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5112개의 게시물을 찾았습니다.

  1. 2005/11/22
    Niemals aufgeben!!
    no chr.!
  2. 2005/11/21
    1,000 히트...
    no chr.!
  3. 2005/11/21
    4 년전에 #8(3)
    no chr.!
  4. 2005/11/21
    反차별주의와...
    no chr.!
  5. 2005/11/21
    무례 APEC, WTO... (updated)
    no chr.!
  6. 2005/11/20
    4 년전에 #7(1)
    no chr.!
  7. 2005/11/19
    反APEC 투쟁...마무리...
    no chr.!
  8. 2005/11/19
    4 년전에 #6
    no chr.!
  9. 2005/11/19
    11.18 부산
    no chr.!
  10. 2005/11/18
    Right now in Busan
    no chr.!

1,000 히트...

Yesterday the first time one of our articles in the former (English) home page of ETU-MB got 1,000 hits/readers!

Please check it out here!

 

Actually I really don't know the reason why, but...

 

...축하!!


진보블로그 공감 버튼트위터로 리트윗하기페이스북에 공유하기딜리셔스에 북마크

4 년전에 #8

Yesterday, 4 years ago, I arrived back home. The first what I did, I was checking my e-mail box. And for my great surprise (was it really a surprise for me??) I found the first mail from my...!

 

 

And the mail was just soo nice, and as bonus she sent me beautiful pictures... Wow... and only few minutes later, I just wanted to go to bed, to take a rest, I got the first - nice, funny, lovely - phone call from her (and later hundreds more were following...)!

Actually starting from this time - for a while - the most wonderful, just let뭩 say magic time ?even we were separated over 8,000 KM - since ever was beginning for me...... and...

 

-FIN-



 

...just graffities in my currently neighbourhood... hihi...

진보블로그 공감 버튼트위터로 리트윗하기페이스북에 공유하기딜리셔스에 북마크

反차별주의와...

...反국가주의!!!

 

FIGHT RACISM AND NATIONALISM!

 


...??? f... you!!

 

Following article I found today in IHT (www.iht.com )

 

Manga reflect xenophobia in Japan
 
By Norimitsu Onishi The New York Times
SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 20, 2005

A young Japanese woman in the comic book "Hating the Korean Wave" exclaims, "It's not an exaggeration to say that Japan built the South Korea of today!" In another passage, the book states that "there is nothing at all in Korean culture to be proud of."

 

In another comic book, "Introduction to China," which portrays the Chinese as a depraved people obsessed with cannibalism, a woman of Japanese origin says: "Take the China of today, its principles, thought, literature, art, science, institutions. There's nothing attractive."

 

The two comic books, portraying Chinese and Koreans as base peoples and advocating confrontation with them, have become runaway best sellers in Japan in the past four months.

 

In their graphic and unflattering drawings of Japan's fellow Asians and in the unapologetic, often offensive contents of their speech bubbles, the books reveal some of the sentiments underlying Japan's worsening relations with the rest of Asia.

 

They also point to Japan's longstanding unease with the rest of Asia and its own sense of identity, which is akin to Britain's apartness from the Continent. Much of Japan's history in the last century and a half has been guided by the goal of becoming more like the West and less like Asia. Today, China and South Korea's rise to challenge Japan's position as Asia's economic, diplomatic and cultural leader is inspiring renewed xenophobia against them here.

 

Kanji Nishio, a scholar of German literature, is the honorary chairman of the Japanese Society for History Textbook Reform, the nationalist organization that has pushed to have references to the country's wartime atrocities eliminated from junior high school textbooks.

 

Nishio is blunt about how Japan should deal with its neighbors, saying nothing has changed since 1885, when one of modern Japan's most influential intellectuals, Yukichi Fukuzawa, said Japan should emulate the advanced nations of the West.

 

Fukuzawa also said Japan should leave Asia by dissociating itself from its backward neighbors, especially China and Korea.

 

Nishio, who wrote a chapter in the comic book about South Korea, said Japan should try to cut itself off from China and South Korea, as Fukuzawa had advocated.

 

"Currently we cannot ignore South Korea and China," Nishio said.

 

"Economically it's difficult. But in our hearts, psychologically, we should remain composed and keep that attitude."

 

The reality that South Korea had emerged as a rival hit many Japanese in 2002, when the countries were co-hosts of soccer's World Cup and South Korea advanced further than Japan. At the same time, the so-called Korean Wave - television dramas, movies and music from South Korea - swept Japan and the rest of Asia, often displacing Japanese pop cultural exports.

 

The wave, though popular among Japanese women, gave rise to a counter movement, especially on the Internet. Sharin Yamano, the young cartoonist behind "Hating the Korean Wave," began his strip on his own Web site then.

