badass-bharat-deafmuslim-artista:

karyukai-is-life:

November 9th, 2018: A video of maiko Mameryuu (まめ柳) from Tama okiya in Gion Kobu dancing the famous “Kurokami (黒髪)” dance during her sakkou period.

“Kurokami” is reserved exclusively for a maiko’s sakkou period- the last stage before she becomes a full fledged professional geiko- and tells the story of a courtesan longing for her absent lover.

Mameryuu turned her collar, had her erikae, and became a geiko on November 21st, 2018!

Beautiful 

muchymozzarella:

Please reblog this even if you don’t care

They’re trying to erase the existence of the rape victims of Japanese soldiers in World War II because they think the reminder of their crimes might make Japan a little bit cross

Duterte, the absolute coward, is more worried about women criticizing him than actually honoring the women this country needs to remember

Please don’t let these women be silenced.

wigmund:

From Wikipedia Picture of the Day; March 19, 2018:

The Rock Ptarmigan (Lagopus muta) is a medium-sized gamebird in the grouse family. Averaging 34–36 cm (13–14 in) long, with a wingspan of 54–60 cm (21–24 in), this species feeds primarily on birch and willow buds and catkins. The rock ptarmigan breeds across arctic and subarctic Eurasia and North America and commonly has up to six chicks. This Japanese rock ptarmigan (L. m. japonica), locally known as the raichō (雷鳥) which means “thunder bird”, in summer plumage on Mount Tsubakuro, Japan

Photo: Daiskue Tashiro

‘Comfort Woman’ Memorial Statues, A Thorn In Japan’s Side, Now Sit On Korean Buses

tinyrats:

rapeculturerealities:

One goal of President Trump’s trip to Asia has been to rally America’s allies to help put pressure on North Korea. But the mission is complicated by the fact that America’s two staunchest allies in East Asia — Japan and South Korea — don’t get along well when it comes to issues involving their history.

Much of the friction dates to Japan’s occupation of Korea in the first part of the 20th century. Tensions related to that occupation still simmer — even 70 years after South Korea was liberated.

Things flared up again this year over a statue of a young girl known as the “Peace Statue.”

The small bronze figure depicts a girl sitting in a chair, staring straight ahead with a look of determination. She has cropped hair and wears a hanbok — a traditional Korean dress. She’s barefoot. Her fist is clenched. Next to her is an empty chair.

The girl memorializes women like Ahn Jeom-sun. She’s now 89 and says she has visited the statue often. It symbolizes the youth she lost at age 13, when the Japanese Imperial Army abducted her from her village.

“What I remember is that I was forcibly taken out of Korea and taken to China,” Ahn says.

The United Nations estimates 200,000 girls and women — mostly Koreans — were seized from villages to join Japan’s military sexual slavery program before and during the Second World War.

“It remains only Japan that is seeking to remove a statue of a victim. Politically speaking, there’s just no winning in that,” Dudden says.

Ahn, the former sex slave, says she never got married or had children after what happened to her during the war. She didn’t start speaking out about her story until the 1990s. She says she doesn’t want compensation from Japan.

“At this point, we don’t really care about the money; we don’t really care about politics. We just want a proper apology from them directly to us. We want them to think about us, the actual women that were involved,” she says.

‘Comfort Woman’ Memorial Statues, A Thorn In Japan’s Side, Now Sit On Korean Buses

suburbanerrorist:

memecucker:

rendakuenthusiast:

memecucker:

tariqah:

memecucker:

It’s weird how utterly hard it is for ppl on this site to realize that anti-colonial rhetoric is often coopted by reactionary nationalisms even though that was like one of the main idealogical platforms for Imperial Japan

Didn’t Imperial Japan try to position itself as the coloured liberator of all the colonies WHILE COLONISING Korea and China 

Check out the pictures from a 1942 childrens book about how Japan shall be the liberator of the oppressed races and notice what areas are “liberated colonies” and what areas are just colored in as being “Japan”

Do you know what book these images came from? Do you have them in higher resolution?

http://apjjf.org/-James-Orr/2692/article.html

I think I’ve said it before, but yeah, part of the history curricula here involved learning about Japan attacking other Asian countries in the guise of liberating them against the Western colonial powers, and nationalists such as Sukarno and Subhas Chandra Bose welcomed them, while some like Wang Jingwei did so out of political opportunism.

But I remember Indonesian activist and Communist activist Tan Malaka, having witnessed the cruelty the Japanese had displayed to the Chinese during his stay in China was wary about forming an alliance with the Japanese.