Many major media are reporting that the Islamic State (IS) has released
a video showing the beheading of Kenji Goto, a Japanese journalist and a
Christian with a wife and two young children. The New York Times reported Saturday evening:
The video of the killing of the journalist, Kenji Goto, came two days after a deadline set by the extremists expired and the Jordanian government failed to give in to their demands that they exchange a convicted would-be suicide bomber for Mr. Goto’s life. Left unclear by the video, which was posted on a Twitter account associated with the Islamic State’s media organization, al Furqan, was the fate of a Jordanian pilot, whom the extremists also threatened to kill if Jordan did not release the would-be bomber, Sajida al-Rishawi. Japan had not yet authenticated the video. Jordan did not publicly comment.
The government of Japan is seeking to establish the authenticity of the
video. Christianity Today will update this story as events develop.
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This week, Japanese Christians, Muslims, and Buddhists held a vigil in Tokyo
to show public support for the release of Kenji Goto Jogo, the
Christian journalist whom the Islamic State (IS) took as a hostage in
Syria.
On Jan. 20, IS threatened to behead Goto and the captured Jordanian
fighter pilot, Muath al-Kasaesbeh. (Another hostage, Haruna Yukawa, was
beheaded a few days ago.) The terrorist group is demanding release from
prison an Iraqi woman convicted in a 2005 terrorist attack in Amman. As
of Friday, there was no word of the fate of Kenji and al-Kasaesbeh. A
prisoner-hostage swap has been on the table for days. Christians joined
the #PrayforKenji and #IamKenji social media campaigns to bring greater public pressure for his release.
Before Goto was taken hostage, some Japanese anti-war activists said
his trips to Syria were misguided because they were too dangerous and
undermined Japan’s pacifism. (In 2013, Algerian militants killed 13
Japanese workers.) The Japanese public has been extremely guarded about
any involvement by Japan in the recent Middle East conflict. Article 9
of Japan’s constitution forbids Japan from making war on other nations.
Only a self-defense force is legal.
But this past summer, Japan’s President Shinzo Abe reinterpreted
Article 9 to allow Japan to use its self-defense force to aid allies
during war—a move the United State supports, but many Japanese resist.
Abe was in Cairo recently and announced that Japan would provide $200
million in non-military assistance to nations resisting IS.
Goto, a freelance journalist and producer
who became a Christian in 1997, has a reputation for traveling into war
zones to cover the human side of violent conflict. “There are
criticisms of his action. Before leaving for Syria, Kenji left a video
message that he was aware that this attempt was very dangerous and he
was taking the full responsibility for his actions,” said Atsuyoshi Fujiwara, a professor of theology at Seigakuin University and founding pastor at Covenant of Grace Church in Tokyo.
Japan’s Christian minority largely supports the nation’s pacifist
stance and view Kenji’s trips to Syria in that light. “Kenji is a
Christian. Christian population in Japan is less than 1 percent of the
national population,” Fujiwara said. “Not only his church, the United
Christian Church of Japan, but also the churches in Japan are praying
for him. We think that Kenji was doing important work for peace-making.”
But Fujiwara said, “Christians are strongly against the Abe regime as
being militarily oriented and nationalistic. When you think about the
opinions of Christians in Japan, you can almost assume that they are
generally more anti-nationalistic, more non-violence-oriented than the
public. Christians should be peace-making, yet we need to be wise as
serpents and give alternatives to the Abe regime.”
After IS said publicly that Kenji and Yukawa were being held hostage,
the parents of both men apologized to Japan’s public on television for
the trouble they caused. “The initial reaction here in Japan was that
these two went and got themselves in trouble by going where they should
not have gone and have made a problem for the country,” said another
Tokyo-based pastor. “The reports from his pastor and others that Goto is
a Christian and is motivated by giving children in war zones a voice
did a lot to gain at least him favor in the eyes of the public that at
least he was not just an adventure seeker.”
Kenji’s wife, Rinko, recorded a video statement, saying, “My husband is
a good and honest man who went to Syria to show the plight of those who
suffer.”
The Japan Times reported:
As a journalist, Goto is “devoted to reporting what should be reported with a firm conviction,” said Hiroshi Tamura, pastor of the Chofu Church of the United Church of Christ in Japan. Tamura had until March 2013 been pastor of the Denenchofu Church of the United Church of Christ, which Goto attended. He said Goto “has a strong sense of justice . . . and he has always been conscious of vulnerable people, including children.”
The UCCJ is Japan’s largest Protestant body. In 1941, the government
forced all Protestant groups into the UCCJ. Today, it has 200,000
members and has a reputation for liberal theology. After the war,
Baptists, Anglicans, Lutherans, Assemblies of God, and a few others
dropped out.
Goto’s journalism projects have aired on national media and he has
published several books, including “We Want Peace Not Diamonds: A
Confession by Child Soldier Muria.”
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