Black Tokyo Updates

Posted on 12月 6, 2008. Filed under: Black Resources, BLACK TOKYO NEWS | タグ: , , , , , , , |

Arigato to the BT’ers that emailed me while I was injured. The surgery was successful and I am slowly recovering and looking forward to physical therapy. Bring on the pain!

BT’ers can now follow Black Tokyo via Twitter. BT’ers can also join the Black Tokyo social network site (Google Friend Connect) with one click using your Google, Yahoo, AIM or OpenID account. Click the Join this site button found on the BT Friend Connect widget located at the top of the center column.

For those on Facebook, be sure to join the Black Tokyo Facebook Chapter.

Mata ne!

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10 ways not to go loco in yokohama: #1-don’t be you!

Posted on 12月 1, 2008. Filed under: Culture & Society, LIFE IN JAPAN | タグ: , , , , , , , , , , , |

 

This from Loco in Yokohama: I know it’s difficult to do anything life altering. I didn’t come here planning to alter my life. It just kind of happened and I fought it every step of the way. Which only made it more intense, and more interesting I’d like to believe…the results of which I am filling my blog with. But, for those of you who are planning to come to japan or have come here already and just want to have fun and not upset the status quo- Japan’s or your own- too much in the process I have compiled a list of ways to make the potential life altering experience of living in Japan less…life altering.

Of course, if you’ve been here 3 years or longer, and assuming you aren’t loco already, you’ve put together your own list of ways to survive life in Japan. It’s the rare foreigner, I believe, that hasn’t had to significantly adjust his thinking, behavior, lifestyle, and so on, in order to adapt to life here. And perhaps like I, you feel the better for it.

The following list I’ve been putting together in my heart and mind for several years. I’ve tested each one and they have proven to have a high success rate. They’re not 100% but they range from the high 70s to the low 90s percentile. Whether or not they’ll work for you, I really can’t say. And any feedback you have on my list is of course welcomed.

The reason I specify Yokohama is because I know Yokohama well. I also know Saitama and Tokyo well, but, though Japanese are indeed Japanese, I do believe that people have different experiences depending on their area or region. I’ve met foreigners who live in Kansai and were utterly surprised when I told them about some of my experiences here. And I’ve met Nihon-jin in the countryside whose reaction to foreigners was significantly more dramatic and intense than the usual. (さらに…)

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Commentary: What Barack Obama means to me

Posted on 11月 6, 2008. Filed under: Black Resources, Commentary, Government, Politics & Security | タグ: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , |


When President-elect Barack Obama and his family take up residence in the White House it means that he will move into every household in America. He will not be just some Black dude that moved in down the street in a predominately White neighborhood and his family will not become the new Cosby Show. The Obamas move on big time to prime time on the biggest channel watched by millions in the world.

I am a child of the 60’s and a US Marine Corps veteran that served and fought for America much like my father, uncles and cousins did during the Korean War and conflict in Vietnam. The biggest difference in the conflicts during my military service and theirs is that they fought wars abroad only to return home to fight various forms of in your face racism in America.

I am a product of the Detroit public school system and moved from the ghetto to the top flo’ (and at times back down) because others broke various glass ceilings. There was a school house in Little Rock, Arkansas that had its glass ceiling broken by some black children which ultimately allowed people like me, opportunity. There was a young lawyer that had only lost one case out of 30 who went on to become the first African-American Supreme Court Justice in American history. His tenacity ended segregation in public schools. There was a little ol’ woman that rode a bus and refused to give up her seat (and she was not the only one, just the most famous) that translated into people like her being legally allowed to do more than keep their seat. When I headed to a school full of people that I predominately saw on television, in magazines, downtown or at the “white” shopping center, it was like being in a different country. A glass ceiling broke in my house and let in the fresh air of hope when I accomplished things that a couple of generations in my family had not. They paved the way, I just followed the path. Like a young Barack, I had a mother that shoved when I need a push and a family that supported me when I needed.

As a 16-year-old college freshman exposed to something new, I made the most of it. Barack Obama attended the some of the best schools in America and is headed as uptown as one can go in America. I am sure that he will take advantage of being exposed to something new and that he and the in-coming First Lady, Michelle Obama, will expose something new to many in America and around the world. (さらに…)

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A New Pride in America?

Posted on 11月 4, 2008. Filed under: Black Resources, Commentary, Government, Politics & Security | タグ: , , , , , , , , , , , , , |

 

I read the Eugene Robinson (pictured above) piece, “Obama Campaign Instills New Pride” and felt the need to comment here at Black Tokyo. Mr. Robinson writes for the Washington Post. His column is distributed by the Washington Post Writers Group, 1150 15th NW, Washington, DC 20071. You can reach him at eugenerobinson@washpost.com. Please feel free to leave your comments!

Obama campaign instills new pride

Whoever wins this election, I understand what Barack Obama meant when he said his faith in the American people had been “vindicated” by his campaign’s success. I understand what Michelle Obama meant, months ago, when she said she was “proud of my country” for the first time in her adult life. Why should they be immune to the astonishment and vertigo that so many other African-Americans are experiencing? Why shouldn’t they have to pinch themselves to make sure they aren’t dreaming, the way that I do?

I know there’s a possibility that the polls are wrong. I know there’s a possibility that white Americans, when push comes to shove, won’t be able to bring themselves to elect a black man as president of the United States. But the spread in the polls is so great that the Bradley effect wouldn’t be enough to make Obama lose; it would take a kind of “Dr. Strangelove effect” in which voters’ hands developed a will of their own.

