Brent Rogers, Kojima Japan

January 31, 2008

Suicide Rate In Japan Reaches Epidemic Proportions

Filed under: Uncategorized — brentwrogers.com @ 8:19 pm

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Suicide Rate In Japan Reaches Epidemic Proportions
——————————————————————————–

Asia Times Wednesday 28th July, 2004

Japan has been stricken by an epidemic of suicides cutting across all social strata and age groups, according to recently released statistics for 2003.

Every day nearly 100 people take their own lives, at a rate of almost one every 15 minutes. And the long economic slump is a factor. Despite recent signs of economic recovery, the good news hasn’t yet touched the lives of those who leap off buildings, hurl themselves in front of trains, apparently in droves, or hang themselves.

‘All that’s left are endless bankruptcies, chronic unemployment, high suicide rates and a lot of despair,’ one retired rural official told Asia Times Online.

Since 2003, the Aokigahara woods at the base of Mount Fuji have been known as the ’suicide forest’ because 78 middle-aged men apparently committed suicide by hanging themselves from tree branches. Experts cite unemployment, bankruptcies and other economic problems as major reasons for the deaths.

Some of the dominant economic factors that have contributed to the current suicide crisis include large-scale bankruptcies, increased unemployment, a sluggish business climate, accumulated debts, lower incomes, inadequate bankruptcy laws, prolonged economic stagnation, an unregulated financial loan market and corporate restructuring. Ill-health, despair and other problems plague the nation of 127 million, the world’s second-biggest economy.

The total number of Japanese suicides is roughly equal to that of the entire United States, a country that has more than twice Japan’s population. To put the latest data in context, in today’s Japan one is roughly five times as likely to die by one’s own hand as to be killed in a traffic accident.

Some cultural factors exacerbate the problem: lack of religious prohibition against suicide, reluctance to discuss mental health and stress-related problems, a literary tradition that romanticizes suicide, a view of suicide as an honorable act, a way of taking responsibility for failure, among other issues. The breakdown of family and social networks and the increasing isolation of individuals contribute to the problem.

The figures for 2003 paint an exceedingly grim picture, showing that a record 34,427 Japanese men and women took their own lives last year. According to the latest statistics from the National Police Agency (NPA), the number of suicides has increased by 7.1%, or 2,284 more lives lost than in 2002. Many people believe the long recession is a key factor behind the rise.

Especially troubling is the steep increase in the number of people in their 30s taking their own lives. The death toll for this age bracket reached 4,603, an increase of 17%, translating into 668 more cases than in the previous year.

As in other countries, men are far more likely to take their own lives than women, and men account for a staggering 73% of all suicides in Japan. Suicide by the elderly, 33.5%, and by people with financial problems, 25.8%, account for the two largest non-gender groupings. There has also been an alarming surge in the number of children committing suicide.

Financially related suicides up
Japanese suicide rates have been high since 1998, when a surge in bankruptcies and unemployment generated a big upswing in people taking their lives for financial reasons. In the decade leading up to 1997, the number of people who killed themselves hovered in a relatively low range of between 15,000 and 25,000 a year. In 1998, suicide broke the 30,000 threshold and has remained high ever since.

The latest figures also reveal that there were 8,897 money-related suicides, a rise of 12.1% from the 2002 level, which translates into an additional 957 deaths and marks the first time the 8,000 barrier has been exceeded for this category.

The NPA statistics attributed 25.8% of all suicides to money problems. Of these, 5,043 cases were classified as being due to difficulty in paying debts, an increase of 900 or 21.7%. A further 1,321 cases, a rise of 153, were due to other financial difficulties, such as bankruptcies or poor business performance.

Suicide due to failure to gain employment totaled 183 people, up 18.1% from 2002. Although Japan’s long recession appears to be finally ending, the financial turmoil and despair it has created shows little sign of abating.

Suicide destroying rural Japan
Like a virulent biblical plague, for the past seven years suicide has ravaged Japanese society, especially rural areas. Hiroshi Sakamoto, a retired local-government official and volunteer suicide councilor, bitterly blames the government for the current crisis. He told Asia Times Online, ‘Suicide has caused so much pain and damage to the less economically developed regions of Japan. Yet the government has done nothing. It feels like Tokyo just doesn’t care about people living in small cities and towns. We simply don’t count because we don’t live in big cities. Regions like Hokkaido have been decimated by the recession.

