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Olympics Carry A Question - What Does It Mean To Be Japanese - Black Lives Matter Marketa Vondrousova Washington Wizards Tokyo NBA - The Independent
Olympics Carry A Question - What Does It Mean To Be Japanese - Black Lives Matter Marketa Vondrousova Washington Wizards Tokyo NBA - The Independent
Olympics Carry A Question - What Does It Mean To Be Japanese - Black Lives Matter Marketa Vondrousova Washington Wizards Tokyo NBA - The Independent
Japan Ethnicity Question (Copyright 2021 The Associated Press. All rights reserved)
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2023/12/7 上午9:44 Olympics carry a question: What does it mean to be Japanese? Black Lives Matter Marketa Vondrousova Washington Wiz…
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Two multiracial athletes, two high-profile roles: Rising NBA star Rui Hachimura
carried the Japanese flag at the Olympics' opening ceremony. Tennis superstar
Naomi Osaka lit the Olympic cauldron. For Japan, it was a remarkable showcase
of racial diversity — but one that also highlighted how much remains missing in
a nation that values homogeneity and conformity.
Osaka and Hachimura, both of whom have one foreign parent and one Japanese
parent, were cheered warmly by many even as some nationalists pounded them
online for not being “pure Japanese.” It has rekindled a debate on racial identity
that points toward a particular and thorny question: What does it mean to be
Japanese?
Osaka and Hachimura have many fans here. Both appear in commercials for
Nissin Cup Noodle. Osaka recently signed with Panasonic, and Hachimura, a
Washington Wizards forward, appears in ads for a Taisho Pharmaceutical energy
drink and for Sumitomo Mitsui Banking Corp.
Their success coincides with an increase in the number of people with multiracial
and diverse cultural backgrounds in Japan that comes as more people marry
foreigners and more foreign workers arrive.
Children from mixed race families in Japan, often called “hafu,” or half, account
for about 2% of babies born every year. They are often chided for not being “fully
Japanese” or bullied for looking different.
Melissa Luna Isomoto, who is of Japanese and Kenyan descent and grew up in
Japan, was delighted to see her role model, Osaka, represent Japan as the torch
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bearer in the July 23 event. But she said her heart sank when she saw online
comments criticizing Osaka for not being Japanese enough.
“She hardly speaks Japanese, and she is not pure Japanese,” one Twitter posting
said. “No way. We wanted pure Japanese, or as a compromise, at least a Japanese-
speaking ‘hafu (half-Japanese)’ like Rui Hachimura,” another tweet said.
Many critics posting online suggest they define “Japanese” as those whose
parents are both Japanese and speak the language perfectly. Many consider those
born and raised in Japan, such as Hachimura, as Japanese, but think of Osaka,
who grew up mostly in the United States and doesn’t speak fluent Japanese, as
more Japanese-American.
There were also complaints about Osaka's support of the Black Lives Matter anti-
racism movement and her comments about mental health. In addition to her
Haitian roots, Osaka tends to be an easy target in Japan, where experts say biases
against women and mental health issues persist.
Growing up with African roots, Isomoto was repeatedly reminded that she looked
different.
“I was often called a foreigner, or told to go back to Kenya as other kids knew my
Kenyan roots, and sometimes called a gorilla,” she said. “Because of bullying and
racism, I often disliked my own roots and wished I was Japanese."
She gained confidence and started learning more about her African background
when she met other students of multiracial or different cultural backgrounds in
high school. Still, pressure to conform was so strong she got her hair straightened
like other Japanese students, trying to blend in.
Japan’s lack of tolerance also affects sexual minorities and ethnic Koreans and
Chinese, who do not stand out by their physical features but are discriminated
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against for historical and political reasons, said Julian Keane, an Osaka City
University sociologist.
“Naomi Osaka s torch highlighted the use of diversity only when it is convenient
for Japan and brings benefits," Keane said. Multiracial people are seen as “human
resources” and considered Japanese only when they achieve results without
interfering with the privileges of the “majority," he said.
For example, Japan has eased its immigration policy to allow more unskilled
foreign workers to make up for a declining workforce in the world's fastest aging
country — but on the condition that they come without their families and leave
after their contracts end.
The term “pure Japanese” is often used to promote unity and national identity,
and to target and exclude others. There is a growing presence of mixed-race
people in entertainment and sports, where their roles are expected and they are
marketed for their looks and physical performance.
There are also diverse stars from the past: home run king Sadaharu Oh, a Chinese
citizen who grew up in Japan, for example, and baseball star Sachio Kinugasa,
born to a Japanese mother and an African-American soldier, were largely
accepted as Japanese and both received the government's prestigious People's
Honor Award. Kinugasa, who was bullied for his mixed race as a child, died in
2018. Oh participated in the Olympic torch relay last month at the Games'
opening ceremony.
Still, in a country where conformity and homogeneity have been emphasized, life
can often be difficult.
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2023/12/7 上午9:44 Olympics carry a question: What does it mean to be Japanese? Black Lives Matter Marketa Vondrousova Washington Wiz…
Isomoto says she is now confident about her mixed roots, and about who she is.
Like Osaka, her role model, she hopes to help others who still suffer.
“If asked if I’m Japanese or Kenyan, I choose neither. I was born and grew up in
Japan and am bicultural. I cannot choose one or the other,” Isomoto said. “I’d say,
`I’m just me.'”
___
Tokyo-based AP journalist Mari Yamaguchi has covered Japan for 31 years. More
AP Olympics: https://apnews.com/hub/2020-tokyo-olympics and
https://twitter.com/AP_Sports
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