Japan’s Caste Challenges

Source: www.google.com

TOKYO, JAPAN, May 2, 2009: Google never expected repercussions from adding
historical maps of Japan to the online Google Earth collection last year–but
because the maps show the locations of former low-caste communities, Google
is now facing inquiries from the Justice Ministry and angry accusations of
prejudice.

During Japan’s feudal era, a strict caste system was in place. The lowest
class, called the “burakumin,” were ethnically identical to other Japanese
but were forced to live in isolation because they did jobs associated with
death, such as working with leather, butchering
animals and digging graves.

Officially, castes have long been abolished. But the burakumins’
descendants– approximately 3 million, according to rights groups–still face
prejudice, based almost entirely on where they live or their ancestors
lived. Moving is little help, because employers or parents of potential
spouses can hire agencies to check for buraku ancestry through Japan’s
elaborate family records.

An employee at a large, well-known Japanese company, who works in personnel
and has direct knowledge of its hiring practices, said the company actively
screens out burakumin job seekers. “If we suspect that an applicant is a
burakumin, we always do a background check to find out,” she said. She
agreed to discuss the practice only on condition that neither she nor her
company be identified.

Lists of “dirty” addresses circulate on Internet bulletin boards. Some
surveys have shown that such neighborhoods have lower property values than
surrounding areas, and residents have been the target of racial taunts and
graffiti. But the modern locations of the old villages are
largely unknown to the general public, and many burakumin prefer it that
way.


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