‘All that’s left are endless bankruptcies, chronic unemployment, high suicide rates and a lot of despair.’

Sakamoto added, ‘Almost everyone in rural Japan has lost someone to suicide.’ He said a close friend took his life last year. He owned a bar, and business had been bad for years since people had less money to spend. His debts mounted and his business, his life’s work, began to fail. ‘He just could not take it, and took his life. Every week this kind of sad tale is repeated hundreds of times in Hokkaido and all over rural Japan,’ Sakamoto said.

Many people believe the government lacks the political will to tackle the socially sensitive issue, a situation that has allowed suicide rates to soar. The long economic downturn, changing socio-economic trends and various cultural factors combine to transform society, creating a less stable and more suicide-prone environment.

Youth suicide rising
The recent sharp increase in the number of child deaths is one of the most troubling developments. It seems that almost every week there are several tragic cases involving schoolchildren either taking their own lives or being murdered by a mother or father before the despairing parent commits suicide. The number of family murder-suicides is not detailed in the current NPA figures, but news and other reports indicate their frequency is growing.

The latest NPA data confirm that suicide by elementary- and middle-school students is a serious social problem. The suicide rate for this group rose by a massive 57.6%, representing a total of 93 innocent lives lost, 34 more than in 2002. Among high-school students there was also a sharp rise of 29.3%. In total, 225 young lives were lost in this category. There was also an increase in the number of college students killing themselves. The overall suicide rate among people aged 19 or younger rose by 22%.

Experts say that young people who commit suicide are greatly influenced by adults who take their own lives and the publicity surrounding the deaths. The stress and competition in school for jobs that may no longer exist have also been documented.

Just a day before the NPA published its latest figures, the national press reported yet another tragic double suicide attempt by school friends. On this occasion, two high-school girls tried to kill themselves by jumping off the roof of a supermarket in Kashiwazaki, Niigata prefecture. One of the girls, just 15, died, while her friend, 16, survived.

Sadly, youth suicide appears to have become such a common phenomenon that it no longer grabs press attention and reports are usually consigned to the back pages of newspapers.

Hiroshi Sakamoto observed, ‘We only read about suicide in the press, it is never on TV. They say it is too gloomy, too dark, not a happy subject. I feel the whole country is in a state of denial. This is perhaps why we cannot solve this problem. We are trying to ignore it, but wishing it away gets us nowhere.’

Keiko Yamauchi, a former Social Democratic Party lawmaker and elementary-school teacher, has devoted much of her life to trying to improve the school environment for children. She said, ‘What happens in the adult world also has a deep impact on our children. We have a terrible suicide problem, and now we are beginning to see exactly the same trend replicate itself amongst our children.’

She added that Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi ‘has completely failed to address this life-or-death matter. How many children, young people, fathers or mothers have to die before our government takes any real action? Instead of wasting so much energy and national resources in assisting in the destruction of human life in Iraq, why doesn’t Koizumi declare war on suicide in Japan and save thousands of lives in this country?’

Yamauchi also commented, ‘We must urgently tackle the suicide issue, which is destroying the fabric of our society. We need to act immediately and take concrete suicide-prevention measures. At the same time, we must also try to create a more human and caring environment for our children and their parents.’

Many experts think the sharp rise in adult suicide is influencing the surge seen in child suicide rates. Some believe that insensitive media reports of suicides combined with high-profile coverage of celebrity suicides encourages some children to make copycat suicide attempts.

Elderly suicide rate the highest
As in previous surveys, the highest incidence of suicide was found amongst the elderly. The new NPA data register a record 11,529 people aged 60 years or older who took their own lives in 2003. This group accounted for an astonishing 33.5% of all cases, and was closely followed by people in their 50s, who represented 8,614 cases or 25% of all suicides.

The new statistics also marked a steep increase in the number of people in their 30s taking their own lives. The death toll for this age bracket reached 4,603, an increase of 17%, translating into 668 more cases than in the previous year.

The NPA determined that health-related problems were the predominant motive behind the majority of elderly suicides. According to the NPA statistics for 2003, a total of 15,416 people from all age groups killed themselves because of illness or health-related problems, representing an increase of 4.1% from the previous year.

International comparisons
Expressed in the international measurement for suicide, 27 out of every 100,000 Japanese people now take their own lives, giving Japan one of the highest rates among industrially advanced countries. Japan’s current ratio of suicide to population size is about double that found in the United States or most European Union countries.

