Culture Why the Black Lives Matter Movement Fell Flat in Japan - “I can’t forget the look in the eyes of people seeing our march. They were ignoring us, not interested at all.”


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SOPHIE HAS NEVER REALLY TALKED OPENLY ABOUT RACISM IN JAPAN UNTIL LAST YEAR: "IT FEELS LIBERATING".

The killing of George Floyd and the Black Lives Matter protests over the summer last year inspired debates, conversations and substantive action all over the world. One notable exception was Japan. While demonstrations in Tokyo and Osaka drew a few thousand people in June, there was no nationwide reckoning in a country that hasn’t fully come to terms with historical racism against ethnic minorities, such as the indigenous Ainu and Zainichi Koreans.

The issue was generally viewed as a foreign problem, not relevant in a place where many buy into what social scientists have called the homogeneity myth, or the belief that there isn’t much diversity to begin with in Japan. In reality there’s plenty, including a growing number of mixed-race citizens commonly referred to as “hafu.”

VICE World News interviewed a photographer whose work touches on diversity in Japan, as well as two mixed-race Japanese nationals who described their experiences living there, the racism they have been subjected to, and the inspiration they took from the BLM movement. Responses have been edited for length and clarity.

Sophie*

I was at a march in Tokyo, but sadly most of the people weren’t Japanese. I can’t forget the look in the eyes of people seeing our march. They were ignoring us, not interested at all. It made me cry. What are we doing if it doesn’t matter to them? Urusai! [“annoying” in Japanese].

On television, they don’t talk about it. My friends didn’t really ask about the Black Lives Matter movement until I started posting about it on social media. I also wrote about what it’s like to be a Black person growing up in Japan. I wasn’t used to talking about this, but the timing was right to talk to them about it, it felt liberating.

Growing up in a small town near Osaka I never talked about racism. My mom is Japanese [she prefers not to disclose her father’s nationality], but when I was six they divorced and he left. In our town, people stared at me and pointed at me, “look, a foreigner.” It was so sad, it made me depressed, I didn’t want to go out except for school.

Although I was Japanese, I was never considered to be Japanese. I knew it was the color of my skin. I had a foreign name, that didn’t help. When I was eight I asked my mother to change my name, I wanted a Japanese sounding name.

Things changed when I moved to Tokyo last year. Tokyo is more diverse, so I feel more comfortable. It’s more international, people don’t look at me as much. I don’t need to care how to behave, that I need to be “Japanese.” Now I don’t need to be seen as Japanese anymore.

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SOPHIE POSES FOR A PORTRAIT IN TOKYO.

Sometimes the police stopped me, but I was never afraid. When I dated a Black guy he was stopped by the police a lot. Restaurants didn’t let us in and taxis refused to stop.

In a way, Japan is changing for the better. The country is becoming more diverse, you see more hafu, and hafu models. But there are still issues with diversity, such as the notion of “beautifully white” or “bihaku” in Japanese. It’s the idea that people want to have a white skin color, it’s considered beautiful. And it’s everywhere you look, on television, advertisements, and on almost all beauty products. For companies, it’s just a way to make money, but it shows we have a long way to go in educating people about diversity.

After I posted about racism in Japan, I received a lot of comments, a lot of opinions. “Because we’re homogenous we don’t know about this problem,” people commented. Japan is not homogenous. That’s nonsense! Even in June when Naomi Osaka retweeted the protest of Black Lives Matter in Osaka, she was criticized for talking about racism in Japan openly. People were saying that there’s no racism in Japan, and that Japanese people are just not used to dealing with dark-skinned people. My real friends understand my point, but with some others, I felt like cutting ties.

Some people said they don’t feel comfortable sharing online about racism because they’re not Black, but I don't think that’s right. If only Black people say something, nothing will change.

Tetsuro Miyazaki, a Belgian-Japanese photographer who interviewed dozens of “hafu” in Japan for his book Hafu2Hafu

I have interviewed hafu, or mixed-race Japanese people with many different origins. While most have faced some type of discrimination, it rapidly became clear to me that skin color is a determining factor in the severity of it. Most of the non-white hafu talked about subtle or blatant racism. A Black Japanese woman, for example, talked about her school time where kids would give her a sponge to wash off her Black skin color.

This is the most extreme example I heard, but I am afraid that it wasn’t an isolated event incident. While this would cause indignation or anger in other countries, a sense of guilt concerning racism is often missing in Japan. In Japan, teachers all too often play it down or laugh it off.

When you’re non-white and raised in Japan, and everything you know is Japanese, it’s extremely painful to be excluded and to be constantly confronted with people who don’t see you as Japanese and not being able to participate because of your name or skin color.

Since many of the protesters in Japanese BLM marches are non-Japanese citizens, mixed-race Japanese people or Japanese citizens who have lived abroad for a while, the protests are seen as something exotic. Media would suggest the protesters are addressing an American problem. There was some, but way too little, debate following Japan’s own racism issues.

