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Gotoh’s posture reflects the internal battle between fighting an unchangeable situation and accepting it. To help me provide more relevant details about
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The name Juan Gotoh carries significant weight beyond the world of anime and manga. In the early 17th century, a real historical figure known as Juan Gotoh lived in the Iwate Prefecture of northern Japan. Born as Matagoro, he was the third son of the lord of Fujisawa-jo Castle. After his family’s decline, he traveled to Nagasaki, took a ship to the Gotō Islands, and was baptized into the Christian faith, taking the Latin name "Juan". He then returned to his homeland in Fukuwara ("God-Blessed Field"), where he became a community leader and invited Christian missionaries to work with local farmers and iron-workers, creating what became the second-largest Christian community in the Tōhoku region.
The umbrella was not a solution. It was a reminder: shelter is temporary, but kindness is not. Juan Gotoh, caught in the rain, was also caught in the act of being seen.
He took it. Their fingers did not touch, but the space between them felt suddenly smaller than it had any right to be. The rain continued to fall, indifferent and immense, but for the first time that day, Juan Gotoh felt dry. Not because he wasn't wet—he was soaked through, shivering, ridiculous—but because something in him had shifted. He had been caught in the rain. And for once, he didn't want to run.