Sun.Star Pampanga

Japan’s former princess leaves for US with commoner husband

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OKYO (AP) — A Japanese princess who gave up the throne to marry her commoner college sweetheart left for New York on Sunday, as the couple pursued happiness as newlyweds and left behind a nation that has criticized their romance.

TThe departure of Mako Komuro, the former Princess Mako, and Kei Komuro, both 30, as they boarded their plane amid a flurry of camera flashes at Haneda airport in Tokyo was carried live by major Japanese broadcaste­rs.

Kei Komuro, a graduate of Fordham University law school, has a job at a New York law firm. He has yet to pass his bar exam, another piece of news that local media have used to attack him, although it is common to pass after multiple attempts.

“I love Mako,” he told reporters last month after registerin­g their marriage in Tokyo. They did so without a wedding banquet or any of the other usual celebrator­y rituals.

“I want to live the only life person I love,” he said.

Although Japan appears modern in many ways, values about family relations and the status of women remain somewhat antiquated, rooted in feudal

I have with the practices.

Such views were accentuate­d in the public’s reaction to the marriage. Some Japanese feel they have a say in such matters because taxpayer money supports the imperial family system.

Other princesses have married commoners and left the palace. But Mako is the first to have drawn such a public outcry, including a frenzied reaction on social media and in local tabloids.

Speculatio­n ranged from whether the couple could afford to live in Manhattan to how much money Kei Komuro would earn and if the former princess would end up financiall­y supporting her husband.

Mako is the niece of Emperor Naruhito, who also married a commoner, Masako. Masako often suffered mentally in the cloistered, regulated life of the imperial family. The negative media coverage surroundin­g Mako’s marriage gave her what palace doctors described last month as a form of traumatic stress disorder.

Former Emperor Akihito, the father of the current emperor, was the first member of the imperial family to marry a commoner. His father was the emperor under whom Japan fought and lost in World

War II.

The family holds no political power but serves as a symbol of the nation, attending ceremonial events and visiting disaster zones, and remains relatively popular.

Only males inherit the Chrysanthe­mum Thone. Mako is the daughter of the emperor’s younger brother, and her 15-year-old brother is expected to eventually be emperor.

Complicati­ng the former princess’s marriage, announced in 2017, was a financial dispute involving Kei Komuro’s mother.

That issue was recently settled, according to Kyodo news service.

When Kei Komuro returned from the U.S. in September, the couple was reunited for the first time in three years. They met while attending Tokyo’s Internatio­nal Christian University a decade ago.

In announcing their marriage, the former princess, a museum curator, made her choice cl ear.

“He is someone I cannot do without,” she said. “Marriage is that decision needed for us to live on, staying true to our hearts.”

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