The Star Malaysia

Emperor’s exit resets Japan calendar

Govt keeps mum as speculatio­n ramps up over name of ‘new era’

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Tokyo: The abdication of Japan’s Emperor Akihito on April 30 will quite literally mark the end of an era, the Heisei era of his rule, and highly secretive talks have been going on for months on what to call the next one.

This is anything but a procedural issue, as the name of the era has a tangible effect on the daily lives of the Japanese as well as a psychologi­cal impact on the nation.

Japan is the only country still using Chinese-style imperial calendars. It might be 2019 in much of the world, but in Japan it is Heisei 31 or the 31st year of Akihito’s reign.

While the Gregorian calendar is also widely used in Japan, imperial dates feature on government documents, newspapers and calendars.

“It is easier to imagine what the time was like if you have eras,” said Kunio Kowaguchi, president of major calendar maker Todan.

“For instance, it was early Heisei that the bubble burst,” he said, referring to the collapse of Japan’s speculatio­n-driven economy.

The upcoming end of the Heisei period was even reportedly a factor in the government’s decision to implement death sentences last year against 13 members of the Aum cult behind a 1995 sarin attack.

Government officials apparently wanted to a draw a line under the attacks before the Heisei era ends.

Japan has had nearly 250 eras since adopting the system in the seventh century.

Past emperors would switch era names mid-reign to mark a fresh

start after natural disasters or crises. But more recently, an era has run the entire length of a monarch’s rule.

Crown Prince Naruhito ascends the Chrysanthe­mum Throne on May 1. His era name will be announced at 11.30am on Monday – a month ahead of the ceremony.

And speculatio­n over what the name might be has been rife.

There have been over 10,000 entries in a public guessing competitio­n

run by a liquor company, hoping to win a vintage bottle of sake from year one of the Heisei era (1989).

A new era is a real challenge for companies like Kowaguchi’s, which produces 10 million calendars a year, many featuring both Western and imperial dates.

Printing begins a year before release, so it was too late for his 2019 run to feature the new name.

The new imperial era will be the

first since the IT revolution, with the tech sector girding for the transition.

Software used in Japan that converts between Western and imperial dates will need to be updated, and code and fonts for the new name will also need to be created.

Akihito’s decision to abdicate gave experts a rare head start in choosing the new era’s name. The task falls to the government rather than the palace and, like many royal matters, is shrouded in secrecy.

There are stringent guidelines requiring the name to have two characters, be easy to read and write, and not use common names.

And because each era name is considered “sacred”, any name put forward but rejected in the past cannot be proposed again.

One of the few people familiar with the challenge is Junzo Matoba, a former bureaucrat who helped look for new names in the last years of emperor Hirohito’s Showa era in the late 1980s.

“Some people thought it was irreverent to think about the next era” while the emperor was still alive, he said. “I had to work secretly.”

Japan’s government is believed to have a shortlist of names, but has been mum on potential choices.

A nine-member panel is to make a pick out of the candidates. Parliament leaders’ opinions will be heard and then Cabinet ministers will meet to give the final go-ahead.

“Japanese people love to ‘reset’ things,” said Matoba. “A new era, a new mindset. — AFP

 ??  ?? Guessing game: A shop worker arranging dolls depicting Japan’s chief Cabinet secretary Yoshihide Suga (left) and Prime Minister Shinzo Abe holding the new era names speculated by the public at Kyugetsu, a traditiona­l doll company, in Tokyo. — AP
Guessing game: A shop worker arranging dolls depicting Japan’s chief Cabinet secretary Yoshihide Suga (left) and Prime Minister Shinzo Abe holding the new era names speculated by the public at Kyugetsu, a traditiona­l doll company, in Tokyo. — AP

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