I Certainly Am Foreign
I wasn't going to post this but I need to rant and rave about it.
In the last week I have been racially abused (verbally) twice. It's quite unusual. In the last year and a half since I returned to Japan, these have been the first incidents. I don't count staring by children in the street as incidents because I know I cut quite a striking figure: I'm tall and have blue eyes, therefore as close to Hollywood come to life as most kids are going to get. I'm an uglier, low-budget Steve Buscemi B-movie figure.
Both this week's incidents involved use of the word 'gaijin' which, for some of us international residents but not myself, is akin to the n-word. While I personally prefer the use of the word 'gaikokujin', I don't believe the word 'gaijin' is always used with racial discrimination in mind; some of my experiences have it equate as a simple adjective like fat, skinny, tall, short, etc. but whenever racial abuse toward foreigners in Japan crops up, the word 'gaijin' invariably does too.
The first incident involved an old geezer on a bicycle who shouted "Sukebe gaijin!" (Pervert foreigner) at me as I walked with my girlfriend near Shinjuku Gyoen. I was shocked at first, then joked about it, quipping "How does he know?" After that, maybe five or ten minutes later when my brain finally engaged, it really hit me as a downer.
My girlfriend told me not to take it to heart. "Most Japanese would be angered by him." I know she's right. It's the hatred in his eyes that really caused me the hurt. I like to think Japan is home for me and I normally feel settled here. It's only when things like this happen that I realise that my being here does actually depend on the whims of the government and the demand for English teachers. That there are a minority of people here who resent my presence is not a surprise but it's always surprising when it's made known in public.
The second incident was last night on my way to the dry cleaner's. A woman waiting for the bus called me either a "henna gaijin" (weird foreigner) or "iyana gaijin" (irritating/loathesome foreigner). Still being kind of hung up on being abused in Shinjuku, I called her out on it and asked her what she said to which she pretended to be in thrall to her headphones. Frustrated I called her a "dasai baba" (hard to translate for me but basically trashy middle-aged woman) and in English a "stupid fucking bitch".
Anyway, it's not like whiteys like me get a raw deal in Japan, it's just that ignorant people are unpleasant sometimes. Were I to experience the racism and fear that tall, black men face, whether I'd still be here is debatable.

