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Abe Isoo

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Constituency
  
Tokyo 2nd district

Name
  
Abe Isoo

Constituency
  
Tokyo 2nd district

Party
  
Shakai Taishuto

Residence
  
Tokyo

Resigned
  
1940

Occupation
  
preacher


Abe Isoo httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Born
  
4 February 1865 Fukuoka, Japan (
1865-02-04
)

Political party
  
Shakai Minshuto→ Shakai Minshuto→ Shakai Taishuto→ Kinro Kokuminto (banned)→ Independent→ Japanese Socialist Party

Alma mater
  
Doshisha University, University of Berlin and Hartford Theological Seminary

Died
  
February 10, 1949, Tokyo, Japan

Education
  
Humboldt University of Berlin, Doshisha University, Hartford Seminary

Abe Isoo (安部 磯雄, 4 February 1865 – 10 February 1949) was a Japanese Christian socialist, parliamentarian and pacifist.

Contents

Early life and education

Abe was born in Fukuoka on 4 February 1865. He studied at Doshisha University and abroad, including at the University of Berlin, before attending Hartford Theological Seminary in Hartford, Connecticut. It was while he was studying in Hartford that he became interested in socialism.

Career

After returning to Japan, in 1899, Abe became a Unitarian preacher. He taught at the Waseda University starting in 1901, called Tokyo Semmon Gakko, at the time. He would teach for 25 years. In 1901 he helped to found the short-lived Japanese Social-Democratic party, which the government swiftly prohibited.

During the Russo-Japanese War, he advocated non-cooperation and participated in various early feminist movements. When the anti-war newspaper Heimin Shimbun (People's Weekly News) was banned, he started his own magazine, Shinkigen (A New Era). He used this as a soapbox to promote parliamentary socialism. In 1906, he played an instrumental role in founding the first Japanese Socialist Party, from which he advocated a Christian Socialist viewpoint. However, the government outlawed this party too in 1907. He dropped out of public life until after World War I, when he became active again. He founded the Japanese Fabian Society, in 1921, and in 1924, he became their first President. He resigned his teaching post to become the secretary-general of the Social Democratic Party. In 1928, he was elected to the Japanese Diet, where he held a seat for five consecutive elections. In 1932, he became a chairman of Shakai Taishuto (Social Mass Party). He withdrew from politics in 1940 due to the increasingly militaristic nature of the current government. Abe's other claim to fame was that he was responsible for the emergence of baseball in Japan.

References

Abe Isoo Wikipedia


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