Kenkoku University

Kenkoku Daigaku or simply Kendai [ˈkɛndaɪ] was an educational institution in Xinjing (modern Changchun, Jilin province), the capital of Manchukuo, the Japanese puppet state in occupied Manchuria during the Second Sino-Japanese War. It operated from May 1938 to August 7, 1945.

Kenkoku Daigaku
The campus of Kenkoku University.
Former names
The Manchurian University
MottoChinese: "五族協和"
Japanese: "ごぞくきょうわ"
Korean: "오족협화"
Motto in English
"Five races under one union"
TypePublic research university
EstablishedMay 1938 (1938-05)
ChancellorIshiwara Kanji
Vice-ChancellorSakata Shoichi (1938—1942)
Kamezo Odaka (1942—1945)
Location,
Manchukuo
CampusUrban
Colours     
MascotKanto Star (関東の星)

The university was founded in 1938 by General Kanji Ishiwara, and was run by Professor Shoichi Sakuda of Kyoto University. Its purpose was to promote "ethnic harmony" in the region, legitimising and promoting the Japanese occupation. To this end, students were recruited from Japan, China proper, Mongolia, Taiwan, Manchuria, Korea and Russia. As well as offering free tuition, the University also provided its students with board and lodgings, and a stipend.

The university closed in 1945 when the Kwantung Army were beaten by Soviet red army.

A number of influential aikido practitioners trained and taught at the University, including aikido's founder Morihei Ueshiba, Kenji Tomiki, Shigenobu Okumura and Noriaki Inoue.

Multiple students of Kenkoku University later became prominent political figures in South Korea—including later South Korean prime minister Kang Young-hoon—, North Korea and China. The first test for applicants within Joseon was held at Gyeongseong Women's Normal School in Susong-dong for three days starting on December 27. It was unusual that the physical examination was the first. He said : "If you want to work in Manchuria, you must first be physically healthy, so consider your health first" (Entrance Exam Suffering No. 1, Chosun Ilbo, December 28, 1937). Of the 670 applicants, 90 (60 Koreans and 30 Japanese) were selected. The competition rate was 7.4 to 1.

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