Yoshiomi Tamai


Yoshiomi Tamai was a Japanese activist, philanthropist and educator who was the founder and president of Ashinaga and the founder and headmaster of Kokorojuku dormitory.

Early and personal life

Yoshiomi Tamai was born on 6 February 1935 in Ikeda, Osaka Prefecture. He grew up in Kansai region, and in 1958, he graduated from Shiga University with a degree in economics. In 1961, he left his job at a brokerage firm to pursue a career in economic journalism. In 1963, Tamai's mother died after being involved in a traffic accident caused by a reckless driver. At that time, Tamai decided he would become Japan's first "traffic critic." Over the next few years, his wife was diagnosed with cancer and died at 29 years old. These two losses were the starting point for Tamai's work on the Ashinaga movement.

Career

Association for Traffic Accident Orphans

In 1966, Tamai began appearing as a regular guest in a weekly traffic accident prevention corner on the Katsura Kokinji Afternoon Show, showcasing problems such as the rise in auto insurance premiums and campaigning for the introduction of corporate manslaughter in the Penal Code of Japan. In October 1968, Tamai and Shinji Okajima, who had lost his sister and nephew in a traffic accident, launched the Association to Support Traffic Accidents Orphans and held their first street fundraising campaign in Tokyo. In 1969, the overwhelming public reaction to the collection of poems by traffic accident orphans Tengoku ni iru otōsama prompted the House of Representatives' Budget Committee to formally establish an Association for Traffic Accidents Orphans. The association's purpose was to provide high-school and university students who had lost one or both parents in traffic accidents with student loans. Tamai was appointed as executive director of the association, while Shigeo Nagano, who used to appear with him on the Katsura Kokinji Afternoon Show, was appointed as president. Among the young talents Tamai recruited into the organization, there were future National Diet members Takashi Yamamoto and Osamu Fujimura.

Kokorojuku and Ashinaga

In 1978, Tamai founded the Kokorojuku dormitory in Hino, Tokyo and was appointed its headmaster. In 1989, he won the Asahi Shimbun Social Welfare Award. Around this time, a part of the Association for Traffic Accident Orphans began accusing Tamai of disloyalty for his interest in supporting other orphaned students, such as those who lost their parents to natural disasters. At the same time, some former Government bureaucrats who were working in the organization fell under suspicion of being too heavily influenced by their political affiliations. Tamai, who opposed the presence of revolving door personnel, ultimately decided to create a new, strictly non-political association in support of all orphaned students. The new organization, established in 1993, was named Ashinaga. Yutaka Takeda, then-CEO of Nippon Steel, was appointed president of Ashinaga, while Tamai himself was appointed vice-president.

Other philanthropic work

After the Great Hanshin Earthquake of 1995, Tamai started working on providing support for children who had lost one or both parents in a tragic disaster, as well as conducting a comprehensive survey of all previous student loan recipients. In 1998, he took on the role of president at Ashinaga. In 1999, Ashinaga raised funds from donors in over 150 foreign countries, as well as Japan, and used these resources to build Rainbow House, a facility for the emotional care of orphaned children in Kobe. Since 2000, Tamai worked to reduce extreme poverty in the world and he established Rainbow Houses in several developing countries. He also organized a number of international meetings for orphans of war, terrorism, HIV/AIDS, natural disasters, famines, and various pandemics. In June 2010, his collection of essays Dakara, Ashinaga undō wa suteki da was published for Hihyōsha's "Psycho Critique 13" series. In March and April 2011, after the Great East Japan Earthquake, tsunami, and subsequent Fukushima nuclear disaster, Tamai announced that the construction of three new Rainbow Houses in Tohoku region. Since 2012, Tamai worked on developing Ashinaga Africa Initiative, a project that aims to support the higher education of orphaned students from 49 countries in Sub-Saharan Africa. The goal of this project is to foster future leaders, who will bring positive change to their home countries and work to reduce poverty in the region.

Death

On 5 July 2025, Tamai died of sepsis at Japanese Red Cross Medical Center in Shibuya, Tokyo, at the age of 90.

Recognition

Awards

Author

  • , Dōbunkan Shuppan, 1963
  • Kōbundō, 1965
  • , Dōbunkan Shuppan, 1966
  • , Ushio Shuppansha, Ushio Shinsho, 1966
  • , Saimaru Shuppankai, 1973
  • , Psycho Critique 13, Hihyōsha, 2010

Editor

  • , Dōbunkan Shuppan, 1965
  • , Saimaru Shuppankai, 1968
  • , Saimaru Shuppankai, 1971
  • , Saimaru Shuppankai, 1974
  • , Saimaru Shuppankai, 1977
  • , Saimaru Shuppankai, 1979
  • , Saimaru Shuppankai, 1985
  • , Saimaru Shuppankai, 1985
  • , Saimaru Shuppankai, 1986