Old Japanese Maps On Google Earth Unveil Secrets

daredemonai

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Mar 19, 2009
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May 2, 2009
Associated Press

Old Japanese Maps On Google Earth Unveil Secrets

When Google Earth added historical maps of Japan to its online collection last year, the search giant didn't expect a backlash. The finely detailed woodblock prints have been around for centuries, they were already posted on another Web site, and a historical map of Tokyo put up in 2006 hadn't caused any problems.

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But Google failed to judge how its offering would be received, as it has often done in Japan. The company is now facing inquiries from the Justice Ministry and angry accusations of prejudice because its maps detailed the locations of former low-caste communities.

The maps date back to the country's feudal era, when shoguns ruled and a strict caste system was in place. At the bottom of the hierarchy were a class called the "burakumin," ethnically identical to other Japanese but forced to live in isolation because they did jobs associated with death, such as working with leather, butchering animals and digging graves.

Castes have long since been abolished, and the old buraku villages have largely faded away or been swallowed by Japan's sprawling metropolises. Today, rights groups say the descendants of burakumin make up about 3 million of the country's 127 million people.

But they 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, which can span back over a hundred years.

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.

Google Earth's maps pinpointed several such areas. One village in Tokyo was clearly labeled "eta," a now strongly derogatory word for burakumin that literally means "filthy mass." A single click showed the streets and buildings that are currently in the same area.

Google posted the maps as one of many "layers" available via its mapping software, each of which can be easily matched up with modern satellite imagery. The company provided no explanation or historical context, as is common practice in Japan. Its basic stance is that its actions are acceptable because they are legal, one that has angered burakumin leaders.

"If there is an incident because of these maps, and Google is just going to say 'it's not our fault' or 'it's down to the user,' then we have no choice but to conclude that Google's system itself is a form of prejudice," said Toru Matsuoka, a member of Japan's upper house of parliament.

Asked about its stance on the issue, Google responded with a formal statement that "we deeply care about human rights and have no intention to violate them."

Google spokesman Yoshito Funabashi points out that the company doesn't own the maps in question, it simply provides them to users. Critics argue they come packaged in its software, and the distinction is not immediately clear.

Printing such maps is legal in Japan. But it is an area where publishers and museums tread carefully, as the burakumin leadership is highly organized and has offices throughout the country. Public showings or publications are nearly always accompanied by a historical explanation, a step Google failed to take.

Matsuoka, whose Osaka office borders oneof the areas shown, also serves as secretary general of the Buraku Liberation League, Japan's largest such group. After discovering the maps last month, he raised the issue to Justice Minister Eisuke Mori at a public legal affairs meeting on March 17.

Two weeks later, after the public comments and at least one reporter contacted Google, the old Japanese maps were suddenly changed, wiped clean of any references to the buraku villages. There was no note made of the changes, and they were seen by some as an attempt to quietly dodge the issue.

"This is like saying those people didn't exist. There are people for whom this is their hometown, who are still living there now," said Takashi Uchino from the Buraku Liberation League headquarters in Tokyo.

The Justice Ministry is now "gathering information" on the matter, but has yet to reach any kind of conclusion, according to ministry official Hideyuki Yamaguchi.

The League also sent a letter to Google, a copy of which was provided to The Associated Press. It wants a meeting to discuss its knowledge of the buraku issue and position on the use of its services for discrimination. It says Google should "be aware of and responsible for providing a service that can easily be used as a tool for discrimination."

Google has misjudged public sentiment before. After cool responses to privacy issues raised about its Street View feature, which shows ground-level pictures of Tokyo neighborhoods taken without warning or permission, the company has faced strong public criticism and government hearings. It has also had to negotiate with Japanese companies angry over their copyrighted materials uploaded to its YouTube property.

An Internet legal expert said Google is quick to take advantage of its new technologies to expand its advertising network, but society often pays the price.

"This is a classic example of Google outsourcing the risk and appropriating the benefit of their investment," said David Vaile, executive director of the Cyberspace Law and Policy Center at the University of New South Wales in Australia.

The maps in question are part of a larger collection of Japanese maps owned by the University of California at Berkeley. Their digital versions are overseen by David Rumsey, a collector in the U.S. who has more than 100,000 historical maps of his own. He hosts more than 1,000 historical Japanese maps as part of a massive, English-language online archive he runs, and says he has never had a complaint.

It was Rumsey who worked with Google to post the maps in its software, and who was responsible for removing the references to the buraku villages. He said he preferred to leave them untouched as historical documents, but decided to change them after the search company told him of the complaints from Tokyo.

"We tend to think of maps as factual, like a satellite picture, but maps are never neutral, they always have a certain point of view," he said.

Rumsey said he'd be willing to restore the maps to their original state in Google Earth. Matsuoka, the lawmaker, said he is open to a discussion of the issue.