You often hear Japan is a homogenous country, as a starting point for explanations about racism in Japan, but I believe we have to recognize it isn’t that homogenous at all. Japan needs to move away from this homogeneity myth.

Kyoko*

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ACCORDING TO KYOKO THE DEBATE ABOUT RACISM IN JAPAN IS ONLY SURFACE LEVEL, BUT SHE HOPES THIS
WILL IMPROVE THROUGH EDUCATION.


My mother is Japanese and my father African-American. I was eight when I moved to Japan for the first time. You want to belong to a group, you don’t want to stick out, but that was hard as the only half-Black kid in school. In our city in Chiba, close to Tokyo, my brothers and I were the only half-Black kids.

One day a group of kids thought it was fun to stick erasers in my hair. “It doesn’t fall off,” they laughed. That’s one incident that comes to mind. I never told anyone. Even though it didn’t feel good, I didn’t want to make a big deal out of it. During that time, I probably thought, if this is how I can make friends, it’s not all that bad.

I first left for the U.S. when I was 17 and I lived there for a year before I moved back to Japan. I left Japan to live in the U.S. again when I was 23. I returned to Tokyo in 2018 to work in publishing. This year I started to work for a non-profit organization.

In Japan people see the Black Lives Matter movement as something unrelated to Japan, and that racism is not a problem, which is not true. Perhaps this is because people don’t interact with Black people in their daily life. It’s hard to know what it’s like if you’re not familiar with the issue. Even my friends weren’t aware of what happened in Japan, because they weren’t exposed to it. I’m their only half-Black friend. And it’s not something you talk about in daily conversations.

In the past, when I talked about microaggressions, it was pushed under the rug. “They don’t mean it,” “they don’t have a bad intention,” or “Japan is homogenous.” But it’s not true, all excuses. I don’t think they’re trying to dismiss my feelings, but they don’t know how else to deal with it or talk about it. This is the Japanese way of dealing with it, shoganai, “it can’t be helped.”
That way they’re putting the onus on the oppressed, this concept of making the oppressed responsible for educating people. I think we haven’t reached that state in Japan. In Japan, institutional racism is perhaps less visible, but everyday racism is worse here. I do feel safer here in Japan compared to the U.S., but a lot of the discussions about racism are surface level in Japan. People still find it hard to perceive it as their problem. I think education is a good place to start.

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KYOKO POSES FOR A PORTRAIT IN TOKYO.

Representation is a problem here too. Even with Naomi Osaka people still perceive her as some kind of unicorn. I don’t think it helps a lot, I think there should be representation in other areas outside of sport, such as politics, literature and science. For a real meaningful impact, however, we have to continue talking about it.

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Cope, seethe and dilate. Based Nippon strikes again.
 
This is the worst nightmare for leftist activists. Beat them in the streets? They'll have a nice video playing on every outlet for months on end to point to and scream for more donations and support. To be completely ignored like they don't even exist? A fate worse than death. The best they can muster out of that is a couple of passive aggressive articles on z list news blogs whining about how people shouldn't be allowed to ignore their super cereal virtue signaling.
 
This is the worst nightmare for leftist activists. Beat them in the streets? They'll have a nice video playing on every outlet for months on end to point to and scream for more donations and support. To be completely ignored like they don't even exist? A fate worse than death. The best they can muster out of that is a couple of passive aggressive articles on z list news blogs whining about how people shouldn't be allowed to ignore their super cereal virtue signaling.
Agreed. That's exactly why I wish the Right wouldn't constantly take the bait and fall into their traps. To be fair, the Right did actually behave itself and exercised restraint throughout the 2020 riots. But you still do have groups that insist on showing up to counterprotest and brawl with Antifa/BLM and the only thing that produces are hit pieces with photos of the lone Confederate flag in the crowd and scary headlines about the growing threat of "white supremacist domestic terrorism." Frustrating as it may be to have a totally captured media, don't give them fuel to turn around and burn you with.
 
Every time I hear about "industrialized slavery" and "muh slave trade", it involves the Portuguese, who had a huge mercantile class at the time. I hate to sound like a conspiracy theorist, but does anyone know what percentage of those Portuguese were (((traders)))?
None. Judaism was banned in Portugal since 1497 and the Inquisition existed primarily to make sure Jews who converted to Christianity (called New Christians, but some were former Muslims) stayed Christian and forgot their traditions. A lot of these New Christians found it too much of a hassle and just emigrated to other parts of Europe (including the Ottoman Empire) and became Jews again. HOWEVER, some of these New Christians got into the Portuguese Empire and would settle in colonies and shit but they were only a minority of settlers and traders because it was genuinely hard to forge your identity as a normal Christian.

Happened in Spain too, so when AOC says she's part Jewish, this is what she's referring to, and she possibly is since there's tens of millions of descendents of these converted Jews.
 
