This is very true (especially the outlawing of foreign religions). Shintoism is a very distinctly Japanese religion, almost tailor made to the country.Nate (post: 1345596) wrote:It has almost nothing to do with being misunderstood and pretty much everything to do with Japan's sense of self-identity.
Fish and Chips (post: 1345610) wrote:This is very true (especially the outlawing of foreign religions). Shintoism is a very distinctly Japanese religion, almost tailor made to the country.
According to Shintoism, the parent gods Izanagi and his wife Izanami personally created the Japanese archipelago by drops falling from the tips of their holy spears, materializing into land when they made contact with the salty sea. Other islands were even conceived and borne of Izanami like children. In Shintoism, the ground and the rocks you walk on to the trees and the animals and the people of Japan are all blessed by the gods, and hold everything as sacred in one light or another. It is a very particular mythology constrained to a small portion of the world, where the Isles of Japan lay.
Christianity, by contrast, would be seen as a religion of the West, of Europe and later America, having nothing to do with Japan. It was brought by traders, many of whom were dogged in their pursuit of conversions, and of course it's association with the ever infamous Oda Nobunaga, who Nate has already mentioned.
There was, briefly, a small but thriving community of Christians due to Jesuit influence before the isolationist policies, but afterwards a good number were killed or went underground.
EDIT: Actually, I believe the Dutch were one of the few groups who didn't try to impress their faith upon the people they did business with, and so were permitted (to an extremely limited degree) to continue business with Japan, even during the Isolationist Period.
Yamamaya wrote:Although in some ways that is similar to the condition of the U.S. because Protestant Christianity has for the most part been dominant in the U.S.
Ante Bellum (post: 1340729) wrote:Also, remember that a lot of Japanese are still worried over H1N1, so a lot of them wear masks. What does this have to do with xenophobia? My uncle and his friend (his friend is Australian but looks a little Mexican) were in a convenience store and the friend sneezed. Really loudly. And everyone. Just. Stared. So if you sneeze and people are worried...yeah.
Tokyo isn't the friendliest of areas. The saying is, you don't need to know Japanese in Tokyo because you don't speak to anyone. Kyoto, on the other hand, is a bit friendlier.
Sailor Kenshin wrote:But regarding another post: why would a Catholic refuse to say the Our Father and read the Ten Commandments? That's part of our liturgy as well.
Nate wrote:from what I hear, for Catholics the first commandment is entirely "I am the Lord your God, you shall have no other gods before me, you shall not make for yourself an idol."
I think we also differ in that Catholicism splits "You shall not covet your neighbor's wife" and "You shall not covet your neighbor's stuff" into two separate commandments, whereas Jews and Protestants have the two as one commandment.
Hi,
I'm Japanese.
We wear a white mask because we don't want to spread any germs that we've caught to other people.
For example, when we have a cold, we cough a lot. So we wear a white mask. When we have some allergies, we cough a lot. So we wear a white mask. It's just a simple reason to wear this white mask.
Here in Japan, face masks are a common sight. Visitors often wonder why ordinary people wear what appears to be white surgical masks as they take the subway or walk around town. Face masks have evolved as a kind of courtesy: if you have caught a cold, you wear a mask to avoid spreading the germs to others. Also, masks may help people who suffer from allergies
Nate (post: 1345632) wrote: This is in stark contrast to Jews and Catholics in the early days of the country, where if they didn't pretend to be Protestant they were beaten or had their property vandalized.
I wonder how xenophobic the people in Tokyo can really be, since it's a pretty big tourist hub?
Nate (post: 1345965) wrote:So that black dude I saw today wasn't really black, it was an illusion. Got it.
like a white dude would not become CEO of a Japanese company, or even VP
Nate wrote:Also, of COURSE race is genetic. Otherwise you're saying two white couples could have a black baby, or that a white and a black couple could mysteriously have a child that looked Asian. They don't, because race IS genetic.
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 99 guests