Kunio Maruyama

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Kunio Maruyama (

college professor of English and economics. He was one of the three Japanese men who were secretly sent from Xinjing's Japanese Society, that led to the successful repatriation of most of the 1.6 million Japanese who had been trapped in the former Manchukuo at the end of World War II
.

Early life

He was born in Yanagihara Village, now part of Iiyama, Nagano Prefecture, in 1903. He went a local high school there, and graduated from Meiji University, Tokyo, in 1930, with a major in law. He further studied at the University of Puget Sound, George Washington University, and Columbia University, from which universities he received BA and MA degrees.

He left the US in 1937 and visited Europe, returning to Japan in 1938.

Working in Manchukuo

Like many adventurous young Japanese at that time, Kunio left Japan and sought his career in Manchukuo, that Japan had established in 1931. He worked in the planning and education departments of Showa Steel Works (昭和製鋼所), Anshan, which is now the main plant of Ansteel Group (Chinese: 鞍钢股份有限公司).[1]

Arranging Repatriation of Over One Million Japanese

When World War II ended in 1945, about 1.6 million Japanese people were left in Manchuria, most of which was nominally under the

Chinese Nationalist
control.

Once in Japan, the reply of

Fukuoka. This operation is now known in Japan as the Great Japanese Repatriation from Huludao 1946–48
.

Kunio's effort to push for the repatriation did not end with simply delivering a message to the Supreme Commander. He further negotiated with other people and organizations, including the staff of the Allied Forces and the

Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Shigeru Yoshida who would become Japan's next premier, and Father Byrne
who advised on General MacArthur. He also published a few books on the need and results of the repatriation.

Teaching in Colleges

From 1953, he taught English and Economics at Meiji University, his alma mater. In 1964, he did economic research at both University of Glasgow and University of Edinburgh. After Meiji University's mandatory retirement in 1969, he taught at Teikyo University.

Kunio Maruyama died in Tokyo in 1981.

Personal life

Kunio was married to Mary Takeda, his sweetheart from his University of Puget Sound days. Both were Christians. Between them were born six children: four sons and two daughters. His third son, Paul K. Maruyama (丸山邦昭), was an Olympian of the U.S. Judo Team.

NHK TV Drama

NHK, the semi-Japanese Government TV-Radio network, announced in September 2017 that Kunio Maruyama's life will be broadcast on March 24 and 30, 9:00 pm, as a Special Drama Series called A Country Which Exists Nowhere (どこにもない国), with Seiyo Uchino playing the title role of Kunio.[3]

References