The Sun (San Bernardino)

Former Japanese prime minister attended USC, had cummunity ties

- By Elizabeth Chou hchou@scng.com

Former Japanese prime minister Shinzo Abe’s assassinat­ion set off strong emotions in Southern California, where the longtime leader attended USC and last visited in 2015.

“For him to be shot, it was quite shocking,” said David Ikegami, president of the Little Tokyo Business Associatio­n.

Japan doesn’t allow guns aside from rare uses and is considered a “very safe country,” said Ikegami, who had traveled to Japan many times before the pandemic, including in 2017. “They don’t have that type of gun violence trauma, like we do.”

Many in the Southern California area, Ikegami said, feel a natural connection to Abe, particular­ly those who attended USC; Abe attended the university for a time and Ikegami graduated from there.

Alums like himself were “very anxious” when they heard the news that Abe had been shot, Ikegami said.

“We consider him a fellow Trojan,” he said.

Abe spent three semesters at the USC Sol Price School of Public Policy, from 1978 to 1979, the university said. He studied English, political science, internatio­nal relations and history.

“The Trojan Family is deeply saddened and shocked by the horrific shooting of former Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, a proud Trojan who last visited USC in 2015,” USC President Carol Folt said in a statement.

The university Friday shared photos of Abe’s last trip to USC, including shots of him meeting with faculty members and donning a letterman’s jacket bearing the iconic SC letters.

“The brutal assassinat­ion of Prime Minister Shinzo Abe saddens us all,” tweeted L.A. Mayor Eric Garcetti. “The Prime Minister visited L.A. in 2015 and we hold fast to his vision for partnershi­p and cooperatio­n throughout the Pacific Rim.”

Kimiko Fujita, president of the Orange County Japanese American Associatio­n, said she was shocked to see gun violence in a country like Japan, which boasts one of the world’s most restrictiv­e firearms laws.

Her impression of Abe comes from a Los Angeles event she attended at which Abe’s presence as a representa­tive of the Japanese government showed “they care” even about Japanese living overseas in the U.S.

Fujita said their group often works with their community’s seniors, such as delivering food during the pandemic. And she was impressed that despite his stature, Abe and his wife remained standing until an elder, 96-year-old attendee had been seated.

The shooting has left Fujita wondering why such a thing happened. She was shocked because “Japan and the U.S. are completely different . ... The gun control is very strict (in Japan), so it’s very difficult to get a gun. But they made it — handmade it. That’s unbelievab­le.”

The state of global geopolitic­s weighed on Akio Katano, an attorney and community organizer, who said the shooting may “fuel the ultranatio­nalists in Japan.”

While Abe is a well-liked dignitary in the West, Katano said, the former prime minister was far from an innocuous figure in the East.

Abe, while serving longer than any other prime minister in Japan’s history and maintainin­g strong ties to the West, could be a divisive figure. Supporters said his legacy was a stronger U.S.-Japan relationsh­ip that was meant to bolster Japan’s defense capability. But Abe made enemies by forcing his defense goals and other contentiou­s issues through parliament despite strong public opposition.

His nationalis­m angered officials in the Koreas and China. Abe failed to achieve his cherished goal of formally rewriting the U.S.-drafted pacifist constituti­on because of poor public support. Following the U.S.-Japanese treaty that ended World War II’s conflict in the Pacific Theater — which levied strict military limitation­s on the Asian empire’s military sovereignt­y — the country also implemente­d a constituti­on that said Japan could only use the military for self-defense within its borders.

Some also accused Abe of downplayin­g such wartime atrocities as the “rape of Nanking” and the sexual abuse of “comfort women” in Korea. Katano said it is vital that people acknowledg­e the full scope of Abe’s legacy in “a time of rising tensions” in the East.

Meanwhile, Haruo Takehana, a Los Angeles businessma­n who leads the Japanese American Chamber of Commerce, said that he prayed for Abe’s recovery when he learned the news of the shooting.

“I personally and strongly condemn the violence,” he said, adding that the shooting suspect, Tetsuya Yamagami, “should have been able to express his opinion by election.”

Takehana said Abe’s positive contributi­ons included introducin­g new economic reform in his second stint as Japan’s prime minister.

He also recalled Abe visiting the U.S. and making a stop at Los Angeles’s Little Tokyo neighborho­od to pay respects at a monument commemorat­ing a unit of Japanese Americans who fought for their country in World War II, even as their people were being interned in concentrat­ion camps by the U.S. government.

Mark Nakagawa, the West District superinten­dent of the local region’s United Methodist Church, said that Abe stood out as a prime minister who seemed to excel at building relationsh­ips with the West. Abe was able to maintain good relationsh­ips with U.S. presidents, such as Barack Obama, he said, “and even Trump — and I don’t know if that is a good thing, but I mean, gosh, even Donald Trump praised the guy today.”

“Even though he was seen as extremist in some of his political views, he probably had as good of an understand­ing of America — if not a better understand­ing of America — than most recent prime ministers simply because of his experience living here in the U.S., not to mention right here in Los Angeles, which is the most highly populated Japanese American community in the country,” Nakagawa said, “I think it goes back to his experience living here in North America and understand­ing at least on a minimal level, how Americans think and what American life was like.”

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