National Hansen's Disease Museum (Japan)

National Hansen's Disease Museum (国立ハンセン病資料館)
Established 1993
Location Higashimurayama, Tokyo, Japan
Website http://www.hansen-dis.jp/

The National Hansen's Disease Museum (国立ハンセン病資料館 Kokuritsu Hansen-byō Shiryōkan) is a museum in Higashimurayama, Tokyo, Japan that is dedicated to education about Hansen's disease (leprosy) and to eliminate discriminatory practices against its sufferers. It was formerly (1993–2007) named "His Imperial Highness Prince Takamatsu Memorial Museum of Hansen's Disease".

The museum's purpose, located next to one of Japan's remaining leprosy sanatoriums, is to:[1]

History

Fujio Ohtani wrote in a pamphlet "H.I.H. Prince Takamatsu Memorial Museum of Hansen's Disease": Our Museum was conceived as a commomerative undertaking for the Fortieth Anniversary of the Tofu Kyokai Foundation. While the construction plans were under way, the Leprosy Prevention Law still existed. All the parties involved ardently wished that this new Museum would function in a way to win the public support for abolition of the Law and to show the realities of the thirteen national and three religious associations affiliated Hansen's Disease sanatoria, which were known only to a limited number of people.[2]

Table

On Display

The Meiji Era and Taisho Era

Showa Era

Law was abolished, Trial for compensation

Life in Sanatoriums

Maintenance of Order

Marriage, Abortions and Sterilization

Education in Sanatoriums

Prejudice in Society (Leprosy Stigma)

Death in Sanatoriums

How to create something to live for

Progress of Medicine

Sanatoriums in and out of Japan

Testimony of ex-patients and related persons

Information about the Museum

See also

Notes

  1. National Hansen's Disease Museum Re-opens in Tokyo (retrieved August 1, 2009)
  2. H.I.H.Prince Takamatsu Memorial Museum of Hansen's Disease , a pamphlet written in 1999 in English

External links

Coordinates: 35°45′58.3″N 139°29′53.2″E / 35.766194°N 139.498111°E / 35.766194; 139.498111

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