tv [untitled] September 30, 2020 11:30am-12:01pm +03
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well it may get to what is a result. they are very few people well economy and so you have a very negative cycle which reinforces. and let's take you through some of the headlines here now just 0 coy's has sworn in the new amir shares now after. he took an oath of office inside parliament and promised to continue mediation efforts across the region he succeeds his half brother. who died on wednesday the other from. bill just. as a soon this huge burden of this office i promise god almighty i promise our homeland and our people that i will spare no efforts that i will continue to work
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to save the interests of our homeland preserve the freedoms of our people their welfare and continue to support the peoples of kuwait and i pray to god almighty to guide our steps forward. the 1st debates in the u.s. presidential election has taken place in ohio he was a bad tempered and that times chaotic affair biden called trump a lie and the clown trump failed to condemn white supremacists and targeted what he called the radical left and i would say almost everything i see is from the left wing not from the right so what do you what do you what do you say i'm willing to do anything i want to see. do it say. you want to call him what do you want to call him give me a name give me a white supremacist who like me can die out process and write proud of i wish stand back and stand by but i'll tell you what i'll tell you what somebody has got to do something about anti fair and the left because this is not a right. says i love you i direct this afternoon i've got white.
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armenia are accusing each other of firing deep into each other's territory fighting over who got in a car about his continuing for a 4th day the u.n. security council held an emergency meeting and is calling for an immediate cease fire pro-democracy activists joshua wong is back in court in hong kong following his arrest last week he's been charged with taking part in an unauthorized demonstration in october last year and violating laws against wearing masks is among several activists facing charges related to last year's pro-democracy protests beijing imposed national security goals in response to those rallies back in june. we're back at the top of the hour now we're going to leave you with the stream stay with us al-jazeera. of all my friends and coworkers who were detained by one survived they were all waiting for news of the men for it was only one of
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the little marks they saw a boy killed in his father's. i saw a man killed next to his son i have only once in my life see. one of the bosnian wars darkest secrets bosnia the count on al-jazeera. hello i'm melissa can guest host al-jazeera is the stream home edition today we'll be taking a closer look at japanese food passed through is a term signifying someone who is half japanese and has something else now japan is a modulus country is very much in this country so have to stick out for better or worse as usual post your comments and questions on you tube will try to get to as many of them as possible so you too can join the stream.
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me and mitzi welcome to the program if you can each introduce yourselves let's start with mitzi hi i'm a 2 year i had a carter and i my professor of anthropology and student studies at florida international university in miami florida i am a bit of writing about black and ok now in issues or for quite some time now and megumi i everybody and my girl need to cram a documentary filmmaker i focus on telling stories about the marquis racial japanese experience and in 2013 my partner lara present i get i made the film. about the mixed race experience in japan and it sort of tell us about yourself. ok
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i mean consider me a 2nd half belgian half japanese photographer and i've been working on a photo project called the hunt for the heart for i don't have a clue poster like me who knows but i have i've been to have the book here. it's a photo project about being mixed up unease and for this one i've photographed and if you would about 150 huffed up in these people from a 100 or more different so different other countries excellent so 1st things 1st have to do which is a japanese were derived from the english word for half is it a derogatory word can can we even use it or is it commonly used in japan whoever wants to star in answer this question so. yeah obviously we called the film hospital and. the filmmakers everybody is involved in the team that feel that the term is drug atory we
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intentionally called the film ha ha a few as opposed to have the english word because we believe that it is a japanese term now and it really directly means somebody who has one japanese parent and one not japanese parent and i think you know it's a commonly used term it's the most common use term within. japan and it's very good when you meet somebody to the 1st time and you explain that you're hostile people and so we understand that you have one japanese parent what not jackals parents so i think it's. you know a large part of the community accepts that and braces that term. and of course one of the most well known hostages these days is naomi osaka and there's been so much commentary in japan about how japanese she is and whether she's japanese enough and so that makes me very curious in terms of your personal experiences being hostile
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in japan where there are particular moments that you remember and how are you treated perhaps nitze you can start. well i grew up in the united states so i will have a very different experience from someone who grew up in japan and especially someone who you know maybe speaks only japanese and maybe no other in the other language so i have a very particular experience when i go back home to ok now which is also a very particular place and. it's my relationship to this term even half true or to other mixed race people is very different i think for other people who are in mainland japan. i think you know i think or for people who are mixed for people who are have you know and have black in particular we have a. it's a complicated at a very complicated story i think for people of my generation and maybe
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a little bit older we are not totally so you know as part of being you know part of really being integrated in the in the nation and into that space and it's there are a lot of painful stories that many of us have shared with each other sometimes they're very beautiful stories it really depends on i think you know the moment the political moment the political climate and. yet it's there's so many so many factors that go into how you are feeling in that particular moment. i don't know maybe megumi and tend to have a similar situation or feeling about that but that's that's definitely how i. i think. well from a very well personal perspective. there are there are moments where where you love everything about being half japanese. i mean you get you get all the perks of being
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hot japanese you go to japan you get the taste of japanese food. you speak japanese or that's as my case i speak japanese i have relatives in japan i have friends in japan and i have a 2nd home in japan. but on the other hand there are plenty of times where i wish i were not mixed or just that i were just belgian or even just japanese so it really depends on as mrs said it depends on so many factors it depends on the political climate but it depends on the people you're with it depends on the mood you're in and your own age so where am i in in my life. i want to share one. will go right to you want to share comment that we had received on twitter about this issue from dr afa h.q.
