Emperor Akihito, Japan's 'Surprising Pacifist,' Steps Down After 30 Years
Japan's defeat in World War II "produced in him strong feelings against war and its chaos," says a childhood friend. Akihito has expressed deep remorse at home and abroad for Japan's wartime actions.
by Anthony Kuhn
Apr 30, 2019
4 minutes
In the years immediately after World War II, at the Peers' School in Tokyo, a Quaker teacher named Elizabeth Vining liked to give English names to her students, all children of the Japanese nobility.
"I was Eric," recalls Masao Oda, one of Vining's former pupils.
His roommate and classmate, a boy named Akihito, was given the name Jimmy. But Akihito pushed back.
"So he stood up and rejected this name given by Mrs. Vining, 'Jimmy,'" Oda recalls. "'I'm not a Jimmy, I'm a crown prince,' he said."
Akihito ascended the Chrysanthemum Throne in 1989, succeeding his father, Emperor Hirohito. On
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