home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- WORLD, Page 61World NotesJAPANThere Goes the Neighborhood
-
-
- Most Japanese, raised in an essentially homogeneous
- society, deny that racism exists in their islands. Still, every
- so often, Tokyo proves that insularity breeds bigotry. In 1986
- former Prime Minister Yasuhiro Nakasone touched off an uproar by
- declaring that blacks and minorities lowered the I.Q. of
- Americans. Two weeks ago, another Japanese official was at it.
- Following a police raid on a red-light district, Justice
- Minister Seiroku Kajiyama casually commented that prostitutes
- ruined neighborhoods, then added, "It's like in America when
- neighborhoods become mixed because blacks move in and whites are
- forced out."
-
- New York Congressman Charles Rangel said such remarks were
- becoming a "national sport in Japan." For Prime Minister Toshiki
- Kaifu, preparing for a U.S. trip, Kajiyama's words were ill
- timed. Kaifu already has to take heat for Japan's reluctance to
- participate in the gulf, where, U.S. politicians point out,
- blacks are among those protecting Tokyo's oil interests.
- Kajiyama quickly apologized. Or did he? He retracted his
- statement, saying it was inappropriate for him to comment on
- U.S. race problems, but he never said he was sorry.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-