A neighborhood in central Tokyo, a few blocks from the touristy Asakusa area and the city's oldest temple, was labeled as an old "eta" village in the maps. It is indistinguishable from countless other Tokyo communities, except for a large number of leather businesses offering handmade bags, shoes and furniture.

When shown printouts of the maps from Google Earth, several older residents declined to comment. Younger people were more open on the subject.

Wakana Kondo, 27, recently started working in the neighborhood, at a new business that sells leather for sofas. She was surprised when she learned the history of the area, but said it didn't bother her.

"I learned about the burakumin in school, but it was always something abstract," she said. "That's a really interesting bit of history, thank you"


Copyright 2009 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
 

jupiter999

loves Tada Mizuho only...
Apr 2, 2008
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:attention:
Truly opened up my eyes...
Hope prejudices will diminish gradually...
 

daredemonai

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Mar 19, 2009
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Eliminating the Family Registry System (戸籍制度 koseki seido) would be a big step in the right direction. The same system enables discrimination against illegitimate children and unwed mothers by making it too easy for anyone to investigate the genealogy and former residences of anyone else. The Google maps just make public information that is already well known to private investigators and personnel managers whose job is to uncover such information. The Family Registry Law (戸籍法) was revised almost exactly one year ago to make it more difficult to abuse the system, but it is still full of loopholes that allow the system to be used for discrimination.
 

daredemonai

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Mar 19, 2009
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By the way, the article translates the old kanji for "Eta" to mean "filthy mass," a more accurate translation would be "much uncleanliness" or "very unclean". Also, this word is now taboo and is never used in the media or outside of scholarly historical discussion, so if the word should NEVER be used in conversation with Japanese. You can learn more about the Burakumin on Wikipedia, but keep in mind that there are bigoted vandals who regularly add lies to or delete facts from the article. You can get an idea of the situation by looking at the "discussion" of the article. These vandals are the same kind of people who spread hateful lies about Korean-Japanese.
 

buttobi

Member
Mar 29, 2007
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I'm glad probably most of the Japanese members are English illiterate and aren't visiting the discussion forums that have no video/photo links. Otherwise this thread would be bombarded with piles of crap.:shiver:
 

daredemonai

Retiree
Mar 19, 2009
980
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I'm glad probably most of the Japanese members are English illiterate and aren't visiting the discussion forums that have no video/photo links. Otherwise this thread would be bombarded with piles of crap.:shiver:

Indeed! I once wrote a column tha made the Japanese right wing unhappy, and the publication I wrote it for was flooded with threatening phone calls. :defeat: Those people work through persistent intimidation to try to silence people who speak out against them.
 

Axandra

Member
Jul 7, 2008
79
1
"But they 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, which can span back over a hundred years.

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."

As I see it, this is Japan's problem and not Google's.

Do Google's published maps trump any of the much more sophisticated and certain ways mentioned above? I don't think so.

Families and businesses still clinging to the ideas of caste: there's lies the problem. It's their prejudice, and they'll take it with them to their graves.

I'd say more but I find the topic depressing, really.
 

chibi-san

Aristocrat
Aug 4, 2008
143
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Surprise?

Looks like racism & bigotry are a part of the human condition. Even if we are all the same group of people, we "need" to have a minority group to dispise... The lowly (in the majority's view) minority group must serve a special (socially vital?) function. Somehow...

Oh well, welcome to America- I mean Japan. :casual:
 

Axandra

Member
Jul 7, 2008
79
1
@ chibi-san:
Excellent point. I was just thinking the same yesterday, while watching "Okuribito". Don't want to roll out any spoilers, I'll just say that if you're going to watch this Oscar awarded movie, there is a particular scene in there where you'll understand the connection I made.
 

buttobi

Member
Mar 29, 2007
769
22
Looks like racism & bigotry are a part of the human condition. Even if we are all the same group of people, we "need" to have a minority group to dispise... The lowly (in the majority's view) minority group must serve a special (socially vital?) function. Somehow...

Oh well, welcome to America- I mean Japan. :casual:
So true especially of the Japanese mentality.

Go to 2chan and see how morons obviously lacking in thinking faculty call each other's names. Looks as if they need a group of people they can consider lower than themselves in older to feel better about themselves. It's no coinsidence that anti-Korean and anti-Burakumin vandals are rampant in 2chan.

The anti-Korean and anti-Burakumin sentiments=2chan mentality are the evidences of how general mind is subject to bias and delusions even in the modern highly scientific world. After all human beings are metaphysical/unscientific creatures by nature. :attention:
 
May 7, 2009
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Well, another part of why i don't really like japanese society and social climate, the girls are hot and the porn is good, but when it comes down to living and working there, it's hell, and many of my IRL japanese buddies confirm that. My japanese teacher actually moved to scandinavia for that very reason, work was hard and social pressure and norms was/is ridicilus.
 

daredemonai

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Mar 19, 2009
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Well, another part of why i don't really like japanese society and social climate, the girls are hot and the porn is good, but when it comes down to living and working there, it's hell, and many of my IRL japanese buddies confirm that. My japanese teacher actually moved to scandinavia for that very reason, work was hard and social pressure and norms was/is ridicilus.

