Thursday, February 28, 2019

Pink Shirt Day anti-bullying movement seen to spread in Japan




February 28, 2019

Pink Shirt Day anti-bullying movement seen to spread in Japan

More than 100 people were seriously listening to a small readers' drama performed in front of the west gate to Japan Railways' Yokohama Station in Yokohama, Kanagawa Prefecture, eastern Japan, on a sunny day late February. The drama, which formed a part of a campaign aimed at stopping bullying incidents, was played by a group of five youngsters who depicted the sufferings of children bullied at school and elsewhere.
The event was jointly organized by non-profit organizations in support of the Pink Shirt Day Movement 2019 in Kanagawa, at a time when the number of school  bullying cases has been on the increase in the prefecture, southwest of Tokyo, and other regions in Japan.
According to publicly compiled figures, the number of recognized bullying cases at elementary, junior high and senior high schools across the country came to over 410,000 in fiscal 2017 to March 2018, an increase of about 90,000 from the year before.
Of this, the number of cases reported in Kanagawa grew to a record 19,997 in the same year.
The increase in the number of reported cases of school bullying partly reflects a broadened definition of bullying by the Ministry of Education, but the situation is no doubt getting worse, experts say.
The Pink Shirt Day movement spread globally from an incident which occurred at a high school near Vancouver, Canada, in February 2007.
When a ninth grader wearing a pink shirt went to school one day, he was made fun of and attacked. Upon hearing this, two upperclassmen quickly called classmates to take action to stop bullying by wearing pink shirts. Their effort successfully stopped bullying at the school.
The anti-bullying movement has become a global action with various events held in more than 70 countries.
A main organizer for the Pink Shirt Day campaign in Yokohama was the Kanagawa Children's Future Fund,  a non-profit organization established in 2003. Members of the fund and other organizers were on hand to call passers-by to join the event.
"We call people here in Japan to participate in the global action by wearing pink shirts or small items," said an official of the fund at the site.
Pink Shirt Day events in Japan started in Yokohama and other areas individually a few years ago. "This is the second time for us to organize a big event like this" in Kanagawa, he said. 
"We hope that the Pink Shirt Day events in Japan will get bigger and bigger by linking together actively."
The readers' drama was followed by live performances by pop singers and a dancing team, which attracted more spectators on the busy street.
A flyer distributed to passers-by around the stage said, "We are each different in terms of nationality, culture and fashion, and it is quite natural for us to be different, and this must be respected as an important character."

Monday, January 28, 2019

Japanese getting excited on advent of new era name on Emperor's abdication




January 28, 2019

Japanese getting excited on advent of new era name on Emperor's abdication

The year of 2019 should be remembered as a unique, unprecedented year for Japanese people, who will see a new era name emerge following Emperor Akihito's planned abdication.
Unlike the New Year's greetings Japanese usually exchange, the phrase, "This is the last year in the Heisei era, isn't it?" often came up in their conversations this year.
Japan is the sole country with its own era name in today's world, though some countries observe original calendar years, among other things, the Hijri calendar used mainly in Islamic states.
The current era name of Heisei was proclaimed on January 7, 1989, following the demise of Emperor Hirohito, the father of Emperor Akihito. The name will be replaced with a yet-to-be-announced new Imperial era name on May 1, when his eldest son, Crown Prince Naruhito, will succeed to the Chrysanthemum Throne.
The change of the era name is seen unlikely to have a direct influence on the people's daily life, but the unique occasion is coming to have something like an exciting mood among the people. The planned event is prompting some businesses to launch new services or release commemorative products in a joyous mood.
Many Japanese harbor special feelings while recalling a series of occurrences during the 30-year reign of Emperor Akihito, who can be seen as the first Emperor for various reasons.
Born on December 23, 1938, he experienced Japan's surrender in the Pacific war in 1945, when he was a child. He saw Japan try hard to rebuild itself from the ashes of the war, which was fought in the name of his father.
He was the first Emperor to get married with a commoner and the first Japanese monarch to visit Okinawa, the southernmost Japan island which became a fierce battle field in the war. with his wife, Empress Michiko.
Under Japan's current constitution, established after Japan's defeat in the war, the Emperor is designated as "the symbol of the unity of the people."
The years under his reign are expected to be recalled with a host of extensive natural disasters, too.
The Emperor endeavored to get the Imperial family closer to the people, visiting disabled and socially weak people and calling disaster-hit people to console them on their sufferings.
In a message to the people on his last birthday on the throne, on December 23, 2018, Emperor Akihito noted that the era of his reign is coming to an end without Japan having fought any war, again. This "gives me deep comfort," he said.
The Emperor will be the first living Japanese monarch to leave the throne in Japan's modern history.
Japan's era names had been changed occasionally by the then rulers, by the Tokugawa shogunate government until before the Meiji Restoration of 1868. However, the era name has been established for the reign of each Emperor since the Meiji government came to power.
Emperor Akihito indirectly made known his wish to relinquish the throne in 2017, noting his age and declining health have made it difficult for him to perform his official duties. This prompted the government to amend the Imperial Household Law last year, making it possible for the Emperor to abdicate the throne.
The planned succession to the throne comes at a time when the ruling Liberal Democratic Party is trying to revise Japan's pacifist constitution. The coming happy event must be closely watched so that it may not be used for political purposes, notably, for boosting moves toward a constitutional revision, some experts say.
This means that Japanese people will have to ask themselves how Japan's  Emperor system should be for their life from now on.

