Yaeko Batchelor Explained

was an Ainu waka poet and evangelist.

Life

Yaeko Batchelor was born on June 13, 1884, in Usu, Date City, Hokkaido. Her name was entered into the family register as, and her childhood name was Fuchi.[1] Her father was, a member of a powerful Ainu family, and whose Ainu name was . Her mother was named . Among Yaeko's five siblings was the Anglican pastor . Yaeko's father deeply trusted the Anglican missionary John Batchelor, and allowed Yaeko to be baptized. However, when Yaeko was 11, her father died. When she was 13, she set out for Sapporo to attend the Ainu Girls' School that Batchelor operated, and later advanced to St. Hilda's School in Tokyo.

In 1906, when Yaeko was 22, she was adopted by John Batchelor and his wife Louisa. January in 1909 Yaeko accompanied the pair on a trip to England, and was commissioned as a lay evangelist by the Archbishop of Canterbury. She pursued this mission in Biratori and Noboribetsu. In 1912, she went with her adopted father to Sakhalin to spread her faith there.

In 1931, a collection of her tanka poems entitled was published.[2] Her adoptive mother Louisa died in 1936, and was buried in Maruyama Cemetery in Sapporo. Her adoptive father John Batchelor died in 1944. Yaeko stored about 250 of his books and some of his other items in her home after his death.

Yaeko Batchelor died on 29 April 1962, in Kyoto while visiting there, at the age of 78.

Bibliography

Notes and References

  1. Web site: 文筆活動に生きた女性たち - 向井(バチェラー)八重子. Women who Lived to Write: Yaeko Mukai (Batchelor). .
  2. Book: Batchelor, Yaeko. ja:若きウタリに. Wakaki utari ni. For the Young Ainu. Iwanami Gendai Bunko. December 17, 2003. 978-4006020781. ja.