Japans Emperor Akihito and Empress Michiko celebrated their 50th wedding anniversary Friday as the media hailed ways in which they have adapted the worlds oldest monarchy to modern times. In the half century since they married, Japan has emerged from the aftermath of World War II and US occupation to become Asias economic powerhouse, and the Chrysanthemum Throne has changed along with the times.
While Akihitos father Emperor Hirohito was once worshipped as a living demigod, Akihito and Michiko have tried to be seen as an "ordinary couple" and narrowed the distance between the palace and the people. Michiko, educated at a Catholic university, was the first commoner in modern times to marry into Japans imperial family and the first empress to raise her children herself, famously making them "bento" lunch boxes to take to school.
Now 74, she recalled how in the early years, cloistered behind palace walls, "my heart was filled with anxiety and insecurity," but she said now "it feels like a dream to celebrate the golden wedding day by his majestys side." Newspapers praised the couples pilgrimages to former war-ravaged areas to pray for peace, including Hiroshima and Nagasaki, the sites of the US atomic bombings that led to Japans World War II surrender.
They also recalled the imperial couples visits to the city of Kobe after the 1995 earthquake, when both knelt down before survivors - a stunning scene in a country where the monarch never spoke in public until 1945. The golden wedding was to be marked Friday in ceremonies at Tokyos Imperial Palace, including an afternoon tea party with 101 couples invited from across Japan who are also marking their golden wedding anniversaries.
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