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- <text id=93TT1835>
- <title>
- June 07, 1993: The 21st Century Princess
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- Jun. 07, 1993 The Incredible Shrinking President
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- ROYALS, Page 54
- The 21st Century Princess
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>Masako Owada, the soon-to-be bride of the heir to the Chrysanthemum
- Throne, is no shrinking violet
- </p>
- <p>By MARTHA DUFFY--With reporting by Kumiko Makihara/Tokyo
- </p>
- <p> Back when she was a student at Harvard, Masako Owada introduced
- some of her friends to a card game called Emperor. The various
- players drew titles from emperor to commoner. Funny thing was
- that Owada always managed to win: when she played she always
- turned out to be empress.
- </p>
- <p> Who says that cards do not deal the hand of fate? Owada seems
- to have the world at her feet. On June 9 she will marry Crown
- Prince Naruhito, who will be the next Emperor of Japan, the
- world's oldest monarchy. The Japanese royal family does not
- have private wealth like Britain's Queen Elizabeth, but the
- government takes splendid care of it. More important, the imperial
- family enjoys the nation's respect, unlike the beleaguered Windsors,
- who may be only a few tapes away from oblivion. As crown princess,
- Owada will deal with the world's most powerful and interesting
- people--statesmen, business leaders, educators, artists--and travel the globe. If she decides she wants to learn something
- new--say, the violin or calligraphy--tutors of consummate
- skill are right at hand.
- </p>
- <p> Best of all, she is marrying a husband who appears to care for
- her deeply. Heaven knows he has campaigned long and hard to
- win her. Victory came six years after the couple met in 1986
- and after she had turned him down twice. When the pair gave
- their engagement press conference, Naruhito, 33, was fairly
- bursting with pride. He beamed constantly and offered his "heartfelt
- thanks" to his bride-to-be. A member of the Owada family acknowledges
- the crucial importance of the suitor's ardor. "It is easy to
- see that this was not an easy decision. One decisive factor
- was the strength of love that, as a human being, she must have
- felt very intensely from the prince."
- </p>
- <p> The choice was hard because Masako Owada had another world at
- her feet--one earned by her own efforts rather than inherited
- or acquired by marriage--that was incompatible with membership
- in the imperial family. Until she resigned last January, she
- was a rising young member of the Foreign Ministry, conducting
- shuttle diplomacy with Washington on such issues as semiconductor
- trade talks and Japan's refusal to accept foreign lawyers. At
- 29, with graceful, perfect English and a sharp, analytical mind,
- she had a chance to pierce the glass ceiling that prevents Japanese
- women from rising to prestigious positions in government and
- business. She had the potential to let in some fresh gusts of
- revolutionary air. There can be no doubt that Owada knows her
- worth.
- </p>
- <p> So do her countrymen. The winning of Masako-san, the familiar
- and endearing title by which she is usually called, is seen
- as a triumph for the imperial family. On an international level,
- the press is avid: unlike the feckless Brits and the sulky Grimaldis,
- this pair are good-news royals, appealing, admirable and with
- the allure of mystery. Tabloids and weeklies have become fascinated
- by the young woman with the Mona Lisa smile and habit of looking
- upward from downcast eyes--not unlike the young Lady Di. At
- home, Masakomania dominates the thriving women's magazine business,
- although Owada has given no interviews and precious few photo
- opportunities.
- </p>
- <p> More seriously, Owada represents values that modern Japanese
- admire most: discipline, a love of learning, discretion and,
- perhaps most important, the poise and sophistication to deal
- with the world beyond their borders. Until now she has built
- her life along the lines of her father's brilliant diplomatic
- career. Hisashi Owada is Japan's Vice Minister of Foreign Affairs.
- She is aware she comes from a fortunate background, is comfortable
- with it, and has a sense of responsibility. Former teachers
- say she has strong convictions about expanding Japan's role
- in international political and cultural life. Despite the fact
- that much of the world envies them their business dominance,
- many Japanese feel their country is regarded as recessive, insular
- and conformist.
- </p>
- <p> The prince was able to persuade Owada that as his wife she would
- be able to use her diplomatic skills in a very effective way.
- If so, he will have to help make it happen. A truly enigmatic
- institution, the imperial household is secretive and, in general,
- tradition bound. Beyond its role in guarding the practice of
- religious rituals, nothing much is known about it. By comparison,
- European royal houses are open books.
- </p>
- <p> Feminists, a minority among Japanese women, are divided about
- Owada's decision to join such a closed society. Some think she
- let down the side. Says Keiko Higuchi, professor of women's
- studies at Tokyo Kasei University: "There is a view that it's
- too bad she doesn't continue her work as a pioneer." She will
- be consigned to attending cultural events, tending to charity
- work and composing poems, an exacting task expected of all imperials.