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he says japan is a country of japanese people their traditions customs festivals worshipping methods birth and death culture is way different from the rest of the world even if the political system wants to minimise this those they will never change i have lived there japan won't change and so may give me i'm curious what you think about that did you ever experience that it was your experience has your experience been more positive or negative or a mixture of both. so i was born and raised in japan and for me you know growing up speaking japanese as my 1st language and having a fully japanese name you know i grew up identifying as japanese 1st and i think you know a lot of the hazards especially when i became an adult and had to go outside of my you know immediate bubble of family and friends that you kind of interact with when you're a child and your world is very small and summer when you become adult and you have
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a much larger world and interact with new and strange people all the time. i received a lot of kind of disbelief that i could be japanese you know people would say your name is nice could do you are you married to a japanese man is that because that's the only way i could have a japanese last name you know they would always compliment me on my level of japanese and so you know that's a lot of experience that i had and it got to be very exhausting and you know constantly having to explain and justify your existence and that's part of the motivation of why i made this film but specific to the comment that we just received i mean you know absolutely japan has a. you know i think unspoken definition of what it needs to be japanese and there's these boxes that you have to take off that like if you look japanese you speak japanese you have japanese citizenship and you have to be culturally japanese and
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if you don't you can't check off * all of those boxes you're not japanese and you know i think what's one of the brilliant things about that is that she actually doesn't take a lot of those boxes but she is japanese and she's representing japan on the world stage and you know i think that's really challenging a lot of people about broadening their definition about what it means to be japanese so i think change is happening absolutely and i definitely want to follow up a little bit and if you could tell us a bit more about your film share i'm so are the film follows 5 different individuals. who have all different mixes and behind you you can see david at the top he's half going in and japanese and below is sophia who's half a stranger you know definitely also have somebody who has happened as well and a japanese half korean and japanese and has and you just saw some clips earlier of a little boy who's half mexican and japanese so you know we see
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a variety of experiences but central to each of their story lines is kind of how being have japanese impacts their daily life so we see people who completely live outside japan. and you know come to japan for the very 1st time to experience their roots and we see people who have been you know going to race in japan and primarily only speak japanese and but come on a daily basis struggle with you know finding their place in japanese society. about your global project i definitely think everyone to check it out after this program but tell us about some of the lessons or takeaways you got while going around taking photographs of half those around the world. right well we're going to start i think i should start with my own very narrow world. i grew up
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in belgium went to japan and most of my summers and i interviewed about 15 have to happen is people in the netherlands when i was living there and i thought after 15 people that i had a pretty good idea of what being half japanese was until i got invited to his house by japan festival in the center of this where i meant how from the rest of the world and those included some of the people. maybe he has talked about already some like some others as well and that's when i realized that i had this huge blind spot on my my radar. i did not know that there were known white japanese nuns i mean i could have imagined but i didn't know them there were not on my own i know as i say so finally meeting them for the 1st time and hearing their stories really open up this huge new box and that's when i decided
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to to try and capture. the full range if you want of being half japanese so even though by for example media or beauty standards you're not half japanese if you're not this talented young white japanese is not a legal person. i wanted to find people from different generations people from every single continent and from as many countries as possible so i made that my goal and what i've found out yeah i'll finish your thought and then the question i found out and i thought was the most interesting find of my project is that basically you can divide the whole. house through 'd community in 2 so you have to huffers who are born and raised in japan then you have the huffers are born and raised outside of japan and each of those categories can be then divided into 3
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being. visual visually identifiable 'd japanese but why. the 2nd fish surely i don't if i bought japanese but nonwhite so accomplices africa latin america parts of asia and then you have the 3rd group who are non-visible and say the invisible half ago and they are chinese japanese korean japanese. and we all have a completely different experience there is something that unites us that's this label of being harmful but what sets us apart are these these factors those are the biggest right factors that i've seen well that's what's really interesting to me as i started hearing the voices and reading interviews of different half was is that not all have those are treated equally i want to bring
