Difference between revisions of "Japanese Christians in Hawaii"
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Revision as of 14:32, 25 June 2014
Though Japanese immigrants to Hawaii were almost exclusively followers of Buddhist and Shinto beliefs and practices, the earliest Buddhist temples to be established by or for the Japanese community in Hawaii came only after the establishment of a number of Christian churches meant to serve that community.
The first formal attempts to convert members of the Japanese community were made by a Dr. C.M. Hyde, of the Hawaiian Mission Board, who led English-language lessons and Bible classes for Japanese on the plantations, but found little success in converting anyone. The first Japanese minister to establish a church in the islands was Rev. Miyama Kanichi, who returned to Hawaii in 1887 from a Methodist Church Conference held in San Francisco that year, and who attempted to appeal to plantation workers' national pride as Japanese, and to their individual personal pride, to turn them away from drinking and gambling. Japanese Consul General in Hawaii from 1886 to 1888, Andô Tarô, was also a converted Christian, and played a prominent if brief role in the temperance movement in the islands. A Rev. Shimizu Taizô arrived in Honolulu from San Francisco in 1888 to aid Dr. Hyde, and a Rev. Okabe Jirô arrived the same year in Hilo, remaining there until 1892, when he too moved to Honolulu. Finally, in 1894, Rev. Okumura Takie, a recent graduate of Dôshisha University, arrived in the islands. These were the first prominent Japanese Christian leaders of missionizing efforts aimed at the Japanese community there.
Okumura became head of the Japanese Christian Church based in Nu'uanu in 1904, and established a second mission in the Makiki neighborhood of Honolulu that same year, but was also influential in establishing the islands' first Japanese language school, in 1896.
References
- Franklin Odo and Kazuko Sinoto, A Pictorial History of the Japanese in Hawaii 1885-1924, Bishop Museum (1985), 77.