- But, says Yukiko Kishimoto, the author of several books on women,
- "she is already a star and a diplomat, and she made up her own
- mind, which shows great independence."
- </p>
- <p> Kuniko Inoguchi, a professor of international politics at Tokyo's
- Sophia University, believes the selection of Owada is an indication
- that the royal family wants to move forward. Its members are
- often seen as prisoners of the Imperial Household Agency, a
- 1,132-person bureaucracy that controls everything from rigid
- security to silver service to press interviews (almost none).
- It is hard for an outsider to adapt to such a sequestered life.
- Michiko, the pres ent Empress, who married Emperor Akihito
- in 1959, is, like Owada, a commoner. She broke ground by insisting
- on certain innovations, such as raising her children herself.
- She suffered for her determination, coming close to a nervous
- breakdown in the 1960s.
- </p>
- <p> Always popular, she has risen in stature through the years and
- has now passed the word that she will be Owada's ally. Says
- Inoguchi: "The royal family are guardians of tradition, but
- in wider choices, they go ahead. Michiko dared to bring up her
- own children. Naruhito is marrying a career woman." Poet Machi
- Tawara, who is Owada's contemporary, notes that she "chose her
- own timing. We can identify with that. There's a lot of talk
- about the crown prince saying `I will put all my might in protecting
- you my entire life.' Some of my friends said, `I want someone
- to say that to me,' but my reaction was that the imperial household
- must be quite a place if Masako Owada needs to be protected."
- </p>
- <p> But the institution is not so much malign as remote. The bride-to-be
- has just spent six intensive weeks learning its religious rituals
- and ceremonies. She has already participated in one of its quainter
- customs. Wearing a formal silk kimono for the first time anyone
- could recall, she joined her parents in their living room to
- receive ceremonial gifts (five bolts of silk, six bottles of
- sake and a pair of sea bream) from the grand master of the prince's
- household. His highness was not present. As soon as he received
- word that the presents were accepted, he was off to ancestral
- shrines on the palace grounds to inform the gods of his engagement.
- It's about as far from late 20th century negotiations as you
- can get.
- </p>
- <p> Why did Masako-san choose to enter this world? Around Tokyo,
- many young people speculate that the reason might be as simple
- as the ticking of the biological clock. She was nearing 30,
- late for a Japanese woman to marry and have children. And with
- the crown prince in the picture, very few men would be willing
- to court her. A more serious explanation is suggested by various
- teachers. It has to do with the fact that she is deeply Japanese
- in her outlook and that the call to duty, as well as the promise
- of love, was strong. On both sides of her family, she is descended
- from the samurai class, warriors in feudal times, administrators
- and teachers later. The word samurai means "to serve."
- </p>
- <p> The press refers to her as a superwoman, and the list of her
- accomplishments tallies with that tag. Still, she was something
- of a late bloomer. Friends remember her as a child who loved
- sports and animals more than books. She once thought about becoming
- a veterinarian and, until she quit the Foreign Ministry, kept
- pictures of dogs and kittens on her office desk. When the occasion
- called for it, she was fearless in standing up to teachers and
- willing to speak for the class when she felt that injustice
- was being done.
- </p>
- <p> At one point a teacher decreed that parents had to sign off
- on their children's tests to prove that the scores had been
- duly brought home and inspected. The drill called for the parents
- to write "I saw this" on the test sheets. Not everyone wanted
- to attempt this particular hurdle, and her pals turned to Masako,
- a good choice since she already had superior penmanship. "I
- saw this," she wrote confidently on their papers, until someone
- in the class squealed. In the dustup that followed, Owada spoke
- out, saying each student should choose whether to reveal her
- scores. Recalls a classmate: "At a time when everyone took the
- teacher's word as absolute, she already sensed some right and
- wrong."
- </p>
- <p> Masako could be cheeky. In high school English class, the students
- would try to disrupt a lesson by asking the teacher endless
- questions. Before the start of the session, Owada and her best
- friend to this day, Sumiyo Tsuchikawa, the two most fluent English
- speakers in the group, would go to the blackboard and write
- down teasers like "Did you go out with anyone during college?"
- The rest of the class shouted out questions in Japanese for
- the pair to translate in chalk.
- </p>
- <p> Masako was a key figure in organizing a team for softball, an
- activity the school disapproved of as dangerous and unfeminine.
- The game clearly caught her imagination in those early teenage
- years. She played third base and was cleanup hitter. She was
- a tough player: in the batter's box, she stared down the pitcher.
- When the ragtag group played the teachers, she liked to catch
- their line drives right in front of her face. Recalls an admiring
- classmate: "She could do things ordinary girls couldn't--like
- hit fungoes."
- </p>
- <p> After winning a tournament and receiving a large trophy, the
- victors held a party. On such an occasion many teenagers might
- get sentimental, but her friends say they have never seen Masako
- cry. Says classmate Sachiko Takamine: "I'm positive she still
- has her boyish side. She has become an incredible woman with
- femininity and masculine strength. She now has the appropriate
- aura for a princess. She has the wisdom to adapt herself to
- any environment."
- </p>
- <p> Shortly after that triumph, Masako's life changed. Her father
- accepted an invitation to teach at the Harvard Law School, and
- the family packed up and moved to the Boston suburb of Belmont.
- Perhaps because she was challenged by a language that she knew
- but was not expert at, she became serious, studious and focused.
- The infielder and the would-be vet gradually receded. Her adviser,
- Lillian Katz, says Masako "never needed moral support. She knew
- her own worth, and she knew that she was her parents' pride
- and joy." Belmont has reason to remember its former high-schooler.
- Since the engagement, Japanese tourists arrive by the busload
- to ogle her alma mater and the Owada house.
- </p>
- <p> When the elder Owada's two-year teaching stint was over, his
- daughter remained in the U.S. and went to Harvard, graduating
- magna cum laude in economics. Her thesis adviser was Jeffrey
- Sachs, who went on to advise countries around the world on how
- to switch from controlled to free-market economies. "She had
- a certain extra dimension, a real analytical mind," he observes.
- "Her thesis concerned Japan's trade performance after each shock
- in oil prices during the '70s and '80s, and how the country
- paid for fuel by increasing exports. She devised computer work
- that was sophisticated, especially for an undergraduate."
- </p>
- <p> The Owadas wanted their daughters--Masako has younger twin
- sisters--to "have some solid base to stick to," says an immediate-family
- member. "The parents wanted them to avoid becoming rootless
- people. It was simple things, like customs and observing traditional
- Japanese festivals."
- </p>
- <p> Masako evidently agreed. In 1986 she entered the law department
- of the University of Tokyo to study for the Foreign Ministry
- entrance exam. The stocky teenager was becoming sleek and turning
- heads in a division that is only about 5% female. She passed
- the stiff exam after just one year--most people require two
- years of study, and only 5.3% succeeded in 1986, Owada's year.
- Even now, Tokyo professionals can be heard to say, "She did
- what a man can't do," and then hurriedly correct themselves.
- </p>
- <p> In October 1986 she met her fate at a reception given for Spain's
- Princess Elena in Tokyo. It was a typical ceremonial trade-off:
- young women were invited to amuse the pretty Spanish royal and
- also to be reviewed by the bachelor crown prince. Naruhito
- liked Masako-san at once. Shigemitsu Dando, a former Supreme
- Court justice and longtime adviser to the imperial household,
- confided to his diary that "she was very graceful but also cheery
- and outgoing." Four meetings were arranged, and the imperial
- watchdogs began a routine background check over three generations.
- </p>
- <p> There were problems with Owada. Her grandfather was linked to
- Chisso, the firm responsible for major chemical dumping first
- detected in the '50s that led to the death or crippling of thousands.
- He was not connected to the company at the time but later, as
- the firm's president, was involved with the settlement of lawsuits.
- Second, Owada did not seem that interested in an imperial future.
- Furthermore, she may have had a boyfriend or two. And then there
- was the press, which caught on to Na ruhito's interest almost
- at once. The Owadas were besieged. Masako-san was tough with
- reporters, often demanding their business cards, and even slamming
- her hand against photographers' lenses. As celebrities before
- her have learned, retaliatory action doesn't do much good. By
- the time she flew off to Oxford in 1988 for two years' study
- assigned by the Foreign Ministry, a reporter had rented a room
- across the street from her house for snooping purposes, and
- 50 of his colleagues were clamoring around her at the airport.
- </p>
- <p> As it happened, her future husband had just finished two years
- at the same university. For Naruhito, who speaks English almost
- as fluently, Oxford was a liberation. Though he did have minimal
- security protection, he was for the first time in his young
- life on his own. A wine fancier, he could walk into a liquor
- store and pick his own bottles. He could go to the laundry and
- make a fool of himself by letting suds flood the floor. When
- the winter turned harsh, he could tape his own windows or suffer
- the consequences. He made good use of his experience, writing
- a thesis on the Thames as a commercial highway during the Middle
- Ages. Later, he was to write a book on his English experience,
- illustrated with his own photographs that caught the charm of
- a very different land.
