Paul Aijirō Yamaguchi

パウロ 山口愛次郎
Paulus Aijirō Yamaguchi
Archbishop emeritus of Nagasaki
Church Roman Catholic Church
Archdiocese Nagasaki
Installed November 7, 1937
(Appointed on September 27, 1959)
Term ended December 19, 1968
Predecessor Januarius Kyunosuke Hayasaka
Successor Joseph Asjiro Satowaki
Other posts Kagoshima Apostolic Prefecture (1936 - 1937)
Personal details
Born (1894-07-14)July 14, 1894
Died September 24, 1976(1976-09-24) (aged 82)
Nationality Japanese

Paul Aijirō Yamaguchi (山口愛次郎 Yamaguchi Aijirō, July 14, 1894 - September 24, 1976) was a Japanese prelate of the Roman Catholic Church. He served as Archbishop of Nagasaki from 1937 to 1968.

Biography

Yamaguchi was born in Nishisonogi District, Nagasaki (currently part of the city of Nagasaki). He attended the Urbino University in Rome, where he was consecrated as a priest on December 24, 1923. In 1924, he returned to Nagasaki, where he was appointed priest of the Tainoura Church in Shin-Kamigotō in the Gotō Islands. In 1926, he became a professor at the Nagasaki Catholic University. He was appointed chief priest of the Nakamachi Church in Nagasaki in 1930. From November 1936, he was also appointed to the Prefecture Apostolic of Kagoshima. He was elevated to bishop on November 7, 1937.

In August 1943, Bishop Yamaguchi was sent by the Civil Administration Office of the Imperial Japanese Navy’s Southwest Area Fleet to the Japanese-occupied island of Flores in the Netherlands East Indies. Flores had a predominately Roman Catholic population, and Bishop Yamaguchi struggled to obtain a lenient attitude from the Navy authorities towards the local population.

After the end of the war, he returned to the ruins of atomic-bombed Nagasaki, where he devoted his efforts towards the reconstruction of churches destroyed by the bombing. In 1948, in an extraordinary session of the city council, he was appointed to the Nagasaki City Public Safety Commission to oversee reforms of the police administration. He was elevated to archbishop on September 27, 1959 after Nagasaki was promoted to an arch-diocese. On June 8, 1962 he presided over a mass celebrating the canonization of the Twenty-six Martyrs of Japan. From 1962 to 1965, he attended the Second Vatican Council. He retired on December 19, 1968.

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