Let’s Face the Facts: Japanese Indigenous Groups
Okinawans:
-Second largest minority group with a population of 1.3 million in Japan (Yamashiro, 2013)
-Okinawan culture has been deemed merely as a prefectural difference (as for any prefecture in Japan), which ignores their indigenous differences in language, food, and culture, and blatantly covers up their historical status as a distinct ethnic group and independent nation (Yamashiro, 2013)
-Okinawa has been the poorest prefecture in Japan since its integration into Japan in 1879 (Yamashiro, 2013)
-The only part of Japan to experience land battles in World War 2 (Yamashiro, 2013)
-Forced to hold a disproportionate amount of US military forces stationed in Japan (Yamashiro, 2013)
-World War 2 and particularly the Battle of Okinawa, which claimed more than 100,000 Okinawan civilian lives, showed how ready Japan was to sacrifice Okinawa to protect the “mainland” (Howell, 1996)
-Japan has attempted to ‘buy off’ the Okinawan people with deceptive economic development, while using Japanese public symbols (i.e. schools displaying the Japanese national flag) in order to establish Okinawans’ “Japaneseness” (Howell 1996)
-Okinawan music, dance, and crafts have been tamed and exoticized so that they are simply prefectural variants of a main Japanese culture and ethnicity (Howell, 1996)
Ainu:
-Most Japanese perceive them to be racially different (Yamashiro, 2013)
-Historically, Ainu were ethnically and phenotypically different, seen as hairier and taller (Yamashiro, 2013)
-Standard of living and average level of education are lower than the Japanese population (Howell, 1996)
-Media coverage of Ainu issues avoids direct discussion of discrimination within Japan and instead celebrates Ainu culture as a regional difference (Howell, 1996)
Burakumin:
-Described as a caste rather than an ethnically distinct group, but are treated like a different race on the notion of impurity (Yamashiro, 2013)
-The largest minority group in Japan -- 1.5-3 million Burakumin (Yamashiro, 2013)
-The caste was constructed in the Tokugawa Era (1603-1867) by condemning all who were considered “unclean” based their occupations that involve killing (I.e. butchers) (Yamashiro, 2013)
-They were highly discriminated against and lived in segregated communities because of it (Shimahara, 1984)











