Advertisement

'Honorable Pregnancy' Has the Japanese Going Ga-Ga

World Perspective | ASIA

December 11, 1999|SONNI EFRON, TIMES STAFF WRITER

TOKYO — "Honorable Pregnancy," screamed the giant headlines on a tabloid here Friday as Japanese rejoiced over reports that Crown Princess Masako, after more than six years of marriage, might at last be pregnant with an heir to the 2,600-year-old Chrysanthemum Throne.

The news came as a triumphant scoop for Asahi Shimbun. The newspaper reported in Friday morning editions that the former Masako Owada, a Harvard-educated diplomat, was showing signs of pregnancy.


Advertisement

The nation's media gleefully deployed to follow the story in every detail, with tabloids breathlessly reporting that the princess, who turned 36 Thursday, had received two positive results from pregnancy tests and declaring that she is reported to have received help from fertility specialists.

The Imperial Household Agency said it was too early to confirm the pregnancy--but did not deny it. It said the princess is scheduled next week to visit the Imperial Hospital, reportedly for an ultrasound test. State-sponsored NHK television reported that Masako is believed to be in the fifth week of pregnancy and that the imperial infant is due Aug. 6.

"Princess Masako's Millennium Baby," proclaimed the Tokyo Sports Newspaper. "Entire Nation Overjoyed by Masako's Pregnancy," gushed another.

The exuberant tabloids were less than diplomatic in referring to the years of speculation about why the royal couple has not produced a child, but all is now apparently forgiven. "Stork Has Its Own Pace," one headline said. "Hey, They Did It!! A Baby!!" said another.

Many said an imperial birth was just what Japan needed to lift its recession-induced gloom. The Sports Nippon tabloid declared that the royal baby was worth $200 billion in economic stimulus. "End-of-Century Recession is Resolved in a Flash," it said.

Amid the joy, however, a number of Japanese women said they were appalled by the premature leak of an unconfirmed pregnancy, particularly in the unstable first trimester, and expressed concern that it will put even more pressure on Masako to produce an heir.

"I feel so sorry for her," said Kaiyo Mochizuki, a 42-year-old homemaker. "The announcement came much too soon. If something goes wrong, what will she do now? Couldn't they have left her alone for a while?"

"It's a dreadful invasion of her privacy," agreed feminist lawmaker Mizuho Fukushima.

Los Angeles Times Articles
|