From what I gather it has to do with Japanese in the Philippines during the time of American rule and their experience of baseball there which is ironic since baseball didn’t become popular in the Philippines especially after the US left. The other explanation could be the American rule after two certain bombs.Reply
First Japanese Baseball team was founded in 1934. The JBL (now NPB) was founded in 1936.
They were prisoners of war being treated cruelly due to being enemy soldiers.
That was in WW2 in WW1 when Japan was with the Allies it was the other way around.
Over 63 German POW's opted to stay in japan and it was a German POW orchestra who made the first performance of Bethoven 9th Symphony.
Karl Juchheim, stayed in Japan and established a bakery, which grew into the successful Juchheim bakery chain in Japan. Another other famous company founded by a former Bando POW is Lohmeyer Corporation in Tochigi.
Because America has better money making opportunities.

BLM got pretty big in Europe, the UK even had several of their statues torn down.
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It got only really big in the UK, in the most other European countries like Germany there were a few demonstrations, because them University Kids got brownie points from their Professors and a day off and even that died pretty quick when the first riot pictures were aired in national tv news. In eastern Europe it was mostly a non-event with next to nobody showing up for protests. Not even in France which has the second biggest nigger infection after the UK it was really a biggy.
Even ‘whiteface’ is considered offensive that they had to apologize for that

Japanese apologize for every shit, they even apologized for a train leaving the station to fucking early. 25 fucking seconds to early!
 
>In a way, Japan is changing for the better. The country is becoming more diverse
Huh? That is statistically and factually false in every way. They just made it harder for foreigners to reside in Japan and the visas restrictions have just been locked down ever further. Anyone who lives there knows for a fact Japan hasn't bent thus far. This sounds like wishful thinking by a White western liberal woman.
 
Huh? That is statistically and factually false in every way. They just made it harder for foreigners to reside in Japan and the visas restrictions have just been locked down ever further. Anyone who lives there knows for a fact Japan hasn't bent thus far. This sounds like wishful thinking by a White western liberal woman.

Much like all those articles claiming the Japanese streets were rivers of blm protestors, it is all relying on the reader’s ignorance of the foreigners.

And the wishful thinking of western white liberals who want to drain the world of color and replace it with themselves.
 
Of course the father is african american. Only through military bases does america manage to sneak in diversity into japan.
does that mean he wasn't there? explains the woketarding, woketards tend to have no paternal figures in their life

also, no, black asians do not exist, they were hunted to extinction for their hides and their glands(this was for the chinese medicine markets cuz let's face it, spread claims in china that some substance can help with erection and they'll eat it up)
 
Every half human half nigger mutant I met in Japan was abandoned by their father. Every single one. You'll find plenty of white GIs and expacts who get married after knocking up a Japanese woman but not one single nigger stays. Zero surpise when she said her dad never came back from his cigarette run.
 
I fucking hate how some pasty ass priveledged mixed race person who's able to fucking be in foreign nations during a worldwide pandemic shutdown is so into the twitter BLM virtue signal hivemind that in a nation that has literally fuckall to do with george Floyd's death tried getting the same shit going over there that was going over here for an entire year. All the shit around you you can go and do and you choose to try and pull that? fuck you. Now I know why some of the darker black people fucking hate lighter skinned ones. it's cause of bitches like this.

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they’re barely past the black face mammy stage. Give them another 20 years and they’ll get to the “maybe if we pretend to care about them, they’ll shut up” stage.
Mr. Popo isn't a black face Mammy, he's a genie and a fucking cool dude. For years the only people that bitched about mr. popo were the usual "no fun allowed" types and I don't think that's really changed aside from the fact that there's more of them due to reddit/twitter/tiktok clout brainrot slowly taking the masses.

Check the fucking date you morons, if there isn't any new info don't be necroing year old shit you faggots.
Fuck I didn't realize it was a necro because I literally had a brainfart and somehow forgot it was fucking 2022, god DAMN!
 
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you do this in Okinawa and you'll probably get stabbed by the locals.

#stopasianhate


The 1945 Katsuyama killing incident was the murder of three African-American United States Marines in Katsuyama near Nago, Okinawa after the Battle of Okinawa in June 1945. Residents of Katsuyama had reportedly killed the three Marines for their repeated rape of village women during occupation of Okinawa and hid their bodies in a nearby cave out of fear for retaliation.[1] The Katsuyama incident was kept secret until 1997 when the bodies and identities of the Marines were discovered.[1]
This article used to be called Cave of the Negros before it was changed last year.

I know this is going to upset people, but from every past experience of speaking to Japanese people, Kurombo = Nigger. I am considering a request to move this article to Cave of the Niggers. Please comment here before that happens, as I'm not 100% sure about this, due to the offensive nature of the word. Spacecowboy420 (talk) 10:54, 22 December 2015 (UTC)
 
Oh ffs! Didn't even realise that this was a necro-ed thread until sticker-ing some of the comments and then realising the date was early last year. :roll:

It would be interesting to know what's currently going on in Japan in regards to Japan-born "gajins" given what's happened with the covid shit.

There was this back in June-July. But I have no idea what came of it.

After dealing with economic issues and mandates I'm betting the Nipons are sick and tired of the loudly-whinging, annoying blacks by now.
 
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