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up a comment from june so gmo who is a well known television personality in japan who is half and this is what he had to say about his own experience got to go i really hated being different from other people when i was in elementary school i kept wondering why i was a different color from other and hopes that i could become the same as everyone else but now being different in japan having different colored skin has turned my advantage and there's this moments when you realize your satirical. and then i also actually want to share another video comment a back to back from runs oh he's founder of the black experience to pantheistic distant give people an idea of some of the negative experiences of being different looking in japan. you know free as the black experience in japan is myriad just not one i think if you think about it there are a multiplicity of factors that goes into influence in each person's experience to
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be honest you'll find experiences different registers across the spectrum some really good some really really bad it really depends on a lot of factors when it comes down to inclusiveness and japan rental discrimination is a thing in japan is a fact i faced a recently when i was trying to find a larger place to live in so you know there is still a lot of work to be then of course and but i remain optimistic because interviewed people within japan who occupy sort of positions and roles within the japanese society that back in a day maybe 4 decades ago would not have been possible so i think there is some progress but a lot of work still needs to be done. you know i mentioned at the beginning of the show that japan is a homogenous country just to throw some numbers out there for people to keep in mind 125000000 people approximately 2 percent are migrants and of course a lot of these migrants could easily blend in a lot of people from china and south korea for example in terms of refugees
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10000 people applied it to be refugees in 2019 and only 40 people got their applications a sept it and other interesting numbers i know that of course this is a population that is aging and also not many people are having as many children so it's a shrinking population and so the government is concerned about trying to bring in more people but the fact of the matter is a pew poll of from a few years ago shows that only 25 percent of people in japan are really ready to a set immigrants. i think we sort of danced around this but there are words for this thought a racism and a certain views of blood purity and i wonder what you guys think about that is that what's driving some of the negative experiences that have whose have had in japan maybe i'll start with nigga. that's a great question i mean i think perry has
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a long history. yet you know it's an island. it's foreigners being closed and so i think that. there and then there's also this you know salt pepper generated image of itself and you know perceived by the rest of the world that as homogenous and so that kind of you know narrative continues to exist and. so people are you know ducking people believe that you know they're largely one people one culture one nation one language and. there's also a lot of i think societal pressure to. be to go with the flow and be accepted. you know there's a saying that everybody likes to say that the like the nail that sticks out gets hammered down. and so. you know i think if you're even
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a little bit different and like the boxes that i alluded to before if you don't check all of them that you tend to be. you know treated differently mitzi what do you think i mean you study a lot of. you know i think we have to be really careful when we talk about japan as a homogenous nation as though he was referring to this kind of the hunting growing myth this and as that as the twitter comment cumin i was thinking about the same thing you know this idea that japan is unchanging it's this kind of. reifies idea that it's an essential it's place and it reifies that kind of idea that it's that. you know it's unchanging and it can never be a place of acceptance of difference when that's really not the case and it's really it's up further isolating and marginalizing the experiences of so many different
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types of mixed race people within within the nation state so we have to be really careful about perpetuating that that that. myth upon which immediately it's a dangerous one and it's one that we put on to japan historically we've done that apologists have done that in my field but also i think japanese people have taken the single story myth and really it's very it's very dangerous for for for mixed race people. and so it is done out of japan like many nation states are dynamic they deal with the you know phobia and there's a push back to that as well i mean maybe the push may not be as fast as we would like but. you know it is changing and you know there are some black lives matter protests within japan that are organized by japanese people who are who are you know trying to really make a change within their own countries i mean when we have a a miss america competition i think is in 2013 or 2014 when an indian american woman
