Shigeri Yamataka became involved in Chifuren in 1952, when Chifuren was formed. Yamataka had previously been involved with women's groups or
fujinakai which helped make up part of Chifuren. The activist tradition of Chifuren was based on the idea of , meaning "good wife, wise mother." Millions of women joined the group, united under the ideas of improving women's lives, reforming both home and society and creating social welfare. Chifuren opposed revisions to the
postwar Constitution and Civil Code of 1948 that would put women, their real property and their families under legal control of a family
patriarch. In 1955, Chifuren and the Housewives Association founded the New Life Campaign Association, which was seen by Yamataka as a "movement by and for women." During the 1960s, Chifuren, along with the
YWCA,
Japanese League of Women Voters, the Women's Bar Association of Japan and the Christian Women's Temperance Union all "independently declared their opposition to nuclear armaments." Chifuren fought for environmental changes and fought against pollution in the late 1960s and early 1970s. == References ==