@article{oai:seijoh-u.repo.nii.ac.jp:00000303, author = {Kato, Tomoko and 加藤, 知子}, issue = {22}, journal = {研究紀要, Research bulletin of Seijoh University}, month = {Mar}, note = {After 1873, when Christianity became legal in Japan, Christian beliefs began spreading all over the nation. As syncretization being one of the Japanese cultural characteristics, some Japanese tried to grasp Christianity in the Japanese context and established their made-in-Japan Christianity. Imaizumi Genkichi’s Mikuni movement was one of them. Mikuni activists published their monthly Mikuni magazines from 1935 to 1943 with Imaizumi as its chief editor. The Mikuni , born out of an intercultural turmoil between a foreign religion and Japanese traditional ideas, was right-wing in its opinions, actively pro-war, and riddled with anti-Jewish remarks. This anti-Semite attitude was seen not only in the Mikuni but also in non-Christian Japanese during that period. In this paper, the author tries to argue that the anti-Semitism in Japan of the early Showa era, which probably influenced the Mikuni , should be one of the reasons why Japanese Christians were persecuted and controlled by the Japanese government in the 1930s and 40s. Due to the limited number of pages, this introductory paper mainly outlines the Japanese-ness, made-in-Japan Christianity, and the Anti-Semite movement around the world including Japan and the Mikuni , leaving the details of the anti-Semitism in the Mikuni to another paper following this current one.}, pages = {21--36}, title = {日本的キリスト教についての一考察 : 今泉源吉『みくに』における反ユダヤ主義から、日本キリスト教界が受けた弾圧を読み解く}, year = {2022}, yomi = {カトウ, トモコ} }