Based on provisional data for 2003, Japanese male and female suicide rates per 100,000 people are now roughly 40.2 for men and 14.9 for women, approaching levels normally witnessed in countries suffering severe economic hardships such as Russia, Latvia or Lithuania.

For most Japanese, these dreadful statistics will come as little surprise. They have no need to read an official analysis – just picking up a daily newspaper provides a stream of disturbing suicide reports.

Explaining the rise in suicide
Explaining the explosion in suicide is a highly complex task for which there is no shortage of elaborate theories, but in reality no easy answers. The fundamental causes lie in a highly complex weave of social and economic factors. For more than a decade, powerful socio-economic forces have been reshaping society. A great many of these currents have been generated by the long economic downturn, or at least strongly influenced by it. Economic factors such as bankruptcies, unemployment and high debt have been cited.

These economic elements have been exacerbated by various cultural traits and customs, making it especially difficult for Japan to deal with the fallout from the increased stress levels and higher incidences of mental-health problems induced by the lengthy recession. All these outlined elements have been compounded by inadequate suicide-prevention measures and a lack of effective government policy.

Will suicides continue to rise?
Michael Zielenziger, a former Tokyo-based foreign correspondent now a visiting scholar at University of California, Berkeley, has been researching Japanese suicide trends for his forthcoming book, Shutting Out the Sun. Zielenziger is concerned by the latest suicide figures.

‘These worrying statistics demonstrate that Japanese society and its leaders have not done enough to consider the fruits of their economic prosperity,’ he told Asia Times Online. ‘Now that Japan is a wealthy country, its citizens are searching for greater meaning.’ He added, ‘The nation’s schools and workplaces need to demonstrate more willingness to educate and openly discuss issues like stress and depression, which often lead to suicide.’

Zielenziger also believes that the medical establishment needs to do more to tackle suicide. ‘The nation’s medical community must become proactive and demand access to the cutting-edge anti-depressants, the SSRIs [selective seratonin reuptake inhibitors] like Prozac, that are readily available in Western nations but not yet legal in Japan,’ he said.

Koizumi does not appear to have examined the issue in any great detail, but has said there are no easy solutions for dealing with the suicide crisis. He has largely shied away from investing in effective suicide-prevention measures.

In sharp contrast to its suicide policy, the state has spent billions of yen on road-safety measures to reduce the death toll from traffic accidents. Consequently, while all Japanese prefectures have highly sophisticated road-safety procedures, many lack comprehensive suicide prevention networks. NPA figures for 2003 show 7,702 people were killed on the roads, while 34,427 took their own lives.

Koizumi says the government’s efforts to improve the economic climate will eventually reduce suicide levels. The unemployment rate has dropped to 5.3% and bankruptcies appear to be down for the first time in four years. Some suicide experts agree with Koizumi’s prognosis and think a gradual economic upturn will finally stem the merciless suicide tide. They believe the 2003 figures may represent a suicide peak.

However, suicide has become such a widespread social phenomenon that it may well take some years before numbers begin to fall back, even if a solid recovery sets in.

Hiroshi Sakamoto, the former government official and suicide councilor, is not optimistic, ‘I do not believe we will see any drop in suicide rates in 2004. In fact, I think they will increase. Until we stop denying the reality of the situation, I don’t think Japanese society can overcome the crisis it is facing.’

January 23, 2008

MORE NEWS

Filed under: Uncategorized — brentwrogers.com @ 8:32 pm

WORKERS
WE NEED WORKERS!!!
Did we mention that?
Good news is that two different young cousin-kids are thinking of coming for a short time. Mary and Esther are both experienced servants with great hearts for the Lord.

Also whispers from a remnant in Chico coming for a while.

HEALTH
Good right now. Bren will have at least one little thing done this year and maybe two. Kidney and pacemaker checks are coming soon.You can see recent deliveries on my other blog

http://firsttheword.blogspot.com/

CHICO can not come this year, to our great disappointment. However, we do trust God’s guidance for them.

CHURCH
Sunday is quite probably different here from what you are used to.

We usually meet in the afternoon. English worship is usually Brent, Sandy, and David, a teacher in a public high school in Kurashiki City.

Sunday evening at 5 is usually Japanese worship. There are no Japanese Christians who attend, but there are three Japanese people we can expect almost every Sunday. M-chan is now studying very hard for university finals. N-ko, a dental hygienist, is less regular than before. K-san is very active in different groups, but usually comes. Mrs. A has to drive an hour and comes about once a month.

