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The personal log of Peter Payne, owner of JLIST.com, the home of "wacky things from Japan"

Wednesday, August 05, 2009

Gaijin in Japan, Continued

Last time I talked about the way Japanese perceive Westerners, who kind of hold a special place in society here because we're so obviously different from the Japanese faces all around us -- we basically have a big sign that says gaijin! hanging around our necks. One question I'm sometimes asked is, do foreigners in Japan face discrimination. Now, the Japanese are human beings just like people in every other country, and not everyone is always happy to have to deal with a bumbling foreigner who doesn't necessarily know the local language and customs yet often assumes that others are familiar with his country. I have naturally experienced some issues during my time here, from an inebriated yakuza who was clearly not happy to have an American breaking the wa in the public bath he was using to the occasional crazy individual who walks up and down the train cars in Tokyo shouting while everyone pretends he's not there. These instances have been extremely rare, and it's interesting to observe that even when a Japanese person is put off by you for some reason their usual response is to be more polite. I've observed before that most of the "discrimination" many gaijin face is positive, not negative, taking the form of people giving us gifts or letting us out of certain obligations that Japanese would have to fulfill, like the time I broke my vacuum cleaner through misuse and the electronics shop fixed it for free, just because. I think that if people coming to Japan keep an open mind about the country and try their best to respect the local customs and avoid being overly sensitive, there'll never be a problem.

It's not hard to spot the gaijin in this picture, which is something you just get used to here.

4 Comments:

Blogger seiray said...

Japan is a really weird country. Why is it that they treated the Westerners much more nicely than their fellow Asians? No wonder why Japan has no good relationship with other Asian countries (except for Taiwan).

4:25 AM

 
Blogger Peter in Japan said...

It's an interesting question. Westerners are basically viewed as Vulcans in Japan, e.g. an advanced race of people who showed up in black ships to share our more advanced technology and society with them. We had next to no history with them so there was no reason to have competition/dislike/hate/whatever. The closer nations were different, and it seems that a people are always ready to have issues with anyone who lives next to them, no matter who (California/Oregon, England/Ireland, etc.)

9:39 AM

 
Blogger timo said...

heh. The big dude does stand out there.

2:14 PM

 
Blogger martin said...

yeah, i have similar opinion with seiray,
because not all foreigners in Japan have the "gaijin face" like you said. i think foreigners of asian descendant also have their own problems, by not being recognized as foreigner at the first sight.
japanese might think that this kind of foreigner as a japanese and speak to them in japanese only to find that they don't understand japanese at all, or only speak a little japanese.
sometime i also think that being a western foreigner bring some advantages compare to the asian foreigner here in Japan.
btw i'm an Chinese Indonesian.

4:53 PM

 

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