It is with intrepidation that I try to put into words greetings for the end of one year and the welcoming of a New Year. Or rather it is a fact that I have merely forgotten that the reality I have been able to ignore has always existed. For someone who holds so many privileges as myself, it surely is worth thinking how to use such privelege whilst free time is gained over the New Year's holidays. I must also not forget that my life is supported by the care and labour of countless people (regardless of country or region), who struggle through each day, each with different circumstances and whom I may have never met.
The unimaginable scale of the massacre in the Gaza Strip, Palestine, the horror of not realising the increasing number of deaths, the voices of families being interviewed just before they were killed, parents carrying the bodies of their children mutilated by bombing, Israeli soldiers carrying rainbow flags, US President Biden repeatedly lying about seeing photos of infants whose heads were severed by Hamas; Foreign Minister Kamikawa doing nothing to protest the occupation and genocide on a visit to Israel; McDonald's offering free meals to Israeli soldiers; boycotting consumer sales on Fridays... The impossibility and fear of one's everday way of life coexisting with this reality.
The passing of the revision of the Immigration Control Act in June to deprive refugees and people on provisional release of their fundamental rights to living sustenance; Governor Koike failing to send words of rememerance towards the massacre of Koreans in the Great Kanto Earthquake, which marked 100 years on 1st September. A case in which a foreign technical trainee, whose sexual and reproductive health/rights are not guaranteed and who was unable to access safe and secure contraception, abortion, or pregnancy and childbirth, was arrested for disposal of a corpse. A restaurant in Tokyo that served bleach-laced water to a customer, presumably upon knowing that the customer was a foreign national (a request for a fair investigation was submitted by the South Korean Government). These are just a few of the events of 2023 that I can quickly recall, but what is this if not the violence of colonial rule and racism that persists in Japanese society? And Japan, which should learn from the past (which is also the present) of the Japanese Empire, which occupied and ruled many Asian countries and regions, massacred civilians, allowed organised sexual violence and even deprived the people living there of their language and names, is also complicit in the genocide taking place now in Gaza, Palestine.
I can never speak the words and thoughts for each and every person involved in KOSATEN, but I would like to start another year by trying to learn little by little a part of a reality that we have left unacknowledged. (While feeling disgusted by the Hinomaru flags that fosoon each town, the heterosexist and gender dualistic family representations of New Year's met on every street, and the extreme glorification of family gatherings around Osechi).
Date and Time
January 3, 2024 @ 12:00 pm – January 31, 2024 @ 6:00 pm
Asia/Tokyo Timezone
It is with intrepidation that I try to put into words greetings for the end of one year and the welcoming of a New Year. Or rather it is a fact that I have merely forgotten that the reality I have been able to ignore has always existed. For someone who holds so many privileges as myself, it surely is worth thinking how to use such privelege whilst free time is gained over the New Year’s holidays. I must also not forget that my life is supported by the care and labour of countless people (regardless of country or region), who struggle through each day, each with different circumstances and whom I may have never met.
The unimaginable scale of the massacre in the Gaza Strip, Palestine, the horror of not realising the increasing number of deaths, the voices of families being interviewed just before they were killed, parents carrying the bodies of their children mutilated by bombing, Israeli soldiers carrying rainbow flags, US President Biden repeatedly lying about seeing photos of infants whose heads were severed by Hamas; Foreign Minister Kamikawa doing nothing to protest the occupation and genocide on a visit to Israel; McDonald’s offering free meals to Israeli soldiers; boycotting consumer sales on Fridays… The impossibility and fear of one’s everday way of life coexisting with this reality.
The passing of the revision of the Immigration Control Act in June to deprive refugees and people on provisional release of their fundamental rights to living sustenance; Governor Koike failing to send words of rememerance towards the massacre of Koreans in the Great Kanto Earthquake, which marked 100 years on 1st September. A case in which a foreign technical trainee, whose sexual and reproductive health/rights are not guaranteed and who was unable to access safe and secure contraception, abortion, or pregnancy and childbirth, was arrested for disposal of a corpse. A restaurant in Tokyo that served bleach-laced water to a customer, presumably upon knowing that the customer was a foreign national (a request for a fair investigation was submitted by the South Korean Government). These are just a few of the events of 2023 that I can quickly recall, but what is this if not the violence of colonial rule and racism that persists in Japanese society? And Japan, which should learn from the past (which is also the present) of the Japanese Empire, which occupied and ruled many Asian countries and regions, massacred civilians, allowed organised sexual violence and even deprived the people living there of their language and names, is also complicit in the genocide taking place now in Gaza, Palestine.
I can never speak the words and thoughts for each and every person involved in KOSATEN, but I would like to start another year by trying to learn little by little a part of a reality that we have left unacknowledged. (While feeling disgusted by the Hinomaru flags that fosoon each town, the heterosexist and gender dualistic family representations of New Year’s met on every street, and the extreme glorification of family gatherings around Osechi).