Changes

Jump to: navigation, search

Paul Sawabe

1 byte removed, 23:38, July 27, 2011
m
deleted solitaire bracket
{{orthodoxyinjapan}}
'''Paul (Pavel) Sawabe''' was the first Japanese student and [[catechumen]] of St. [[Nicholas of Japan]] after he had arrived in Hakodate, Japan in 1861. Paul was the first Japanese to embrace Orthodox Christianity and was an ardent disciple of the future St. [Nicholas and was an active [[missionary]]. Through his efforts the Japanese mission drew many new Christians and in time he became the first Japanese to be [[ordination|ordained]] to the [[priest]]hood.
[[Image:PavelSawabe.jpg|thumb|left|Fr. Paul Sawabe]]'''Takuma Sawabe''' was born in 1833 in Kochi prefecture. His original name was Yamamoto Kazuma. He was a student, with a cousin, of the samurai art of Ken-do (Japanese swordsmanship) and philosophy. In 1857, while walking off some heavy drinking, Yamamoto ended up with two watches stolen by his cousin, but which he tried to sell. Yamamoto fled to Hakodate to escape the police who had identified him as having stolen the watches. In Hakodate, Yamamoto married the daughter of a Shinto priest named Sawabe. Yamamoto, after marrying the priest's daughter, became an adopted son of the priest and changed his name. Under his new identity Takuma Sawabe did not participate in the Shinto priesthood, but led a group that reverenced the Emperor and demanded expulsion of the foreigners. The Russian Consulate in Hakodate became a target of their plan for assassinations.
16,951
edits

Navigation menu