Do Foreigners Freak Out Japanese People?
I was recently asked "Are Japanese afraid of gaijin?" It was an interesting question which I had to think on a bit before responding. Certainly the answer is no -- although Westerners are sometimes viewed as mysterious and confusing creatures by the locals, I wouldn't say anyone feels actual fear, except possibly for small children who might hide in their mother's skirts when a big foreigner comes lumbering up to say hello. Of course, foreigners here do perplex the Japanese around them on a regular basis with some of the strange things they do, whether it's leaving a box of laserdiscs out in the rain then taking them back to the store the next day as defective (as a friend of mine did once), using a mimikaki ear cleaner as a coffee stir, or squealing with delight at the most mundane sights and sounds of the country, like my unending fascination with Japanese railroad crossings. Of course, there are times when Japanese are freaked out by foreigners for good reason, like when a British tourist from Spain decided it would be a good idea to take his clothes off and go for a swim in the moat around the Imperial Palace in Tokyo, after he'd accidentally dropped a bag he was carrying in the water. It took the Japanese two hours to finally corner and arrest him.
Here are some pics. Hope you're not eating now ^_^ Who thinks this guy deserves to be made into an Internet meme?





10 Comments:
what he's doing??
9:05 PM
He was trying to get a bag he dropped in the water, I gather, then he was trying to evade the cops.
9:14 PM
There's another white person among the japanese, and have incredible stupid look.
It's like he's thinking, "wow, he's naked ^¬^"
News videos of this are the uber funny, and you can see how they really are afraid of that man. Don't they have electric tasers or clubs? why they run away from the man with a stone?
11:25 PM
This is worse than the video of the police running away as fast as they could from an unarmed Japanese man who was crazy in the head. No, no tasers here that I've ever seen.
11:39 PM
Peter,
I travel in Asia a lot. I was a Sailor in the US Navy and I have a home in the Philippines. Like you I am taller than average (6'2"). Unlike you, I'm Black. Asians in many countries treat me like a two-legged demon; children cower, women often shy away.
I've only been to Sasebo once 15 years ago. How do the Japanese react to visiting "Black gaijin" these day?
4:01 AM
The police are using one of those man catcher type things, a sasumata maybe? That's pretty cool.
4:44 AM
Morgan, thanks for the comments. You're right, my experiences are affected partially by me being a white guy from California. I personally think that the average Japanese would just deal with a person normally without overt bias. If there was some, it'd be out here in the sticks where I live rather than Tokyo. Out here I can't say as I've ever seen a black person (either from the U.S. or from Africa, pretending to be from the U.S., which you see a lot in Harajuku ^_^) out here in Gunma.
9:59 AM
The Japanese response seems a little over the top. Shield? Sticks? Geez.... take the guy by the arm and tell him to get dressed.
11:40 AM
I do like the reaction of the guy in the white shirt in the background of the top picture - he definitely seems to be enjoying the sow. The rest of the folks aren't showing much emotion. Only 1 phone camera in use that I saw.
1:55 AM
I watched this clip on the internet, and just laughed. I think it's fun to see how different cultures react to crazy people running naked.
No big deal to me really, but I think it has a lot to do with where you grow up and what cultures you are exposed too. I am sure many of the local people are enjoying the show internally, they probably just show their emotion in a more reserved manner.
9:49 AM
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