Zurui’s comment: Not only white Americans but other Americans that tend to vote Republican and not for a “normal” candidate.

I’m being facetious but not unserious. In my gut, I know there’s a chance that the first African-American to make a serious run for the presidency will lose. But that is precisely what’s new and, in a sense, unsettling: I’m talking about possibility, not inevitability.

(さらに…)

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Japan would help children of international marriages

Posted on 11月 1, 2008. Filed under: Culture & Society, Government, Politics & Security, Law, THE MILITARY IN JAPAN | タグ: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , |

 Japanese women from collapsed international marriages who bring their children to Japan without their partner’s consent are facing charges of abduction — an issue that has highlighted a convention covering international child abduction.

The Hague Convention on the Civil Aspects of International Child Abduction has been signed by about 80 countries, including in Europe and the United States. Under the convention, it is illegal for one parent to take a child away from his or her country or residence without first settling issues such as custody and visitation rights.

Signatory countries have a responsibility to return children who have unilaterally been taken out of the country by one of their parents. (There are some exceptions, such as when the child refuses to go back.) Japan, however, has not signed the convention, so this rule of returning the child does not apply. This has raised strong dissatisfaction among foreigners who cannot see their children because they have been taken to Japan.

The Ministry of Foreign Affairs and the Ministry of Justice are giving favorable consideration to signing the convention, but the opinions of experts are split.

Kensuke Onuki, a lawyer familiar with the issue, is opposed to Japan signing the convention, based on the viewpoint of Japan protecting its own citizens. (さらに…)

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by the time i get to shibuya…

Posted on 10月 29, 2008. Filed under: Culture & Society, LIFE IN JAPAN | タグ: , , , , , , , , , , , , |

 

Some of the older heads here at BT have previously shared their various encounters and experiences on “riding the train in Japan” on the BT Forum. Here is an interesting post by Loco in Yokohama:

“Imagination without action is dreaming. But, my imagination is my life and sanity preserver. Without it, I’d drown for sure. For example, take this morning. When I got on the train it wasn’t very crowded, so I was able to find a seat easily. There are about 10 stops between mine and Shibuya, my destination, and at each stop the train gets more and more crowded. And, as each passenger enters through the door nearest me they are presented with the option of sitting beside me and sitting elsewhere. The latter is taken. Even if the other available seat is at the far end of the car, and the choice is a sure bet next to me and a low percentage chance of capturing another seat, you better believe they go against the odds. But, actually, the people with options are not much fun. They don’t stop and think…it’s a no-brainer, and so it’s clear that the only thing that occurred to them was to find a seat elsewhere. It’s when all the other seats are filled that it becomes interesting, and that’s when I really begin my daily game and my imagination gets its daily workout.

I don’t know exactly why Japanese people are afraid of me, but I have some ideas. And that’s how I entertain myself these days, which is a vast improvement over the anger I felt everyday last year. Based on my observations, the limited knowledge I’ve accumulated through teaching and getting to know students over the past three years, various conversations I’ve had over that time, and, admittedly, my utter frustration at not being able to affect change, I can imagine the conversation some people are having with themselves upon seeing me seated beside the coveted seat: (さらに…)

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T.K.O. for B.O., Jero Hero in Kirin Fire Cafe Zero

Posted on 5月 25, 2008. Filed under: Blasian, LIFE IN JAPAN | タグ: , , , , , |

Konnichi wa BT’ers! The post below was submitted by Ato in the ” Jero Enka Singer” thread on the Black Tokyo Forum. I like MANY other people of the Afro persuasion understands where he is coming from. Feel free to post your comments here or in the BT Forum.
————————- Ato’s post ————————  
Thank God! 

Anyone that is black and lives in Japan must be breathing a sigh of relief now that Jero (sans hip-hop regalia) is advertising something on TV in an adult, serious manner. I felt a certain sense of pride. He is now the new face of Kirin Beverage’s canned coffee product Kirin Fire Cafe Zero. The ad began rotation on May 21.

For too long Bobby Ologun (and Bob Sapp) have been the face of blacks here in Japan and unfortunately a large percentage of Japanese out there couldn’t be bothered to learn anything about a race or culture besides what is fed to them on TV. Fueling this is the ease with which one can become a TV personality and household name here in Japan; just find a gimmick and you’ll be on the tube schmoozing and tasting oishii delicacies with celebreties in no time.
Unfortunately for blacks in Japan, Ologun’s “gimmick” has been one of feigned stupidity and the stereotypes have only been reinforced as a result. Enter Jero, a young, reasonably attractive man of black heritage, breathing a new life into a Japanese art form from yesteryear that even Japanese young people lack interest in. In sharp contrast to Ologun’s purposely mispronounced Japanese, Jero croons enka perfectly enough to make even the most battle-hardened baabaa swoon.
Jero’s earlier “hip-hop” image will probably now be relegated to a foot-in-the-door strategy (hopefully) as the Japanese marketing machine sinks their claws into him. No doubt countless contracts have been signed to control and mold his image and likeness. I for one like the new look (at least in the ad): sleek, adult, silver and most importantly of all – serious.  

Does this mark the beginning of the end of negative stereotyping and poor opinions of blacks in Japan? I for one certainly hope so…

Here’s his blog:
http://blog.goo.ne.jp/jeroenka/e/227bdcb90303f199c3f6c6e35b5611cf

 

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