Tragedy in Akihabara
Usually there's nothing like a Sunday afternoon in Akihabara. It's fun to roam through the many electronics stores to see the latest devices, or head into one of the anime shops to browse figures or doujinshi comics. The blocked-off street (known as "pedestrian's heaven") is so full of shoppers and tourists and fans in cosplay giving "guerilla live" street performances that it feels like a great big carnival. This happy image was destroyed on Sunday when a crazed man drove a rented truck into a crowd then jumped out and started attacking people with a large survival-type knife, eventually killing six men and one woman and injuring ten others before police could take him into custody. Although rare in usually-peaceful Japan, these bizarre knife attacks do sometimes occur, and they're called torima, roughly translated as "a devil who just happened to be passing by." Sunday's tragedy called to mind an attack on children in an elementary school by a deranged man in which eight children were killed, which in an eerie twist happened exactly seven years before this attack. All Japan is buzzing about the possible motives of the attacker, a 25-year-old temporary factory worker from Shizuoka Prefecture, who may have been set off by a mistaken belief that he had been let go from his company when this was not the case. All throughout the world and the web, people are expressing sadness over the terrible tragedy.


"Ich bin ein Akihabarer..."



16 Comments:
American anime fans heard about this tragedy via outlets like Anime News Network.
In the states when something like this happens, as I'm sure you're aware, some kind of charitable fund is almost always started for the victims. Does that sort of thing happen in Japan as well when a tragedy like this occurs?
1:37 AM
thanks for sharing, Peter; first I've heard this story. I have a link for Anime News, but I always look at your blog first. A terrible thing; stress building up in a person and exploding. Guess it can happen in all places.
1:52 AM
Yes, it's been all over the blogs like wildfire. I just hope Akiba rebounds soon, we need a happy place like that. This kind of makes all the School Days / When They Cry "fun" horror anime genre that's been so popular recently a lot less fun. I don't know of any charitable fund but if I see something I'll post it.
There will no doubt be efforts to blame this on anime and manga by some. We'll see what happens -- the guy seemed to be a low level otaku if he was one at all, being into some games and drawing an anime character in his school year book once. I will fight that perception tooth and nail though. Did you see that lame-ass white suit he had on? No way he's an otaku, dressing like that. I also saw some reports that he was a member of a yakuza group, not sure if they were accurate.
2:10 AM
Hi peter, sorry if this is a repeat, but I couldn't confirm if the comment had been posted or not.
I was hoping I could get your opinion, or you could blog about the topic this article is based on.
http://www.japanprobe.com/?p=4833
mostly just criticisms of the japanese school system, whether you agree.
i doubt many people who commented on the post, have had children in japanese school system, and taught in them.
3:06 AM
Obviously, this is a horrific event. I hope people can avoid making generalizations about Japan based on it. Like you, I don't see a huge otaku connection with the guy. If anything, it seems very slight or commonplace.
As an ex-pat living here but not much of a manga or anime fan (I'm more into the music and street fashion scenes here), I'd only recently started exploring Akihabara. I was just there over Golden Week and thoroughly enjoyed it. The giant Mandarake and the building next to the station full of model and toy shops... wow.
So to hear about this... it's just very sad.
That said, I'm avoiding most blogs about it. I know I can come to this one and read something knowledgeable, balanced, sensible and heartfelt. So thanks!
9:53 AM
Kay, that's an interesting post. Those statements are all true, although they're choosing to see a certain side of things. There's also a lot of concern for kids which is a good thing, a lot more than I sensed in the U.S. growing up. (If there was a single day when parents came to school to see us studying I don't remember it, but they have them every other month here, it seems, with high attendance by parents.)
Joel, yes, I hope people keep it perspective. We always look for meaning in things but there's not any overall meaning, most of the time.
10:36 AM
Even though this looks like something only a japanese could think of, yet you get mesmerized that it actually happened! It's absurd to think that this man probably had very little to be upset about, really. If he lived in a slum in Brazil THEN he'd have something to be upset and crazed about...
12:26 PM
Vy, yes, we can't know what the hell was going on in his mind. Well, we can I guess since he's not dead (unfortunately), so he could maybe tell us. I think everything related to happiness is relative though. There can certainly be less frustration in being poor but happy than in being in a rich country like Japan. From what I read, he was working at a temporary factory job that was downsizing from 200 to 50 employees, but he'd been told that the layoffs didn't apply to him, so he had no reason to be worried. When he got to work last week, his work uniform was missing for some reason and he assumed they'd fired him and cleared out his locker, so he flew off the handle without finding out that he had not been laid off, in fact. Too bad he didn't fly off the handle and kill only himself, then it would be mildly amusing.
2:23 PM
I think these events play out different in America, because this is a gun culture, where weapons of all sorts are available to even the most disturbed individuals. So here a guy gets fired or something, and he goes home and then returns with a rifle. Happening a lot, here of late, it seems. In Japan, despite how it looks in movies, guns are a rarity.
8:19 PM
Yes, guns are rare, which is a good thing IMHO. I get flamed by customers whenever I say stuff like, pointing out the differences in murder rates in the U.S. and Japan, even though I left it up to everyone to ponder what the reasons might be, but I do like living in a country where 99.5% of people don't own guns. Knives are terrible as we can see from this tragedy, but they're a little better because the person might encounter Jean Van Damme who would take his knife away and flatten him.
10:37 PM
It's called Parent Teacher Night Peter and Parent's in the US are just as concerned about their children as the Japanese are. The part of all this that I'm having trouble with is that people there saw the guy driving up(someone actually vidoetaped it with their cell phone) yet no one tried to actually to stop the guy. I know Japan has a different culture to US (certainly less violent) and people there are aren't used to dealing with this kind thing but how can people just stand around while this is happenning and not try to do something? And btw I Peter I don't see how the man just killing himself alone would be
any less tragic or mildly amusing.
2:33 AM
Wow...I hadn't heard of this tragedy yet. I just came on to congratulate you on the mention of jlist in this weeks Newsweek (I can save you the mag if you want, if you're coming to SD Comicon this year).
1:46 PM
Kittenpurr, wow, I hadn't heard of that. I'll have our staff there pick up the issue. What is the article?
4:26 PM
It's the June 16, 2008 issue (I have a subscription so I think I get it ahead of release). It will have "A New kind of Recession" as the cover story. Page 55, under "food", titled "Bento Boxes for the Preschool Set".
3:47 AM
Darkrider, they can do it for precisely the same reasons that people will ignore someone lying injured in the street. The power of groupthink is incredible. Look up Asch's study of conformity. If it's that strong in an individualistic culture like American, imagine what it must be like in a group-orientated place like Japan. Then, of course, there is the danger of getting hurt yourself.
5:02 AM
Cool, thanks for the note. I've gotten some copies of the issue, and also found it online. Funny that they'd use the jlist.com URL. We do make the jbox.com available for this kind of thing...
10:58 AM
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