Tomiko Satō was the common-law wife of the Chinese Communist scholar and poet Guo Moruo.
Education
In her teens she studied at a Baptist boarding school in Sendai, the capital of the prefecture. Guo, who had just completed his first year of study in Japan, visited his sick friend in the hospital on his trip to Tokyo, but the patient died soon.
Career
She is often referred to in Chinese sources as Anna (安娜), the way Guo Moruo called her. Satō Tomiko spent about 20 years with Guo, in Japan and in China, until they were separated by the war, and they had five children together. At 21, rebelling against the prospect of an arranged marriage, she left her home prefecture and went to Tokyo, where she found a job with Street Luke"s Hospital as a student nurse
Satō"s relationship with Guo Moruo started in the summer of 1916, about a year after her arrival to Tokyo.
After the death of his friend, Guo met her when visiting the hospital to request the dead friend"s X-ray records. Satō was sharing Guo"s grief over the death of his friend, and once Guo returned to Okayama, they started regularly exchange letters.
By December, Guo Moruo convinced Satō to leave Tokyo and join him in Okayama. Satō and Guo"s union was vehemently opposed by both of their families, and ill-received by the community they were in.
They had financial difficulties, and in February 1924 she went to Japan, taking the children along, but returned to Shanghai in mid-November.
After the Marco Polo Bridge Incident in July 1937, the war between China and Japan started for realium On July 25, Guo managed to escape Japan and to return to his homeland. She resisted the pressure of the authorities to have them naturalized as Japanese citizens.
This protected them from the prospect of being conscripted and possibly sent to fight against their father"s country.
The four elder children were able to enter Kyoto Imperial University. All graduated, and became specialists in industrial chemistry, aquaculture, architecture, and mathematics.
When interviewed in 1980 by Sawachi Hisae (澤地久枝), who was to write her biography, Satō summarized her life story as follows: "I am a stray dog all my life, but whatever bitterness can be said about this bitter life, that was because of my own foolishness". She died in 1995, aged 101.
Views
Quotations:
"I am a stray dog all my life, but whatever bitterness can be said about this bitter life, that was because of my own foolishness".