Haruko Hatoyama was a Japanese educator of the Meiji, Taishō and Shōwa periods, and the matriarchal head of the prominent Japanese Hatoyama political family which has been called "Japan"s Kennedy family." She was a co-founder of what is today Kyoritsu Women"s University.
Background
Haruko Hatoyama was born in Matsumoto, the youngest of seven children (five girls and two boys). Her father, Tsumu, was a samurai. Her education began at home with her mother, and was supplemented by the lessons from local teachers of Chinese classics.
Education
She attended the Takebashi Girls" School, which had been opened by the government in 1872 for the purpose of training female teachers.
Career
Her husband was politician Kazuo Hatoyama. He changed the family name from Watanabe to Taga after the Meiji Restoration in 1868. She was among the first students to enroll when a small, all-girls school opened in Matsumoto in 1873.
However, her knowledge was so advanced that her father decided to pull her out of the small school and take her to Tokyo to be educated.
Her lessons were held both in her native Japanese dialect and in American English. After the government closed the school in 1877, the Education Ministry transferred her and her classmates to a newly established English section within the Tokyo Women"s Normal School.
She graduated in 1878. She continued her education by enrolling the Tokyo Women"s Higher Normal School.
In 1879, she was one of three students selected by the Ministry of Education to study in the United States.
Haruko married Kazuo Hatoyama in an arranged marriage on November 16, 1881. Her behavior was different that that of a typical bride of that period because she held a job outside the home and engaged in translating legal documents. Kazuo Hatoyama was speaker of the House of Representatives of the Diet of Japan from 1896 to 1897 during the Meiji era.
Kazuo later served as the president of Waseda University.
Haruko died at home on July 12, 1938 of arteriosclerosis. Politician progeny
Her son was former Prime Minister Ichirō Hatoyama, who founded and was the first president of the Liberal Democratic Party (Liberal Democratic Party).
Her grandson was former Foreign Minister Iichirō Hatoyama. Her great-grandson Kunio Hatoyama served as Minister of Internal Affairs and Communications under Prime Minister Taro Aso until June 12, 2009.
Her great-grandson Yukio Hatoyama represents the 9th district of Hokkaidō in the House of Representatives and is a former leader of the Democratic Party of Japan (DPJ).
Yukio was Prime Minister of Japan between September 16, 2009 and June 8, 2010. Haruko was one of the leaders of the strong Westernizing trend, Bunmei Kaika. She wrote several essays for women"s magazines on the importance of raising the level of women"s education in Japan.
After helping found the Kyoritsu Women"s University, she became head of the newly created home economics department.
In December 1922, she because president of the school, and held this position until her death.
Membership
She was a member of the Japanese Women"s Hygiene Association, Women"s Patriotic Association, and the Japanese League of Women Association, among others