Monday, December 24, 2018

Ordinary people on hand to receive tourists for World Heritage Christian sites on remote Japanese islands



December 24, 2018



Ordinary people on hand to receive tourists for World Heritage Christian sites on remote Japanese islands

Japan saw its Christian-related historical sites in the westernmost part of the Japanese Archipelago inscribed on the World Heritage list in July 2018. A joyous mood spread in regions involved just after the incident, but old Christian churches on remote islands in Nagasaki Prefecture, as part of the World Heritage sites, stand to receive visitors in a calm atmosphere.
All but one of the 12 sites are actually the villages or remains linked to the so-called hidden Christians, the people who maintained their faith secretly in the absence of Western missionaries amid the ban on Christianity from the end of the 16th century. The exception is Oura Cathedral, Japan's oldest Christian church built in Nagasaki City in the 1850s.
Four of the World Heritage sites are located in largely isolated areas on the Goto Islands, which lie about 100 kilometers west of Nagasaki.
Accompanied with an unprofessional guide, a group of tourists visited a stone-built church which stands on a hill right behind a village of Christians on Kashiragajima Island. They were asked to take off their hats and refrain from talking loudly within the church, because it is a place of prayer.
The church is usually closed, but three old local women, who are Christians, are on hand to open the door for tourists by turns, the guide said.
The guide introduced herself as a "pilgrimage guide." She started the job a few years ago after attending a course opened by a local nonprofit organization, called "Pilgrimage College."
The number of tourists to the Goto Islands has been growing since around the registration of the sites as the World Heritage, but the regions involved remain relatively unsophisticated.
The Goto Islands are formed by about 140 isles, where about 57,000 people live.  The local economy depends mainly on fishery.
Because there are no major tourist bus companies, staff bus guides are limited. This is the reason why local tourist organizations are trying to raise guides for tourists from among ordinary people.
The number of amateur guides is precisely unknown, but 20 or so people are believed to be so registered in the region.
"I studied together with a few others, but those who actually work as pilgrimage guides, like me, are limited, maybe three or four," the guide said. "This job is tough, you know, sometimes we have to be on a long bus ride, sometimes aboard a boat."
Every one of 10 Goto islanders is said to be a Christian. "I am not a Christian, but I love this job," she said.
Another amateur guide took care of the tourists on the second half of their tour on the islands. "I studied for becoming a guide at a course sponsored by the local government," she said, "because I like talking with people."
The local authorities hope to take the occasion to bolster the economy in the region as a whole, at a time when its mainstay business, fishery, is not active enough. But they also have to be careful about preserving the historical environment around the sites. Christianity was introduced into Japan in the middle of the 16th century, and just after that, Christians spread quickly in the western part of Japan. But a crackdown on missionaries and Christians started soon, toward the end of the century.
Many Christians fled from the Nagasaki region in search for safer places, on the Goto Islands or elsewhere, but they found only environmentally hard places for them to resettle, for instance, locations just above steep cliffs or deep into inlets.
The locations turned out to be convenient for them to live while hiding their faith, however. A series of bitter, sad episodes in their history is expected to be told further over centuries, sometimes through the voices of ordinary people in the region.

