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Japan: Hardship After Suicide

Kinmi Ohashi is photographed with her late husband's guitar in Osaka, Japan. Kinmi's husband worked for a logistics company for 35 years and committed suicide four years ago. The pressure of lay-offs, harassment, and overwork had brought on his depression. Kinmi's husband worked long hours and holidays and rarely attended their son's school events. She says she raised their two sons as a single mother. “Most  fathers in Japan are workaholics. Many salarymen can’t share dinner with their family members. It's an abnormal work situation where they work until midnight and go to work the next morning.” Image by Shiho Fukada. Japan, 2012.

Ms. Nanbu has kept her late husband's briefcase and a bottle of sake, which he left unfinished. Mr. Nanbu was a plant engineer for a small company where his long work hours kept him away from his family. He hid his depression from them for over 10 years. She says, “I went to see his doctor many times to find out my husband’s diagnosis, but he refused to tell me.“ Image by Shiho Fukada. Japan, 2012.

Setsuko Nanbu holds her late husband's jacket as she stands by his briefcases in Ibaragi, Japan. The suicide note left in his pocket said, "I'm sorry. I can't work anymore. I don't know why. I’m really sorry to cause so much trouble for the company.”  He repeated his apologies over 20 times. Image by Shiho Fukada. Japan, 2012.

An undated photo shows Setsuko and Koichi Nanbu as newlyweds. Mr. Nanbu jumped onto the train tracks where he could see the apartment where they lived nearly 20 years ago. Ms. Nanbu says, “I think that was the best time in his life.” Image by Shiho Fukada. Japan, 2012. 

Setsuko Nanbu shows her late husband's watch. The day he committed suicide, he put on a matching watch he and his wife wore on special occasions, leaving this one behind. Image by Shiho Fukada. Japan, 2012.

Hiroko Ishikura holds her late husband’s photo in Kyoto, Japan. She lost her husband 25 years ago but could not talk about his suicide for 18 years. After his death, she plunged into depression, suffered from alcoholism, and attempted suicide three times. In 2006, she founded a cafe to hold regular meetings where people could talk about the loss of loved ones. Image by Shiho Fukada. Japan, 2012.

Undated photos of Hiroko Ishikura's late husband Masafumi. Masafumi had a hard time finding a job after he got out of the hospital where he had been treated for depression. When they last spoke, he was worried he would not find a job. She said to him, ”We need to find you a job." She now regrets this. “Looking back on it, it was a really cruel thing to say. I should have said something more considerate like ‘Let’s find a job together’ or ‘It’s ok you don’t have a job.'”  Image by Shiho Fukada. Japan, 2012.

Hideko Shimamura still sleeps in the bed she used to share with her late husband Msayoshi Shimamura in Saitama, Japan. He committed suicide in 2009 while suffering from depression brought on by overwork and harassment. Hideko says, “He wanted to quit his job and rest to treat his depression, but he could not afford to lose his job because he had to take care of his family. If he told the company about his depression, he would have been demoted, transferred to a remote place, or just pushed aside with a marginal assignment. He had the same job his whole life, so he didn’t have the confidence that he could do something else in the current economy in Japan.”  Image by Shiho Fukada. Japan, 2012.

Hideko Shimamura keeps her and her husband’s wedding rings. When her husband committed suicide, his company refused to pay his retirement benefits and threatened her with a lawsuit.  Image by Shiho Fukada. Japan, 2012.

Hideko Shimamura shows the last text message from her late husband. It says, “Thank you for everything. I’m sorry." Over the phone, he said to her, “I took eleven pills and I'm burning coal briquet, but I don’t feel sleepy yet.” He called her again later and said, “I finally started feeling sleepy and am losing consciousness.” Those were his last words to her. Image by Shiho Fukada. Japan, 2012.

An undated photo of Masayoshi Shimamura and his books. The titles of the books are “ How to Live Peacefully,” “How to Live Without Irritation and Worries” and “How to Cheer Up.”  Masayoshi kept a journal for four years and read self-help books to cope with depression. Image by Shiho Fukada. Japan, 2012.

