Members of a college kanto membership carry out in Akita Prefecture, Japan. Custom and faith dictate that solely males are allowed to be sashite or pole carriers.
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Households within the U.S. and around the globe are having fewer youngsters as individuals make profoundly totally different choices about their lives. NPR’s collection Inhabitants Shift: How Smaller Households Are Altering the World explores the causes and implications of this development.
AKITA, Japan — Younger males in conventional competition garments steadiness heavy bamboo poles as much as 40 ft excessive on their heads, arms, hips and shoulders. Crossbars on the poles carry dozens of candlelit paper lanterns.
Half ritual, half competition and half competitors, kanto is a centuries-old show of energy, talent and tradition distinctive to Akita Prefecture, in northern Japan’s Tohoku area.
Historically, solely males are allowed to the touch the poles. Girls play flutes and drums.
Kanto practitioners imagine that girls can’t take part as a result of, in response to Japan’s Shinto faith, girls’s blood from menstruation and childbirth is taken into account impure for the aim of non secular rituals.
Some Japanese girls settle for Kanto’s gender divisions as a part of the tradition, or just chorus from criticizing them. School scholar Mayaka Ogawa, for instance, says, “We won’t actually argue towards custom and spiritual causes.”
Kanto is emblematic of each Akita’s cultural splendor and its conservative rural society.
And Akita itself is emblematic of Japan’s twenty first century demographic challenges: It has essentially the most aged inhabitants (39% had been over age 65 in 2024), the bottom start fee and the quickest declining inhabitants of Japan’s 47 prefectures, in response to authorities figures. Gender inequality is accelerating depopulation in rural areas like this.
A musician, or ohayashi, helps a toddler strive a drum at a kanto efficiency in Japan’s Akita Prefecture.
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Rural girls flee gender inequality
A Japanese authorities report on inequality printed in June discovered that 27% of younger girls need to go away their hometowns, in comparison with 15% of younger males — and inflexible gender roles in rural society are prompting younger girls to vote with their ft.
The survey exhibits that the majority girls transfer to the cities searching for higher employment alternatives — however there is a gender angle to that, too. Widespread expectations that girls will prioritize housekeeping and childcare additionally diminish younger girls’s academic prospects, motivating them to depart rural areas.
In rural communities, “girls are caught in short-term or part-time jobs and solely males get promoted. Girls do not need to work in these locations, so that they transfer to Tokyo,” says Chuo College sociologist Masahiro Yamada.
The issue is persistent, he says, as a result of “middle-aged and older males in rural areas do not need to change the present state of affairs of discrimination towards girls.”
Whereas final month’s choice of Sanae Takaichi as Japan’s first feminine prime minister breaks an necessary glass ceiling, she advocates a conservative, conventional view of gender roles.
Japanese girls’s political empowerment ranks one hundred and twenty fifth out of 148 nations within the World Financial Discussion board’s Gender Hole Report for 2025.
A examine final 12 months discovered that 744 Japanese municipalities, or 43% of the full, principally in rural areas, are prone to disappearing as a result of their proportion of ladies of childbearing age are anticipated to drop by half by mid-century.
However the results of depopulation in Japan are already unattainable to overlook. Lots of of 1000’s of jobs go unfilled resulting from labor shortages. Hundreds of thousands of houses stand vacant or deserted.
Making girls’s voices heard
Whereas the exodus of rural girls continues, some girls keep put or return to rural areas to attempt to enhance them.
Ren Yamamoto wished to make younger rural girls’s voices heard. So the 26-year-old resident of Nirasaki, a metropolis in Yamanashi Prefecture — house to Mount Fuji and a few 80 miles west of Tokyo — taped 100 interviews with rural girls and began her personal YouTube channel.
Ren Yamamoto, 26, interviewed 100 girls about gender discrimination,and posted her materials on YouTube. Then-Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba invited her to speak about her work.
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Lots of her interviewees informed her “once they return to their hometowns, they’re requested: ‘when are you getting married? when are you going to have youngsters?’ and so they’re sick of being pressured into such a job,” she says.
Japan’s public broadcaster NHK reported on her mission. Earlier this 12 months, then-Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba invited her to meet with him.
“Insurance policies to help girls have been centered on childcare and marriage, with out addressing the the explanation why girls go away rural areas,” Yamamoto informed Ishiba. “Policymakers have not confronted the truth that girls have their very own decisions to make. We really feel like we’re seen as baby-making machines.”
Ishiba informed Yamamoto he was attempting to enhance the state of affairs, however it was robust as a result of native officers are overwhelmingly middle-aged males.
The federal government searches for coverage fixes
Japan’s authorities has identified that the problems of gender equality and falling birthrate are inseparably linked. Central and native authorities try varied insurance policies to deal with each points.
Some native governments, together with Tokyo’s and Akita’s, function matchmakers to attempt to improve marriages and births.
“I hate that,” exclaims Mayaka Ogawa, the Akita faculty scholar. “It nearly comes throughout as girls cannot do it for themselves.” She provides: “Girls are beginning to awaken to the truth that they do not really want to kind a household with the intention to be fulfilled.”
On a current weekend, a handful of principally middle-aged girls attended a lecture in Akita, the place an “assertiveness coach” coached them on easy methods to persuade husbands to assist extra with housekeeping and childcare. A poster for the occasion exhibits drawings of smiling males ironing laundry and cradling youngsters.
“Regardless that so many individuals throughout Japan are placing in a lot effort [toward gender equality], we nonetheless discover ourselves in a state of affairs the place progress is painfully gradual,” says Naoko Tani, director of the Akita Prefectural Central Gender Equality Heart, which hosted the lecture.
Feminine musicians play drums and flutes at a kanto efficiency in Japan’s Akita Prefecture.
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Gnawing unease and pessimism
Some Akita girls say they undergo from moya moya, a obscure, gnawing sense that issues aren’t proper, however they can not put their finger on it. Taboos towards difficult gender roles and male authority thicken the fog of moya moya.
Tani says she too as soon as suffered from this confusion, however “by means of studying about issues from a gender perspective, there have been moments when issues instantly clicked for me — after I thought, ‘Ah, so that is what it is about.’ And at these occasions, the belief moved me to tears.”
Others are simply moved to depart and never look again.
“Akita is commonly known as an remoted island on land,” says highschool scholar Yukina Oguma, whose household are hereditary managers of a Buddhist temple in Akita.
She plans to go to school in one other prefecture.
Requested what she would do if she had been informed or anticipated to remain in Akita and take over the temple, she replies, “I might run away.”
Some girls are pessimistic about bettering gender equality in Akita anytime quickly.
“Let Akita be depopulated. There is no such thing as a approach of stopping it, truthfully talking,” argues faculty scholar Miwa Sawano. “They will not notice they’ve an issue till the ladies go away.”
Chie Kobayashi contributed to this report in Tokyo and Yamanashi and Akita Prefectures.