Thursday, November 29, 2018

Disaster-hit town in southwestern Japan pinning hopes on young power for survival



November 29, 2018




Disaster-hit town in southwestern Japan pinning hopes on young power for survival

The southwestern Japan city, hard hit by heavy rain and floods in July last year, sees insufficient progress in restoration works in the affected regions, but community leaders are determined that they must move forward while striving to find a new path of survival for its future. Asakura City, Fukuoka Prefecture, has recently launched an event to demonstrate its resolve for restoration widely to in and outside of the city.
Stage programs for the two-day event featured mainly performances by local kindergarten kids and high school students and other youngsters. 
The mishap left 35 people dead or missing in remote communities in the upper reaches of small rivers, flattened and destroyed hundreds of houses, and damaged farmland and forests.
The slow progress in the post-disaster works is attributed in part to lack of consensus among people involved about how to rehabilitate the affected communities. People are divided over how to resume their life, some of them hoping to return to original places while others seeking to have safer places to build their new life.
Experts agree that the city needs to have a broad-based, carefully refined restoration plan, not cosmetic programs, for its long-term survival.
The disaster came at a time when its population had been steadily shrinking in the past decades. This was the case with many other local cities and towns across Japan amid an aging of society.
The population of the city came to 50,500 as of October 2018, 15 months after the disaster, down from about 60,000 in 2005.
City leaders hope to come up with a grand design for its survival, which is expected to focus on beefing up agriculture as its core business. But the city needs to explore a new, innovative approach to strengthen its farming business, by introducing, for example, an information technology-based method to explore a new type of farming, an expert says.
Asakura is geographically close to big consumer markets, notably Fukuoka, the prefectural capital, and it is traditionally strong at producing peaches, persimmons and other fruits,
To introduce such new approaches for farming, efforts must be made to bring in a new breed of young farmers by making the region more attractive to the young generation.
The event site was occupied by booths carrying foods, farming products and items like handicrafts.
One of the hottest areas at the grounds was a booth where customers, including kids with parents, were seen trying hard to pack as many oranges as possible into a given single net for a fee of 500 yen each.
The energies of young people displayed at the event is expected to give impetus to the restoration efforts for the affected regions and people from now on.



Tuesday, October 30, 2018

Music becoming key community-boosting tool in Japan




October 30, 2018

Music becoming key community-boosting tool in Japan

Various types of music are drawing attention as a key community-boosting tool in various parts of Japan. The move has come at a time when Japanese people think about how to better spend their spare time amid the maturing of society, coupled with a low economic growth.
No precise figures are available about how many of the municipalities across Japan, approximately 1,700 at present, have come up with music-related events as a town reactivating initiative, but it is believed that 100 or so cities and towns, small or big, organize or support events like music festivals for bolstering their economy.
In Kurume, Fukuoka Prefecture, southwestern Japan, local culture-related organizations join forces with the city authorities to organize a city-wide music festival every October.
The 2018 Kurume Promenade Music Festival attracted tens of thousands of people at 10 different open-air performance sites, not just public parks but also a railway station corridor and a Buddhist temple.
The latest two-day festival, the sixth of its kind, brought together about 100 groups who played jazz, hard rock and classic as well as traditional Japanese music.
Appearing on the stage at the main site, just next to the city office building, Kurume Mayor Tsutomu Sasaki remarked, "This town gives weight to music and raises musicians." Actually, those who played at the festival included a few locally raised musicians.
The 57-year-old mayor, who took office in January, then appealed for citizens' greater support to the initiative before those who packed the main event site.
The main site was surrounded with booths and shops set up by vendors in a picnic-like, casual atmosphere with not just young people but also older persons and kids present.
At one booth beside the stage, a group of volunteers organized a class for kids to craft plastic straw flutes so that children may feel close to music.
The flute making class may help grow up young musicians from the community so that the city may be enlivened further in the future.








Sunday, September 30, 2018

Japan's big retailers moving to increase hazard endurance amid abnormal weather



September 30, 2018


Japan's big retailers moving to increase hazard endurance amid abnormal weather

Employees at the shopping mall were busy receiving hundreds of customers late in September for a special three-day sale after a hiatus of three months.
The facility was forced to suspend its business due to the flood of a nearby river following torrential rain early in July. The heavy rain, triggered by the approach of a rain front, played havoc in widely scattered areas in southwestern and western Japan.
The shopping center, located on a site of 118,460 square meters in Ogori City, Fukuoka Prefecture,  consists of the main building, which houses more than 70 shops, directly run and tenant, and the parking just in front of the building with a capacity of 1,600 cars. But both of them were extensively inundated with river water which climbed over the banks.
The facility, opened in 2013, had a retention basin beneath the building, as the area is within a flood danger zone on the newest hazard map made by the local authorities. But the basin was overwhelmed, and as a result, water got into many parts of the shop area. Dozens of vehicles parked were flooded. But the mishap caused no human damage.
The early July heavy rain also forced some other shopping facilities in the affected areas to close its business, but damage to them proved to be lighter than at the Ogori facility.
The series of occurrences at distribution facilities came at a time when Japan's major commercial businesses, particularly those in the distribution sector, have been asked to cooperate in overcoming natural disasters, because their business is directly linked to people's daily life.
The distribution sector is hoped to play greater roles than ever for hazard endurance, because Japan sees unprecedented, abnormal weather patterns to occur almost every year.
The Ogori facility, operated by Ion Kyushu Co.,  conducted evacuation training for cases of fire and earthquake earlier years, but it plans to carry out an evacuation drill annually for cases of a flood, too, from now on. It also expects to improve the water level gauge system for the on-site, underground retention basin.
Other big distribution facilities involved are also expected to improve their ability for hazard endurance.
The Ion Ogori shopping center launched what it dubs
the "ReStart Campaign" to mark its comeback to business, introducing new lines of items, expanding the eat-in food court and building a small corridor which accommodates handicraft shops run by citizens.
A long line was built toward a lottery amid the shop area.
 "We offer many kinds of gifts for customers with receipts of 3,000 yen or more," said an employee. "This is a token of our thanks to the customers for their support to our reopening."

Tuesday, August 28, 2018

Annual TV program gives time for Japanese to think about charity for the socially weak




August 28, 2018

Annual TV program gives time for Japanese to think about charity for the socially weak

An annual charity program produced by Nippon Television Network Corp., or Nittere, with the key phrase "Love Saves the Earth," has become something like a national event in which many Japanese think about how charity should be for the socially weak. This year's 24-Hour Television, the program called so, was aired around the clock from August 25 to 26 on the Nittere network, drawing an average audience rating of 15.2 percent.
The instantaneous rating came to as high as 34.7 percent just before the closing event.
Similar charity programs have been launched by some other TV networks. But, despite the strong public attention, the Nittere program draws various views from interested people.
Some viewers warn of what they see as a tendency of using socially weak people for commercial purposes in excessively moving scenes.
Organizers say events in the program are aimed at encouraging the socially weak, but they sometimes make viewers feel as if they have to be moved all the time while watching people like handicapped persons, critics say.
The special feature Nittere program, the 41st of its kind, focuses mainly on events for enhancing public awareness about challenges facing disabled and handicapped people as well as those who need welfare.
Programs aired this year included footage of a girl with an artificial leg trying to scale a 3,000-meter mountain with a special support team and a boy drummer with glass eyes who played a session with a top stage musician.
The 24-Hour Television for 2018 linked a total of seven event sites nationwide. At a special stage built in front of the north gate to Japan Railways' Hakata Station in Fukuoka, southwestern Japan, many kids were seen playing with colorful twisted balloons.
With balloon walls put up around to make a balloon art square, students attending a local vocational college were on hand to take care of children and their parents.
Next to the balloon square was a booth set up by a major domestic detergent maker, one of the six corporate supporters to the program this year, to promote its recycle-reuse campaign to collect used clothes from consumers and send them to poor countries.
During the two-day program, donations were accepted at the event sites nationwide for use to programs in three areas, welfare, environmental protection and relief for disaster-affected people.
Donations by viewers this year amounted to 267 million yen as of the end of the program, according to organizers.
The viewer audience rate climbed toward the end of the program, as a 33-year-old comedian, selected as this year's charity runner, cut the goal tape at the Tokyo site after covering a distance of 161.5 kilometers in a triathlon race.
Japanese people have become even more aware of the importance of binding together to strengthen their mutual ties since the devastating earthquake and killer tsunami waves of March 2011, which claimed some 20,000 lives mainly in the Tohoku region of northeastern Japan.
The roles for the media to help boost the spirits of mutual help broadly in Japan's society may become more important than ever in the years ahead.