Japan university to set up ninja studies center

Members of ninja group Ashura show their martial-art skills during a press conference held by Japan Ninja Council at Foreign Correspondents' Club of Japan (FCCJ) in Tokyo on February 22, 2017. The Japan Ninja Council, announced its new projects including development of tourist circuits, building a museum devoted to ninja in Tokyo to open in 2018 and a "ninja academy" to train the martial-art of ninja.  / AFP PHOTO / Behrouz MEHRI
Members of the ninja group Ashura show their martial-art skills during a press conference held by the Japan Ninja Council at the Foreign Correspondents’ Club of Japan  in Tokyo on February 22, 2017./ AFP / Behrouz Mehri

TOKYO, Japan (AFP) — A Japanese university is planning what it says will be the world’s first research center devoted to ninja — the black clad assassins known for secrecy and stealth.

While mostly confined to history books and fiction, ninja have been enjoying something of a resurgence as Japanese authorities increasingly deploy them to promote tourism ahead of the 2020 Olympic Games in Tokyo.

Now, Mie University in central Japan — the region considered the home of the feudal martial arts masters — has announced that a ninja research facility will be established in July.

It plans to compile a database of ninja and encourage cooperation between scholars from different disciplines who study ninja, according to Yuji Yamada, a professor of Japanese history at the university.

“We’ll conduct research on ancient documents and collaborate with science researchers to be able to apply the wisdom of ninja to modern society,” Yamada, who is setting up the center, told AFP on Thursday.

“For instance, ninja burnt Japanese incense before going out to avoid evil things. We assume the incense could boost concentration and thus ninja could avoid injuries,” he said, adding that research on such fragrances might prove useful in today’s world.

The facility will be located in Iga — 350 kilometers (220 miles) southwest of Tokyo — a mountain-shrouded city that was once home to many ninja.

Yamada also said that the center plans to publish its research in English and in Japanese so as to make it accessible to interested researchers and fans overseas.

Amid the ongoing ninja boom, Aichi prefecture last year began hiring full-time ninja, including a foreigner, to promote tourism in the area known as the historic Nagoya castle.

In 2015, governors and mayors from prefectures around the country traded their usual suits for ninja costumes to announce the launch of a “ninja council.”