Yemyo Imamura Explained

Yemyo Imamura (May 27, 1867 December 22, 1932) was a Buddhist priest who was active in Honolulu, Hawaii, and was a leader in the Japanese American community. He was a priest at the Honpa Hongwanji, and started their Young Men's Buddhist Association (YMBA).

Yemyo Imamura
Native Name:今村恵猛
Native Name Lang:jp
Birth Date:27 May 1867
Birth Place:Fukui Prefecture, Tokugawa Shogunate (modern-day Japan)
Death Place:Honolulu, Territory of Hawaii, United States
Alma Mater:Keio University

Early life

Imamura was born in Togo village, Fukui prefecture, Japan on May 27, 1867.[1] He entered the priesthood in 1876, when he was 10 years old. After studying in temple schools in Kyoto, he received a scholarship to study at Keio University in Tokyo. He graduated in 1893, then returned to Fukui to teach English.[2]

Career

In 1899, Imamura moved to Hawaii to serve the Jodo Shinshu Buddhists there. He took over the Honpa Hongwanji when its first priest, Honi Satomi, returned to Japan.[3] Heth married his wife Kiyoko in 1904, and they had a son named Kanmo, who also became a priest.

Imamura established the Young Men's Buddhist Association as a Buddhist equivalent to the YMCA. Their activities included teaching English, helping new immigrants adjust to the local culture, and publishing a magazine called Dōhō.[4] In 1902 Imamura opened the Fort Gakuen, a elementary school attached to the temple. He later opened the Hawaii Chugakko (middle school) in 1907. Both schools were Japanese language schools that student attended after the regular school day finished. He also advocated for plantation laborers and picture brides.

Much of Imamura's career was spent showing the similarities between Buddhism and Christianity and Americanizing young Japanese immigrants through Buddhism.[5] He wanted to make Buddhism more compatible with American life in Hawaii, and show it as a "universal" rather than "supernatural" religion.[6] Unlike his Christian contemporary, Takie Okumura, Imamura's focus while Americanizing Japanese youth wasn't to encourage them to leave Japanese culture behind, but rather to carry its values with them as American citizens.

In 1928, Imamura was awarded the Order of the Sacred Treasure for his work expanding the influence of Jodo Shinshu in Hawaii.

Imamura died on December 22, 1932.[7]

Family

His wife Kiyoko(清子) is a daughter of Ahikaga Gizan. Kiyoko's younger sister, Kai Wariko., is the founder of Kyoto Women's University. Yemyo and Kiyoko's daughter, Keiko(恵子) Glenn, used to be a professor of Hawaii Loa College. [8]

Further reading

Notes and References

  1. Book: Snodgrass, Mary Ellen. Settlers of the American West : the lives of 231 notable pioneers. 24 February 2015. 9780786497355. Jefferson, North Carolina. 883647512.
  2. Book: Chinen, Karleen C.. Hawaii's AJA pioneers : one hundred profiles commemorating the centennial of the Hawaii Hochi. Hawaii Hochi Ltd.. 2012. Honolulu, Hawaii. 14–15.
  3. Book: Kimura, Yukiko. Issei : Japanese immigrants in Hawaii. 1992. University of Hawaii Press. 0824814819. Honolulu. 37566798.
  4. Book: Kodomo no tame ni = For the sake of the children : the Japanese American experience in Hawaii. Ogawa. Dennis. Grant. Glen. 1980. University Press of Hawaii. 0824807308. Honolulu. 7865082. Dennis M. Ogawa. Glen Grant (historian). registration.
  5. Book: Japanese American history : an A-to-Z reference from 1868 to the present. 1993. Facts on File. Niiya, Brian., Japanese American National Museum (Los Angeles, Calif.). 0816026807. New York. 26853950. registration.
  6. Book: Issei Buddhism in the Americas. Williams. Duncan Ryūken. Moriya. Tomoe. University of Illinois Press. 2010. 9780252092893. Urbana. 698167405. Duncan Ryūken Williams.
  7. Web site: 今村恵猛(いまむらえみょう)とは. 日本人名大辞典+Plus,日本大百科全書(ニッポニカ). ブリタニカ国際大百科事典 小項目事典,デジタル版. コトバンク. ja. 2019-03-23.
  8. http://www.ritsumei.ac.jp/file.jsp?research/iilcs/08_lcs_31_1_sakaguchi.pdf 京都女子高等専門学校で学んだハワイの日系人