Yes, this is discouraging after 6 years of overt evangelistic activity and a lot of seed-sowing before that.

So, we are thinking of changing everything, but we do not know what to change to.

Sandy wants to prepare a parenting class. This is a real need, but also a big challenge to prepare and carry out.

Any ideas?

UPDATE JAN 08 W-ko, SPRING CAMP

Filed under: Uncategorized — brentwrogers.com @ 8:04 pm

1. W-ko
2. March Camp

We are helathy. We need workers.

Here are the prayer requests:

Our dear friend, Miss W-ko, who was a friend of our kids here when they were little, is in distress.

She has two kids and is married to her second husband. Until a few weeks ago, she was in my Wed morning Bible class, taking notes, asking questions. She seemed really serious.

Then her husband lost two jobs, and now he is home all day. She can not come to class and he apparently gets suspicious if I call or email. Her last email said, “I love Brent’s family forever.” Then she left a phone message that apparently she had to cut off when her husband saw her.

These are not good signs, especially in Japan, especially now. The news is often about suicide and murder in families. There is abig campaign to get people to treasure life. It is empty of content because they have nothing to say. The culture is broken and now the economy is looking grim again.

Overnight in Kojima outreach

On March 1 and 2, we will host a group from Mito for an evangelistic program. We hope our Readers will hear the gospel from Japanese who have become Christians and faced the same questions our Readers face. Please pray for effective PR, good prep by brother Obata and the group from Mito and us. And for open hearts.

Love in Christ,

Brent and Sandy

January 22, 2008

JAPAN IS DIFFERENT Primary form of communication

Filed under: Uncategorized — brentwrogers.com @ 11:37 pm

Before reading further, please complete this sentence:

Whereas Americans like to hug, Japan’s primary form of communication is —–.

Public warming to offer of ‘free hugs’
The Yomiuri Shimbun

The offering of “free hugs” to strangers on public streets is gaining popularity among young people across the nation. However, it remains to be seen whether the phenomenon dubbed the Free Hugs Campaign, which has gained worldwide attention via the Internet, will take hold.

Recently, eight people between the ages of 18 and 37 gathered in the Amerikamura entertainment district in Chuo Ward, Osaka, to offer the Western-style greeting holding signs bearing the message “Free Hugs.”

Sanae Ono, 28, a dance teacher from Higashi-Osaka, Osaka Prefecture, pulled a 22-year-old passerby into her arms. When the man said, “I feel relaxed,” she responded by saying, “Hugging is nice, isn’t it?”

Ono, who lived in Canada for a year, said: “I was surprised by the way people [in Canada] communicated by shaking hands, hugging and expressing their true feelings. It’s completely different from Japan, where the primary form of communication is e-mail.”

After returning to Japan, Ono started promoting the Free Hugs Campaign in September 2006. She now goes to the Amerikamura district and an area near JR Osaka Station once or twice a week where she hugs up to 30 people each time.

The Free Hugs Campaign is said to have begun in 2001, when an American man who lost his mother decided to walk along a Miami beach, holding a sign that read “Free Hugs.”

In 2004, an Australian man started offering free hugs on the street. He posted a video of his efforts on the video-sharing Web site YouTube, which sparked a worldwide movement.

In Japan, the Free Hugs Campaign was introduced on the social networking Web site mixi, among other Web sites.

Kae Tagawa, 22, a job-hopping part-time worker from Konohana Ward, Osaka, who posts her activities on her Mixi homepage and on her blog, said, “I can be tender-hearted by just hugging people, although hugging is not the same as saying kind words.”

However, free hugs can sometimes get people in trouble, such as when a “free hugger” forcibly embraces a passerby, or a hugger is stalked.

Tetsuya Oshima, 37, who promotes free hugs in front of the Hachiko exit of Shibuya Station in Tokyo, follows a strict set of rules when offering hugs. Under the rules, huggers may not initiate a hug, and should stop hugging as soon as the person they are hugging pulls away.

Oshima said the campaign could lead to criminal acts being committed if people with impure motives start offering hugs. He said he hoped people would understand the purpose of the campaign.

January 18, 2008

FOR MARY

Filed under: Uncategorized — brentwrogers.com @ 4:02 am

For Mary, my sister, and my friend,

I may want more,
but I have enough for today.
I have enough money,
enough energy and time,
To obey God for one day.

I am educated enough.
I am smart enough.
I am healthy and strong enough
To do all that he asks me today.