- </p>
- <p> The gossip goes that on his return he pursued at least two other
- eligible young women. But it was always really Owada. The prince
- wanted no other, and the imperial household had persuaded itself
- that her grandfather was blameless in the Chisso disaster and
- that any dalliances Masako-san may have had were unimportant.
- She, meanwhile, was laboring at the ministry, scrupulous about
- providing up-to-date information and taking pains with the phrasing
- of documents so as not to nettle other parties to a negotiation.
- </p>
- <p> But, of course, the imperial household knows a thing or two
- about negotiating also. Somehow, mandatory security was brushed
- aside so the pair could meet privately, if not alone. Naruhito
- would propose, his quarry would demur. Volleys of phone calls
- from the lover followed. There were rendezvous on the imperial
- duck-hunting grounds. All the while, secrecy was an obsession.
- But one short exchange shows that the young pair were establishing
- intimacy and rapport. After some nervous discussion about avoiding
- the press, Masako-san joked to Naruhito, "Perhaps I should get
- dressed up in a panda suit." Some panda.
- </p>
- <p> At one point the Owada family formally rejected the suit, on
- the grounds that their daughter could not decide. At least the
- reply hinted that she was thinking about the offer.
- </p>
- <p> Finally, last Dec. 12, she relented: "If I can be of support
- to you, I would like to accept humbly. Since I am accepting,
- I will work hard to make your highness happy, and also be able
- to look back on my life and think, `It was a good life.' "
- </p>
- <p> That statement may sound modest, even servile, to Western ears,
- but in Japan the reaction was quite different. In the last clause,
- Owada had dared to say in public that she sought fulfillment
- in her own terms. To young women--and many men--that came
- close to calling for a new covenant. Marriage is not necessarily
- an attractive prospect to an educated woman, especially one
- of the growing number who, like Owada, have lived part of their
- childhood abroad and have a wider and more cosmopolitan experience
- than most Japanese.
- </p>
- <p> From the beginning of his school days, a boy is pushed to study
- hard in order to gain acceptance at a top university, preferably
- the University of Tokyo. Then he starts toiling for a corporation
- or in a government bureaucracy. The hours are endless, and when
- they are over, he is often expected to go out and get drunk
- with clients. Weekends are for golf, again usually with clients.
- Back home, his wife takes full charge of the children and manages
- the money. This lockstep life is a foundation of Japan's economic
- supremacy, which is just beginning to show cracks.
- </p>
- <p> If a Japanese family is posted abroad, the parents may leave
- a son home with relatives so he can pursue the rigors of his
- education. He may be smart, but he is often so sheltered that
- as an adult, he can scarcely decide what to eat or which clothes
- to put on in the morning. But a daughter usually travels with
- the family and gets a taste of other cultures. Grown up, these
- women do not want to settle for a corporate automaton as a husband.
- </p>
- <p> A government report released in 1992 disclosed that 74.5% of
- single women did not care that they were unmarried. No wonder.
- In households where both partners work, women spend 4 hours
- and 17 minutes a day on housework. Men toil at home for 19 minutes.
- No one expects that the new imperial couple will be tidying
- up the palace, but Owada struck a blow for female rights when
- she said she had her own legitimate expectations in life.
- </p>
- <p> Both in Japan and around the world, there is avid speculation
- about what she will do in her new position. Can she and her
- husband really shake up the Establishment? Some observers fear
- that the imperial household will have its way and turn her into
- a bland creature whose every gesture is scripted. They point
- to the change in the way she dresses. Never trendy, she was
- mildly Mod at Oxford and wore dark, dress-for-success outfits
- at the ministry. Since her engagement, she has abruptly switched
- to bright colors and conventional, almost matronly styles.
- </p>
- <p> Clothes may not be the way to understand Owada, but everyone
- is looking for clues. "There are several key words here--Harvard,
- University of Tokyo, diplomat," says investigative journalist
- Naoki Inose. "The family thought Masako would be marketable."
- Others have taken her achievements further and declared her
- to be Japan's version of Hillary Clinton, but that is a big
- stretch. Masako knows her worth just as securely, but she is
- too reserved to have either Hillary's very American assumptions
- or her bumptiousness.
- </p>
- <p> Yoshimi Ishikawa, author of several books on Japan and America,
- believes a change from the rampant secrecy surrounding imperial
- life would be a very healthy thing. "Masako Owada has the capacity
- to be a star. The Japanese like people who study hard--her
- educational career gives her charisma." He thinks she has a
- chance to open up a closed world. "The prince loves her so much
- that if she wants change, he may help. If Masako Owada can make
- a good bridge between the family and the people, maybe we can
- create a new era of Japanese history." Eloquently stated, and
- a goal worth striving for, but if Masako-san wants to build
- that bridge, she'll have to be a hell of an engineer.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-