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Описание List of the Sankebetsu brown bear incident's casualites. The world was at war, but in Japan, during a particularly cold winter, besides fighting Imperial Germany, the inhabitants of Sankebetsu Rokusen-sawa had a different kind of enemy, vengeful for his superficial wound. The branch office commissioner was Chief Inspector Suga Mitsugu. Ikeda Tomizō, the head of the Ikeda family, along with his wife, their eldest son Ikeda Tomikichi, and their second son Ikeda Kamejirō (age 18, then he married Ikeda Rikiko, age 9, the daughter of Chōsuke Matsumura, who had long been a leader in the village and his wife miscarried due to concerns about the marauders that were often seen near the village even after the incident was resolved), were not attacked in November. Miyōke Yayo (age 34), Miyōke Yasutarō (age 40)'s wife, who showed great courage despite received head wounds in the attack, made a full recovery and passed away at the age of 82 forty-eight years later, in July 1963, after receiving the filial piety of Miyōke Rikizō (age 10, then he married) and Miyōke Hisano (age 6), the first son and eldest daughter who responded to their mother's deep love and devoted themselves to her, but Miyōke Umekichi (age 1), the fourth and youngest son who was bitten by the strayed bear while being carried on his mother's back, died as a baby boy two years and eight months later, unable to overcome the paralysis. Miyōke Yūjirō (age 8), the second youngest son who narrowly escaped death, grew up smoothly, he was called up as a soldier to fight in World War II twenty-seven years later and was scattered in action on the battlefield of the Greater East Asia War (Pacific War) in 1942: the irony of history is that a boy who survived being attacked by a brown bear was forced to die in a place where humans were slaughtering each other, and this teaches us that humans are the most terrifying creatures. Miyōke Kinzō (age 3), the third son, was killed by Kesagake side by side with his best friend of the same age Saitō Haruyoshi and Saitō Iwao (age 6), the fourth and third sons of the Saitō family, late at night on December 10. Saitō Take (age 34), Saitō Ishigorō (age 42)'s eight months pregnant wife, too was eaten alive that night: the villagers were able to deliver her unborn child, but the fetus in her stomach was too weak and died an hour after discovery. The eldest son Saitō Eiji (age 15), the second son Saitō Yūjirō (age 9), and the eldest daughter Saitō Hama (age 13, "Takeda" after married) were absent because they were enrolled at Onishika Elementary School. Nagamatsu Yūkichi (age 59), a boarder at Ōta house who was living as a man's hand at Miyōke house, also known as nickname Odo, recovered from superficial injuries and returned to work as a woodcutter on the farm, but in April 1916, due his melancholy and survivor's guilt, he accidentally slipped and fell from a log bridge while taking a shortcut on his way home from work in the mountains, and drowned in the river's murky waters. Ōta Saburō (age 42), heartbroken for the lost of his family (his wife Abe Mayu, age 34, and their adopted son Hasumi Mikio, age 6) on December 9, burned down his house in the spring and, relieding on his relatives, moved to Haboro, and then returned to his hometown of Kawabe, Aomori, where he died of illness shortly thereafter. Yamamoto Heikichi knew this bear, had faced it before, who had a taste for young women and was the culprit who had previously killed and eat three adult women in neighbouring villages of Uryū, Asahikawa, and Teshio, later confirmed as parts of his victims were found in his stomach. After the attack, most of the villagers left in fear of more bear attacks within a year, except for the family of Tsuji Hashizō in the downstream area, a village advisor with his wife Rika and probably their son Kamezo, and the site was restored in July 1990. That case so bad went to the Imperial Palace: since the mercilessly bear was finally killed, the avengers reacted with spontaneous shouts of "banzai", as though celebrating a great military victory of the Emperor Taishō, and it was reported in the "Hokkaidō Times" news in brief on December 23 that the Imperial Diet resembled that bear. As estimated adult age about 7-8 years old, Kesagake was surely born around 1907, at the ending of the Meiji era.
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Источник http://noranyan.travel.coocan.jp/ireihi/19151209_sankebetsu/sankebetsu_015_001.html
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