I am free enough.
Old and young enough.
Supported and encouraged enough.
Settled down and backed up enough.

I am good enough.
Humble enough and proud enough.
I am in the right place
At the right time
Here and now.
I can obey God today.

The day is long enough,
The wether is good enough,
No excuses.
I can obey God
For Today.
And that is all that matters.

My adequacy is from Christ.
There is nothing God can not do.
I can do all things through Him.
Amen

TOZER, M-CHAN AND THE CHURCH

Filed under: Uncategorized — brentwrogers.com @ 3:48 am

TOZER AND M-CHAN

TOZER, a great Christian writer of the 20th century, wrote these words:

My eyes and ears and spirit are aware of the immaturities in the so-called evangelicalism of our time. The more noise we make, the happier we seem to be. All of the signs of immaturity are among us.

We are seeing a general abhorrence of being alone, of being silent before the Lord. We shrink from allowing our souls to be bathed in the healing silences. Men Who Met God, 103-104.

M-chan, my extremely intelligent friend, my student, and one day in the far future, my sister, (I hope), had the following thoughts about young Christians she had observed.—They say such wonderful things about God and about how I need him, but they seem to spend a lot more time and energy on relationships with each other than getting to know God deeply.
Tozer and M-chan are very different in background, education and almost every possible way, but in this regard, I found it uncanny how similar their comments were.

For more information about LMI: http://lmi.gospelcom.net/

January 13, 2008

from “None of these Diseases”

Filed under: Uncategorized — brentwrogers.com @ 8:19 am

book “None of These Diseases” that has been on my book
shelf for a long time.

Some of you may have read it. It is an old book first published
in late 1960s. I started reading it. One of the chapters is about
high ambition and anxiety. It applied me in many ways.
Masa from Yokota sent this out recently..

1. Lord, keep me from becoming talkative and possessed with the idea
that I must express myself on every subject.

2. Release me from the craving to straighten out everyone’s affairs.

3. Teach me the glorious lesson that ocassionally I may be wrong.

4. Make me helpful but not bossy.

your only comfort

Filed under: Uncategorized — brentwrogers.com @ 8:11 am

Heidelberg Catechism

The First Part – Of The Misery Of Man

1. Lord’s Day
Question 1.
What is thy only comfort in life and death?

Answer.

That I with body and soul, both in life and death, (a)

am not my own, (b)

but belong unto my faithful Saviour Jesus Christ; (c)

who, with his precious blood, has fully satisfied for all my sins, (d)

and delivered me from all the power of the devil; (e)

and so preserves me (f)

that without the will of my heavenly Father, not a hair can fall from my head; (g)

yea, that all things must be subservient to my salvation, (h)

and therefore, by his Holy Spirit, He also assures me of eternal life, (i)

and makes me sincerely willing and ready, henceforth, to live unto him. (j)

http://www.ccel.org/creeds/heidelberg-cat.html

January 12, 2008

THINKING GOD’S THOUGHTS

Filed under: Uncategorized — brentwrogers.com @ 8:04 pm

To think God’s thoughts requires much prayer. If you do not pray much, you are not thinking God’s thoughts. If you do not read your Bible much and often and reverently, you are not thinking God’s thoughts….

There also has to be a lot of meditation. We ought to learn to live in our Bibles. Get one with print big enough to read so it does not punish your eyes. Look around until you find a good one, and then learn to love it. Begin with the Gospel of John, then read the Psalms. Isaiah is another great book to help you and lift you. When you feel you want to do it, go on to Romans and Hebrews and some of the deeper theological books. But get into the Bible. Do not just read the little passages you like, but in the course of a year or two see that you read it through. Your thoughts will one day come up before God’s judgment. We are responsible for our premeditative thoughts. They make our mind a temple where God can dwell with pleasure, or they make our mind a stable where Christ is angry, ties a rope and drives out the cattle. It is all up to us.

AW Tozer Rut, Rot or Revival: The Condition of the Church, 42.

Prayer
“My thoughts aren’t adequate, Lord, to enable me to lead Your people through the quagmire of today’s society. Nor are the thoughts of the writers, the teachers, the preachers, and the psychologists that bombard me from the pages and the airways. I’m only going to be effective as a spiritual leader as I learn to ‘think God’s thoughts.’ Amen.”

You can get thse Tozer messages to your inbox:

http://lmi.gospelcom.net/contact.php

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