Background
Tomi Kora was born on 1 July 1896 in Toyama Prefecture.
Feminist peace activist politician psychologist
Tomi Kora was born on 1 July 1896 in Toyama Prefecture.
Tomi Kora graduated from the Japan Women's University and then majored in psychology in the United States at Columbia University and Johns Hopkins University.
In 1922 Tomi Kora became possibly the first Japanese woman to earn a doctorate. Her dissertation is titled "An Experimental Study of Hunger in its Relation to Activity". She returned to Japan in 1923 and taught at Kyoto Imperial University - the first female assistant professor at one of the Imperial Universities.
Tomi Kora was a member of the Japanese Christian Women's Peace Movement, and travelled to China. There in January 1932 she met the Chinese writers Lu Xun and Xu Guangping at a bookstore owned by the Japanese Kanzo Uchiyama, shortly after Lu Xun wrote a poem for her.
Tomi Kora was elected as a Councillor in the Japanese House of Councillors election for 1947 as a member of the Democratic Party. She switched to the Ryokufukai party in 1949, and served in the House of Councillors for 12 years. In 1952, she participated in the UNESCO General Conference in Paris. Tomi Kora then attended the World Economic Conference in Moscow that May. Per a request from the US embassy, the Japanese Foreign Ministry had refused to issue passports to those who wished to travel to the Soviet Union, Tomi Kora and two other Councillors got around this restriction by travelling to Moscow through Paris, Copenhagen, and Helsinki. They met with vice-minister of the Chinese Ministry of Foreign Trade Lei Rei-min and were invited to Beijing. At the time, the Japanese government did not recognize the legitimacy of the PRC government. That May Tomi Kora visited Beijing as a member of the House of Councillors Special Committee for the Reptriation of Overseas Japanese. The meeting was a diplomatic breakthrough, resulting in the first PRC -Japan private-sector trade agreement (signed 1 June) and the resumption of the repatriation of Japanese left in China following the end of World War II. Both praise and opposition greeted the trade agreement from Japanese legislators.
Tomi Kora was a practising Quaker.
In 1929, Tomi Kora married psychiatrist Takehisa Kora (1899–1896). She gave birth in 1932 to a daughter, poet Rumiko Kora.