yego.me
💡 Stop wasting time. Read Youtube instead of watch. Download Chrome Extension

Japan's scariest ghost story - Kit Brooks


3m read
·Nov 8, 2024

Looking at her father’s brutally murdered body, Oiwa was sick with despair. Her father had been Oiwa’s only hope for ending her marriage to the cruel and dishonorable samurai Iemon. And now, while her husband and brother-in-law vowed to find the culprit, Oiwa was trapped in her unhappy home with only the household servant Kohei to witness her suffering.

What the grieving woman couldn’t guess, however, was just how close the killer was. After Oiwa’s father tried to end the marriage, it was Iemon who murdered him in cold blood. Hearing of her troubles, Oiwa’s wealthy doctor neighbor sent some medicine to soothe her. However, when Iemon went to offer thanks, the doctor revealed his gift was part of a sordid scheme. His beautiful young granddaughter was madly in love with Iemon, and if the samurai left Oiwa for her, the doctor would offer him great riches.

Iemon happily accepted this bargain, and eager to marry his new bride, he sent a man called Takuetsu to dispose of his poisoned wife. But when Takuetsu arrived in Oiwa’s room, he was appalled. The poison had swollen her eye and her hair fell to the floor in bloody clumps. Taking pity, Takuetsu told Oiwa about the doctor’s scheme. Furious, Oiwa lunged for a sword. Takuetsu wrestled it away and flung the blade across the room.

But when Oiwa ran to confront her husband, she stumbled, falling against the sword. Wounded and poisoned, Oiwa cursed Iemon’s name as the life left her body. At the discovery of his wife's demise, Iemon arranged to remarry that very night—but not before killing his servant Kohei, who heard Oiwa’s death. While Iemon celebrated his wedding, his friends nailed both corpses to a heavy door and sunk them in a nearby river.

That night, Iemon reveled in his successful scheme. But suddenly his bride’s sleeping face shifted into Oiwa’s tortured features. Iemon acted on his violent instincts, slashing her throat. But when his fear subsided, he realized that he’d killed his new wife. He stumbled out of the room and into another monstrous figure wearing the face of his deceased servant. The samurai ran his sword through the man—only to discover he’d slain his new grandfather-in-law as well.

Iemon fled the house, running frantically until he came upon a moonlit river. Here, he stopped to plot his next move, fishing as he thought. Soon his fishing rod began to twitch, but the harder he pulled, the heavier his catch became. Finally, a wooden door broke the river’s surface—with Oiwa’s writhing body on one side and Kohei’s on the other.

Iemon ran for days, finally taking shelter in a mountain hermitage. Over the following months, he tried to convince himself these horrible visions were just illusions—but his nightmares never relented. One night, as he attempted to walk off another bad dream, a nearby lantern began to crackle and tear. The paper stretched larger and larger until Oiwa’s ghost appeared in a blaze of fire.

Iemon begged for mercy, but Oiwa had none to offer. Over just 24 hours, the spirit slaughtered his parents and friends, and tortured the samurai with ravenous rats. Only when Iemon was truly hopeless did Oiwa enlist her brother-in-law to secure bloody justice for her and her father.

In the 19th century, Oiwa’s quest for vengeance was one of the most popular kabuki theater performances, renowned for its grisly narrative and groundbreaking special effects. To depict Oiwa’s iconic transformation, designers hid bags of fake blood in her wig. And for her grand, ghostly entrance, Oiwa’s actor really would emerge from a flaming lantern, doing an assisted handstand to look as though she’s descending from above.

Today, Oiwa is considered Japan’s most famous ghost, and her image continues to inspire counterparts in film and television. But those who retell her story still tread carefully, often asking her spirit’s permission at her rumored grave in Tokyo. In this way, modern storytellers continue to give Oiwa the respect—and fear—she so rightfully deserves.

More Articles

View All
Atomic spectra | Physics | Khan Academy
We can look at stars or nebulas or even planets which are very, very far away and estimate what composes them, what are the elements that are there inside of them. But how do we do that? How can we sit here on Earth and figure out what elements are presen…
Jessica Livingston at Startup School 2012
Hi everyone! This is so big league this year! I can’t believe it. We have like this team of people in the back helping. There’s real chairs, and look how many seats there are! This is so exciting. Um, I’m Jessica Livingston. I’m one of the founders of Y …
Double replacement reactions | Chemistry | Khan Academy
Check this out! I have two clear, colorless solutions over here. Let’s pour them into each other. We pour the first one, and we pour the second one, and boom! We now get a white color solution. Here’s another example: again, two colorless solutions. We p…
Theories Are Explanations, Not Predictions
There’s another example from science like this. On a heat source, put a beaker of water, then put a thermometer into that water and turn on your heat source. Then record, as the time passes, what the temperature of the water is. You will notice that the t…
The Dark Web is Killing Thousands Every Year
In 2010, around 40,000 people died from drug overdoses in the United States. Quantifying the importance and meaning of individual human life in a single statistic is impossible, but that number might already seem high, especially if you knew one of those …
Ron Conway - Startup Investor School Day 4
That was a, I think, a fantastic survey, a summary of how to think about what it means to be a good investor. Paul Graham actually wrote an entire essay about what it means to be a good investor, with Ron Conway as the subject of the essay. So, the guinea…