Whoa, now there's a gross generalization. I've lived and worked here for some 15 years or so, and I find that it's like any other place: it has good and bad points, and what one considers good and bad is naturally subjective and tentative. It's hardly hell. Most of my dearest friends are Japanese. There are assholes anywhere you go in this world. Like I always say, it's not where you are, it's who you're with.

I find that non-Japanese who have lived here in Japan and say they hate it are people who speak little or no Japanese, and whose only Japanese friends are people who speak English and are particularly interested in the U.S. or some other foreign country. And such Japanese people tend to speak contemptuously of Japan and Japanese people because they want to believe they are better than or different from other Japanese. But I bet those real life Japanese buddies of yours miss real Japanese cooking, easy access to manga, clean and reasonably safe streets, family and old friends, etc. :goodboy:

I bitch about Japan, and I bitch about my home country, the U.S.. But there are plenty of things (and people) I miss from the U.S., and plenty of things (and people) I would miss from Japan if I moved back to the U.S..

No place is perfect, no people are perfect. After all, we're all just Homo Sapiens. :dunno:
 

Sakunyuusha

New Member
Jan 27, 2008
1,855
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On the one hand:
The existence of the burakumin has not been kept secret. I learned about it in my Japanese history course, both from the instructor as well as from the textbook we used ... as well as from primary literature we read, now that I come to think of it. What I mean is ... you can't NOT know about the burakumin if you read any substantial amount of Japanese literature from the Muromachi, Sengoku, and Edo periods. They're there. In certain stories the taboos associated with the burakumin -- tanning leather, butchering, or digging graves -- are important plot points in the story.

On the other hand:
The Japanese people, famously, like to put forth a good public image. More than many other nationalities, I've experienced first-hand that Japanese natives are very eager to discuss and share knowledge of Japan when the topic presents Japan in a neutral or in a good light; but they are loathe to talk to outsiders (i.e. non-Japanese) about darker topics like military campaigns in which Japan was clearly the aggressor (e.g. Hideyoshi's invasion of Korea in the late 16th Century). In fact, even amongst fellow Japanese these topics are hush-hush. If you watch period dramas of Japanese history, you'll see very little mention of the wars in mainland China or in Korea, both those of the 16th and of the 20th centuries. So ... I can't say it surprises me to learn that the Japanese government is upset about the publicizing of these maps. Even though the burakumin are common knowledge amongst Japanese historians, the common people of the planet still do not associate caste systems with Japan. When you hear "castes," you immediately think of India. In fact, I doubt India will ever be able to escape that stigma in at least the next 500 years. You might think of medieval Europe or of pre-Soviet Russia, but rarely do you think of Japan when you hear the word "castes." You think "samurai, farmers, merchants, peasants" because that's all most people are aware of. They don't realize that within that ambiguous "peasants" category exists a whole host of classes, and the burakumin are the lowest of the low. They are the ones who come into direct contact with Death -- and because of the Buddhist teachings, this is considered to be so unchaste that the other Japanese do not even want to touch, speak to, or breathe the same air as the burakumin for fear of being contaminated by Death themselves.

In short, it's a stigmatic phobia born out of a backwards religious belief. Surprise! :p
 
May 7, 2009
15
0
Whoa, now there's a gross generalization. I've lived and worked here for some 15 years or so, and I find that it's like any other place: it has good and bad points, and what one considers good and bad is naturally subjective and tentative. It's hardly hell. Most of my dearest friends are Japanese. There are assholes anywhere you go in this world. Like I always say, it's not where you are, it's who you're with.

I find that non-Japanese who have lived here in Japan and say they hate it are people who speak little or no Japanese, and whose only Japanese friends are people who speak English and are particularly interested in the U.S. or some other foreign country. And such Japanese people tend to speak contemptuously of Japan and Japanese people because they want to believe they are better than or different from other Japanese. But I bet those real life Japanese buddies of yours miss real Japanese cooking, easy access to manga, clean and reasonably safe streets, family and old friends, etc. :goodboy:

I bitch about Japan, and I bitch about my home country, the U.S.. But there are plenty of things (and people) I miss from the U.S., and plenty of things (and people) I would miss from Japan if I moved back to the U.S..

No place is perfect, no people are perfect. After all, we're all just Homo Sapiens. :dunno:

Yeah i agree i was a bit overly negative in my post, woke up on the wrong side maybe, of course it's not hell. :casual: