Crown Prince Naruhito: A Profile of Japan’s Next Emperor

Society

In less than a year, on May 1, 2019, Crown Prince Naruhito is set to ascend the Chrysanthemum Throne. Former Imperial Household Agency employee Yamashita Shinji gives a profile of Japan’s next emperor.

Respect and Courtesy to All

At the press conference in February this year, Naruhito was asked when he had first become clearly aware of his own position. He responded, “While observing my parents, I gradually realized that because of my birth I would one day become the emperor.” Living surrounded by Imperial Household Agency employees and police officers assigned to the Imperial Palace made Naruhito’s life very different from that in an ordinary family. He must have come to a natural understanding of his future role.

Imperial family members in the direct line of succession have less room for the private realm than those in branch houses. When imperial family members go on school trips, local mayors ask to welcome them. Some refuse on the grounds of privacy, but Naruhito would accept these invitations, as long as they did not inconvenience other students. He well understood the local leaders’ desire to exchange greetings with him.

His friends and attendants say that since he was very young, Naruhito was always considerate of those around him. Even among the IHA staff, apart from senior officials and personal attendants, there are few people who speak with the emperor, empress, and other members of the imperial family on a regular basis. I regret that I have never attended on them, so I have not had the chance to see their daily life. However, in my many years of liaising with the media at the IHA, I did accompany family members on overseas trips.

In 1991, I went with the crown prince on official visits to Morocco and Britain. Including myself, there were five IHA employees, and I was the only one of us not directly assigned to his official residence, the Tōgū Palace in Akasaka. When the two-week tour was over, we returned to the palace at night. I was paying my greetings at the main office before returning home when his highness happened to enter the room. I think I showed gratitude in some way, to which he responded, “Yamashita-san, thank you for your efforts. Would you take a drink?”

The two of us sat in the office talking about the visits. I think he spoke to me because I was not assigned to Tōgū Palace and he probably would not meet me again for some time. I was grateful for his concern for me, a relatively low-ranking employee, when he must have been tired from jet lag and his many duties during the trip. This is just one example, but I have heard from his attendants that he always shows respect and courtesy toward others, whether they be the prime minister of the nation or ordinary members of the public.

Imperial Interests

The imperial family transforms with the times. It is difficult, however, to decide what needs to change, and the emperor’s own thoughts are important. Naturally, the emperor’s public duties should also change. Crown Prince Naruhito has said: “It is for the Imperial Family to accurately gauge what is required of the Imperial Family in a certain era and the content of official duties in step with the era.”

Naruhito is currently focusing his efforts on water, an area said to be of the highest importance for humanity. As honorary president of the United Nations Secretary-General’s Advisory Board on Water and Sanitation, a post in which he served through 2015, he gave speeches and participated in activities in Japan and overseas. He also discussed issues including welfare for children and the elderly in Japan’s aging society, child education, and promoting cultural exchange and friendly relations at the international level in his 2005 birthday press conference. I look forward to seeing what he does and how he presents himself to the public when he becomes emperor.

Apart from his public duties and research, I hope Naruhito will be able to enjoy his wide range of other interests—such as tennis, mountain climbing, jogging, and playing the viola—and to connect with citizens by doing so.

I believe that Crown Prince Naruhito’s kind personality will help him win the trust and respect of people in Japan and around the world.

(Originally published in Japanese on April 30, 2018. Banner photo: Crown Prince Naruhito gives the keynote speech on the subject of water and disaster at the World Water Forum in Brasilia, Brazil, on March 19, 2018. © Jiji.)

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