The Japanese Could Teach Us a Thing or Two
By NICHOLAS D. KRISTOF

Published: March 19, 2011When America is under stress, as is happening right 
now with debates about where to pare the budget, we sometimes trample the least 
powerful and most vulnerable among us.Damon Winter/The New York TimesNicholas 
D. KristofSo maybe we can learn something from Japan, where the earthquake, 
tsunami and radiation leaks haven’t caused society to come apart at the seams 
but to be knit together more tightly than ever. The selflessness, stoicism and 
discipline in Japan these days are epitomized by those workers at the Fukushima 
Daiichi nuclear plant, uncomplainingly and anonymously risking dangerous doses 
of radiation as they struggle to prevent a complete meltdown that would 
endanger their fellow citizens.The most famous statue in Japan is arguably one 
of a dog, Hachiko, who exemplified loyalty, perseverance and duty. Hachiko met 
his owner at the train station when he returned from work each day, but the 
owner died at work one day in
 1925 and never returned. Until he died about 10 years later, Hachiko 
faithfully went to the station each afternoon just in case his master 
returned.I hope that some day Japan will erect another symbol of loyalty and 
dedication to duty: a statue of those nuclear plant workers.I lived in Japan 
for five years as the Tokyo bureau chief for The New York Times, and I was 
sometimes perceived as hostile to the country because I was often critical of 
the Japanese government’s incompetence and duplicity. But the truth is that I 
came to cherish Japan’s civility and selflessness. There’s a kind of national 
honor code, exemplified by the way even cheap restaurants will lend you an 
umbrella if you’re caught in a downpour; you’re simply expected to return it in 
a day or two. If you lose your wallet in the subway, you expect to get it 
back.The earthquake has put that dichotomy on display. The Japanese government 
has been hapless. And the Japanese people have
 been magnificent, enduring impossible hardships with dignity and grace.As I 
recalled recently on my blog, I covered the 1995 Kobe earthquake that killed 
more than 6,000 people, and I looked everywhere for an example of people 
looting merchandise from one of the many shops with shattered windows. I did 
find a homeowner who was missing two bicycles, but as I did more reporting, it 
seemed as if they might have been taken for rescue efforts.Finally, I came 
across a minimart owner who had seen three young men grab food from his shop 
and run away. I asked the shop owner if he was surprised that his fellow 
Japanese would stoop so low.“No, you misunderstand,” the shop owner told me. 
“These looters weren’t Japanese. They were foreigners.”Granted, Japan’s ethic 
of uncomplaining perseverance — gaman, in Japanese — may also explain why the 
country settles for third-rate leaders. Moreover, Japan’s tight-knit social 
fabric can lead to discrimination
 against those who don’t fit in. Bullying is a problem from elementary school 
to the corporate suite. Ethnic Koreans and an underclass known as burakumin are 
stigmatized. Indeed, after the terrible 1923 earthquake, Japanese rampaged 
against ethnic Koreans (who were accused of setting fires or even somehow 
causing the quake) and slaughtered an estimated 6,000 of them.So Japan’s 
communitarianism has its downside, but we Americans could usefully move a step 
or two in that direction. Gaps between rich and poor are more modest in Japan, 
and Japan’s corporate tycoons would be embarrassed by the flamboyant pay 
packages that are common in America. Even in poor areas — including ethnic 
Korean or burakumin neighborhoods — schools are excellent.My wife and I saw the 
collective ethos drummed into children when we sent our kids to Japanese 
schools. When the teacher was sick, there was no substitute teacher. The 
children were in charge. When our son Gregory
 came home from a school athletic meet, we were impressed that he had won first 
place in all his events, until we realized that every child had won first 
place.For Gregory’s birthday, we invited his classmates over and taught them to 
play musical chairs. Disaster! The children, especially the girls, were 
traumatized by having to push aside others to gain a seat for themselves. What 
unfolded may have been the most polite, most apologetic, and least competitive 
game of musical chairs in the history of the world.Look, we’re pushy Americans. 
We sometimes treat life, and budget negotiations, as a contest in which the 
weakest (such as children) are to be gleefully pushed aside when the music 
stops. But I wish we might learn a bit from the Japanese who right now are 
selflessly subsuming their own interests for the common good. We should 
sympathize with Japanese, yes, but we can also learn from them.



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