At Asakusa, in Yedo, there lives a man
called Danzayémon, the chief of the Etas. This man traces his pedigree back to
Minamoto no Yoritomo, who founded the Shogunate in the year 1192 A.D. The whole
of the Etas in Japan are under his jurisdiction; his subordinates are called
Koyagashira, or "chiefs of the huts"; and they constitute the
government of the Etas. In the "Legacy of Iyéyasu," the 36th Law
provides as follows:
All wandering mendicants, such as male
sorcerers, female diviners, hermits, blind people, beggars, and tanners (Etas),
have had from of old their respective rulers. Be not disinclined, however, to
punish any such who give rise to disputes, or who overstep the boundaries of
their own classes and are disobedient to existing laws.
The occupation of the Etas is to kill and
flay horses, oxen, and other beasts, to stretch drums and make shoes; and if
they are very poor, they wander from house to house, working as cobblers,
mending old shoes and leather, and so earn a scanty livelihood. Besides this,
their daughters and young married women gain a trifle as wandering minstrels,
called Torioi, playing on the shamisen, a sort of banjo, and singing ballads.
They never marry out of their own fraternity, but remain apart, a despised and
shunned race.
At execution by crucifixion it is the duty
of the Etas to transfix the victims with spears; and, besides this, they have
to perform all sorts of degrading offices about criminals, such as carrying
sick prisoners from their cells to the hall of justice, and burying the bodies
of those that have been executed. Thus their race is polluted and accursed, and
they are hated accordingly.
Now this is how the Etas come to be under
the jurisdiction of Danzayémon:
When Minamoto no Yoritomo was yet a child,
his father, Minamoto no Yoshitomo, fought with Taira no Kiyomori, and was
killed by treachery: so his family was ruined; and Yoshitomo's concubine, whose
name was Tokiwa, took her children and fled from the house, to save her own and
their lives. But Kiyomori, desiring to destroy the family of Yoshitomo root and
branch, ordered his retainers to divide themselves into bands, and seek out the
children. At last they were found; but Tokiwa was so exceedingly beautiful that
Kiyomori was inflamed with love for her, and desired her to become his own
concubine. Then Tokiwa told Kiyomori that if he would spare her little ones she
would share his couch; but that if he killed her children she would destroy
herself rather than yield to his desire. When he heard this, Kiyomori,
bewildered by the beauty of Tokiwa, spared the lives of her children, but
banished them from the capital.
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