaido's formation.[1] The Institute of Northern Cultures is the Ainu cultural research center of Hokkaido University.

The Institute of Northern Cultures is an institute of Hokkaido University concerned with the research of Ainu culture.

The East Asia Anti-Japan Armed Front considered these two targets symbols of Japan's imperialistic aggression against the "Ainu Moshiri" or Ainu homeland and decided to blow them up. Masashi Daidoji in particular, the Hokkaido-born leading member of the plotters, had a special interest in the Japanese-Ainu conflict.

They set 23 October as the date of the bombing. This was the date on which Ainu chief Shakushain, who started Shakushain's Revolt, was murdered by the Matsumae Clan.

The bombing

They split into two groups and arrived in Hokkaido on 23 October 1972. They each proceeded directly to their site and set the explosion for 11:30 PM. Both bombs exploded on time, and the Fusetsu no Gunzo was destroyed but the Institute of Northern Cultures escaped with relatively minor damage.

In 1977, the Fusetsu no Gunzo was restored, and it remains in place to the present day.

Bibliography

(読売新聞社・戦後ニッポンを読む、1997)

(河出書房新社・松下竜一その仕事22、2000)

Notes and References

  1. Richard Siddle, "Ainu: Japan's Indigenous People," in Japan's minorities: the illusion of homogeneity, ed. Michael Weiner (London ; New York : Routledge, 1997), 30.