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Justo Takayama

Justo Takayama Ukon (ジュスト高山右近), born Takayama Hikogorō (高山彦五郎) and also known as Dom Justo Takayama was a Japanese Catholic daimyō and samurai during the Sengoku period that saw rampant anti-Catholic sentiment.

Biography
Dom Justo Takayama was the eldest son (thus the heir) of Takayama Tomoteru who was the lord of the Sawa Castle in the Yamato Province. During their domination of Takatsuki region, he and his father pushed their policies as kirishitan daimyōs. Several of their subjects converted to Catholicism under their influence. During his reign, Takayama destroyed numerous Buddhist temples and Shinto shrines in both Takatsuki and Akashi. However, Hideyoshi became hostile towards the Christian faith and in 1587 ordered the expulsion of all missionaries and that all Christian daimyōs should renounce their faith. While several daimyō obeyed this order and renounced Roman Catholicism, Justo proclaimed that he would not give up his faith and would rather give up his land and all that he owned. until 1614 when Tokugawa Ieyasu (the ruler at the time) prohibited the Christian faith which resulted in Takayama's expulsion from Japan. On 8 November 1614, with 300 other Japanese Christians, he left his home from Nagasaki. He arrived at Manila on 11 December 1614 where he received a warm welcome from the Spanish Jesuits and the local Filipinos. The governor Juan de Silva wished to provide him with an income to support him and his relations but he declined this offer saying he was no longer in a position to offer his services in exchange for income nor did he wish to act like a lord. Some in the colonial government of the Spanish Philippines suggested to invade Japan and overthrow Tokugawa in order to protect Japanese Christians and place him in a position of great power and influence. Takayama declined to participate and even opposed the plan. ==Death==
Death
After suffering from a violent fever, he died of illness at midnight on 3 or 5 February 1615, 44 days after arriving in Manila. ==Memorials==
Memorials
At Plaza Dilao in Paco, Manila a statue of Takayama was installed in 1978. The site is the last vestige of the old town where some 3,000 Japanese immigrants lived in exile. The statue of Takayama depicts him in traditional samurai garb and a topknot. He is holding a sheathed katana pointed downwards, upon which hangs a crucifix. The University of Santo Tomas has a copy of the Plaza Dilao statue in front of the Thomas Aquinas Research Complex building. It was unveiled and blessed on 28 March 2017. On 21 December 2022 a resin image of Takayama was enshrined inside the San Miguel Church in Manila. ==Beatification==
Beatification
His cause for sainthood started at a diocesan level which resulted in the validation of the process on 10 June 1994 after the Congregation for the Causes of Saints (CCS) were given all the boxes of documentation pertaining to the cause. The commencement to the cause saw him titled as a Servant of God. There had been failed attempts to start the cause in the past. The first attempt came in 1630 when the Manila priests decided to commence it, but this failed due to the isolationist Japanese policies which prevented the collection of the documentation that was needed; the petition was presented but was rejected. The second attempt in 1965 failed due to several errors being made. In October 2012, a letter was presented to Pope Benedict XVI asking for the cause to be re-examined. The positio dossier was submitted in 2013 to the competent authorities in Rome for further assessment. Takayama's cause was meant to confirm that he was a martyr because of the treatment he received and because he renounced all he had to pursue and profess his faith. Pope Francis approved Takayama's beatification on 21 January 2016; it was celebrated in Osaka on 7 February 2017 with Cardinal Amato presiding on the pope's behalf. During Cardinal Thomas Aquino Manyo Maeda's visit to the Manila Cathedral on 21 December 2023, the cardinal disclosed investigations of possible miracles that would lead to Takayama's canonization. ==See also==
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