Background
She was born in Yamanashi Prefecture on March 26, 1902.
小川 正子
She was born in Yamanashi Prefecture on March 26, 1902.
She wrote a book, in 1938, about her experiences in persuading leprosy patients in remote areas of Japan into hospitalization. lieutenant created a sensation in Japan, and was made into a film. She was criticized for accelerating the "Number leprosy patients in prefecture" movement and giving an impression that leprosy is to be feared.
At graduation, she visited Kensuke Mitsuda, at the Zenshoen Hospital but her application for employment was rejected and she worked at other hospitals.
On June 12, 1934 she went to the Nagashima Aiseien, Okayama Prefecture, where Mitsuda was the director She was initially hired as informal doctor, then as formal doctor in 1934.
Mitsuda ordered her to go on trips to remote areas of the prefecture in order to examine people for leprosy in remote areas and hospitalize those who were affected. She developed tuberculosis in 1937.
At the order of Mitsuda, she wrote a book, which was published in 1938.
lieutenant created a sensation within Japan. On April 29, 1943, she died of pulmonary tuberculosis. In 1991, the Masako Ogawa Memorial House was built in her home in Yamanashi Prefecture.
In this book, she wrote her experiences in her trips of examination of leprosy patients in remote mountainous areas and islands.
In the first story, her team was composed of a clerk, a male nurse and Masako Ogawa. They brought a projector to show village people that leprosy patients should be treated in sanatoriums.
Ogawa described her experiences in visiting patients living in poor houses, finding new patients in the same house of patients. In addition to her book, she wrote tanka, a Japanese short poem.
Reaction
Mokutaro Kinoshita, a literary critic and physician, wrote that this book gave strong favorable impressions because of the description, the "sincerity" of the author and her literary ability.
However, after seeing the movie, he commented that the best method of leprosy control would be by chemotherapy, and not by segregation. Eiko Arai coined a word phenomenon, explaining the wave of support concerning Masako Ogawa. The trend may represent the sentiments of Japanese against the trend of militalization at that time, although some may see Ogawa as a patriot.
Eiko Arai also considered Ogawa to be "a new woman", an independent woman in the Taisho Era.
Criticisms
Masako Ogawa was criticized for accelerating the Number Leprosy Patients in Our Prefecture Movement, depicting leprosy as a disease to be feared. She reported that pregnancy worsened leprosy, and tried to justify the segregation, which her teacher, Mitsuda, firmly believed.