‘Homesick Hachiko’ in Odate, Japan


Hachi, also known as Hachiko (https://www.atlasobscura.com/places/hachiko-hachi-shibuya-station), is arguably one of the best-known dogs – or historical figures, even – in Japan. He famously waited for his master outside Shibuya Station for a decade after his death, becoming a symbol of loyalty. Now a statue of Hachiko stands on the spot, an iconic meet-up spot in Tokyo.

Unbeknownst to most, there’s another Hachiko statue in the city of Ōdate in Akita Prefecture, in the Tōhoku region up north. The connection? This is his birthplace, the original home of Akita dogs.

Hachi was born among eight puppies on 10 November 1923 in the village of Niida, present-day Ōdate, and selected to be sent to Tokyo as requested by Professor Hidesaburō Ueno. After a 20-hour train ride, Hachi arrived in Tokyo and spent a year with Ueno until he died of a cerebral hemorrhage. Hachi kept waiting and waiting for Ueno, though often bullied and abused by passers-by. After his story was published on the newspaper, however, he became a beloved icon and a statue was erected in his honor in 1934, a year before his death.

In 1977, the Akita Inu Preservation Society founded a museum in Ōdate, beside the Keijō castlesite park. 27 years later, in 2004, a new statue of Hachiko was and installed outside this museum. It reuses a pedestal once occupied by a bronze statue of Hachi which was lost during World War II, melted down and surrendered as scrap metal. Titled Homesick Hachiko or Hachiko Longing for Home, it depicts Hachi looking up as if to welcome the long-awaited return of his master.





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