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you know do what i forget her name but her last name remember when she was crowned miss america or she was crowned some pageant head and there was so much pushback people were questioning like if she can she really be american i mean brain your generation and asians who have been living in this country and they're still like where you really probably you know we still and of course we must you know it's interesting because we've also seen that berry being broken in the patterns in japan with i am me a motel and also of course a priyanka ship yoshikawa 2016 miss world in japan and that has really moved things along in terms of the conversation and you just mentioned of course the only osaka talking about one talk about black lives matter in japan and earlier and the gooney was talking about naomi ozark i want to share what she posted at the u.s. open she was showing up and wearing
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a face mask with the names of people who have been victims in. the united states as a result of people thinking that black lives do not matter and that's sending a very strong statement and also if she is japanese and i wonder to what extent her presence has changed things i'm curious about looking ahead in terms of whether the next generation of japanese will be more open to have to choose into new immigrants and to citizenship in general attempts through what do you think. well. i think role models are really really very important so people who become. mister or. really successful sports players can can make make a big change in firstly i think in the self acceptance of younger people so
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so many half japanese people growing up in the countryside don't know anybody who looks like them or who they say does not look like the others as they do if that makes sense. so having a role models is is so important and that goes for europe as well where i live and i'm sure that works the same way for the united states you need people to look up to who can achieve things despite what they look like i mean i'm going to get every vantage absolutely i want to hear me gloomy mitty's thoughts on this we're getting near to the end of the show but the gloomy if you can tell us what you think in terms of what attitudes needs to change and your thoughts about the future yeah i mean i think you know as that's just said like importance of role models is really you know so valuable and i think right now you
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know we've seen role models and. yet any kind of. popular media whether there are t.v. had ental as they like to call them like celebrities in japan or are now athletes and so i think you know it's partially just a kind of a numbers game like it's just a matter of time i mean you know senators to think that like you know the population of japan is declining like the number of mixed babies are you know growing and so. that's going to change and i think you know what i would like to see as these generations grow up and participate in japanese society is not just the people on t.v. and on the sports fields but in business writer ship and nonprofit leadership like different areas of society and we're going to start and there are a few politicians are ready and i want to i want to i want to get i'm so sorry but
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i want to make sure that if he also has a quick thought since we're really getting near to the end it's if you can give us your one quick sentence and thought about the future. one quick sentence that you know i actually agree she would make me here at about you know representation is definitely important of course i would love to see what people who are you know if that's you know except for younger people who are making isolated in the countryside. seeing yourself on on in you know you know and the popular media is very important at the same time yet we've got our educational change shifts have got to be made that it just anti blackness that have been transnationally you know absorbed into the country got it yet doesn't know the bigger harder question that i think you know my. thank you so much attention to meet nitze thank you for joining algiers the street.
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on disease was built months left until election day candidates are warming up for the big day with a series of debates with the range of stories from across the aisle just spun to take some of the stories i think. it's 2 years since the brutal killing of a saudi journalist we look at the impact of the murder of jim frederick algeciras emmy award winner. it's written for the series on the communities we lived in. the beginning with growing tensions between greece and turkey in the mediterranean really explain how the dispute to the secular the self declared republic of northern cyprus october on al-jazeera. current tensions between countries along the river nile have their roots in the colonial past from egypt point of view cannot depend on agreement with the girls because of the new political realities on the
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ground or increasing the sense of uncertainty over cool as the rhythm out there with the need to view the other and meet. the country's neighbors kind of been feet peter. struggle over the moon 000. 0020. 0200 we earth is the government not to take the necessary action to really address some of the structural issues we listen i still think that air travel is the safest
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mode of travel and the spend that we meet with global news makers and talk about the stories that matter so does 0. azerbaijan and armenia rule out peace talks as the un calls for an immediate end to the conflict. i'm sam is a band this is out just here on live from doha also coming up. new emir calls for unity as the sworn in that's a parliamentary ceremony one day after the death of. the 1st u.s. presidential debate dissolves into a chaotic beautified name calling and accusations of racism.
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