Hideko Shimamura keeps a drawer filled with her late husband's clothes. Her husband used to say, “The company doesn’t care about its employees at all. I’m just a cog in the machine. If I said something negative about the work environment, they would say I can quit any time.” Image by Shiho Fukada. Japan, 2012.

An undated photo of Hitoshi Ohashi. Hitoshi kept working until his condition was very severe. His wife Kinmi remembers how he took a long time to leave for work in the morning. She recalls, “He was shaking nervously, then circled around in the room.” When she took him to a hospital, the doctor had him hospitalized immediately. Image by Shiho Fukada. Japan, 2012.

Koichi Nanbu, 58, disappeared from his family and colleagues for a week and traveled nearly 300 miles west from his home to Nara city where he used to live with his wife more than 20 years ago. He chose that city as the place to end his life. It was the morning of February 11, 2004. He left his travel bag in a coin locker, put on a matching watch he and his wife wore on special occasions, and folded a little note in his shirt pocket. At 9:34 a.m., he jumped onto the train tracks. From there he could see the apartment where he and his wife had lived as newlyweds.

The note in his shirt pocket was filled with scribbles of apologies."I can't work anymore. I don't know why. I’m really sorry to cause so much trouble for the company.” Mr. Nanbu was a plant engineer for a small company where his long work hours kept him away from his family. Many people apologize in their suicide notes, says his wife, Setsuko Nanbu, 67. “I think he knew it was wrong, but he was in so much pain that he felt like death was the only way to escape and be relieved from it.“

Ms. Nanbu says she initially could not talk about her husband’s suicide and told neighbors that he died of a heart attack. She thought telling people about his suicide would dishonor him. But as she researched more about suicide, she changed her mind. “I realized lying about how he died was the same as denying how he lived.” Today, she works for a non-profit organization for suicide prevention and speaks about her husband’s suicide at various conferences and events.

Japan has one of the highest suicide rates in the world. More than 30,000 people per year have committed suicide since 1997. Still, the stigma associated with suicide is very strong in Japan and many family members cannot talk about their loved one's suicide because they are often left ostracized from their communities.

Hiroko Ishikura, 68, could not talk about her husband’s suicide for nearly 18 years. The secrecy exacerbated the loneliness, making her more and more isolated from her community. In despair and hopelessness, she herself attempted suicide three times. “I felt like I was not qualified to live. I could not find meaning, value, or purpose in my life. I thought death was the only option,” she says. When she regained consciousness after her third attempt, her family was at her hospital bed arranging her funeral. It was the sight of her mother sobbing quietly by her that made her stop further attempts. “It’s not because I wanted to live. I just didn’t want her to go through the same pain that I had.”

Isolation, survivor’s guilt and regret are just the tip of the iceberg of many complex problems that bereaved family members face. After a husband’s suicide, for example, a wife may be left with small children or huge debt. If he jumped onto a train track, a train company may demand a lot of money from his family. If he jumped from a building, the building management charges a “cleaning fee.” Those who file workers’ compensation cases are a small percentage. The majority of widows are overwhelmed by the financial difficulty of losing their sole bread winner. They can barely make daily expenses, let alone come up with legal fees.

In an attempt to hide their violation of labor laws on working hours or harassment, some companies accuse the deceased of causing financial damage to their company. Masato Shimamura, worked for an automobile company as a salesman for 26 years. He fought through depression for six years. When his wife Hideko Shimamura, 50, called his company about his suicide, two of his bosses visited her immediately. The first thing they asked, Ms. Shimamura recalls, is if her husband said anything about the company or if he left any note or journal. The reason they asked, she suspects, was because one of his bosses had been harassing him. Then they refused to pay his retirement benefits because they claimed her husband caused some damage to the company. They threatened Ms. Shimamura with a lawsuit. “It was really cruel for them to threaten us with a penalty. We’ve just lost a loved one and we had no clue how to survive from one day to the next,” she says.

Kinmi Ohashi, 62, who lost her husband of 33 years, sued the logistics company where her husband worked for 37 years. She claimed that his suicide was caused by power harassment over years. She won the suit. The first thing the company did, she says, was to ask her to sign a resignation letter. “One worker does not mean anything to a big company. He is just disposable.“