 

"The 'Hate Korea' feelings have spread explosively since the World Cup," said Akihide Tange, an editor at Shinyusha, the publisher of the comic book. Still, the number of sales, 360,000 so far, surprised the book's editors, suggesting that the Hate Korea movement was far larger than they had believed.

 

"We weren't expecting there'd be so many," said Susumu Yamanaka, another editor at Shinyusha. "But when the lid was actually taken off, we found a tremendous number of people feeling this way."

 

So far the two books, each running about 300 pages and costing around $10, have drawn little criticism from public officials, intellectuals or the mainstream media.

 

As nationalists and revisionists have come to dominate the public debate in Japan, figures advocating an honest view of history are being silenced, said Yutaka Yoshida, a historian at Hitotsubashi University in Tokyo. Yoshida said the growing movement to deny history, like the Rape of Nanjing, was a sort of "religion" for an increasingly insecure nation.

 

"Lacking confidence, they need a story of healing," Yoshida said. "Even if we say that story is different from facts, it doesn't mean anything to them. Many historians feel exhausted in trying to fill the gap between facts and what people want to believe."

 

The Korea book's cartoonist, who is working on a sequel, has turned down interview requests. The book centers on a Japanese teenager, Kaname, who comes to have a "correct" understanding of Korea. It begins with a chapter on how South Korea's soccer team supposedly cheated to advance in the 2002 Word Cup; subsequent chapters show how Kaname realizes that South Korea owes its current success to Japanese colonialism.

 

"It is Japan who made it possible for Koreans to join the ranks of major nations, not themselves," Nishio said of colonial Korea, claiming Japan even gave Koreans their identity because "they had no pride in their history."

 

But the comic book, perhaps inadvertently, also betrays Japan's conflicted identity, its longstanding feelings of superiority toward Asia and of inferiority toward the West. The Japanese characters in the book are drawn with big eyes, blond hair and Caucasian features; the Koreans are drawn with black hair, narrow eyes and very Asian features.

 

That peculiar aesthetic, so entrenched in pop culture that most Japanese nowadays are unaware of it, has its roots in the Meiji Restoration of the late 19th century, when Japanese leaders decided the best way to stop Western imperialists from reaching here was to emulate them.

 

As those sentiments took root, the Japanese began acquiring Caucasian features in popular drawing.

 

Many of the same influences are at work in the other new comic book, "An Introduction to China," which depicts the Chinese as obsessed with cannibalism and prostitution, and has sold 180,000 copies.

 

The book describes China as the "world's prostitution superpower" and says, without offering evidence, that prostitution accounts for 10 percent of the country's gross domestic product. It describes China as a source of disease and depicts Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi saying, "I hear that most of the epidemics that broke out in Japan on a large scale are from China."

 

The book waves away Japan's worst wartime atrocities in China. It dismisses the Rape of Nanjing, in which historians say 100,000 to 300,000 Chinese were killed by Japanese soldiers in 1937 to 1938, as a fabrication of the Chinese government devised to spread anti-Japanese sentiment - "postwar China's biggest hit."

 

The book also says the Japanese Imperial Army's Unit 731 - which reportedly researched biological warfare and conducted vivisections, amputations and other experiments on thousands of Chinese and other prisoners - was actually formed to defend Japanese soldiers against the Chinese.

 

 

 

Please don't forget, for example last Friday, how many Japanese comrades are fighting shoulder at shoulder with the Korean comrades against war, exploitation and oppression!

진보블로그 공감 버튼트위터로 리트윗하기페이스북에 공유하기딜리셔스에 북마크

무례 APEC, WTO... (updated)

...BUT THE CLASS STRUGGLE

ON THE SPOT IS STILL CONTINUING! -철거민 투쟁/龍山區-

Since long, long time many residents in the Yong-san area (Yongsan-dong 5-ga, the last time I was there, I spent a night there, it was last spring...) are fighting against the Construction Mafia.

Here you can see/watch Hong Gil-dong's last contribution (11.17) about their struggle. And more about their struggle you can see here (2005.3.18). If you want to know more, please check out this (전철연)!
진보블로그 공감 버튼트위터로 리트윗하기페이스북에 공유하기딜리셔스에 북마크

4 년전에 #7

Yesterday, 4 years ago - it was Tuesday and my last full day I spent in S.K. (remember it was just my first visit in the country...) - my German friend and me we went to a short trip to Incheon. There we wanted to search for the areas where several scenes of the beautiful movie "Take Care of my Cat" were photographed, because several scenes were playing there.

 

 

First we went on a hill to check the area... Wow, the air was complete f.. dirty and you could just see the ugly port and some factories. Later we wanted to walk to the seaside, but unfortunately we'd to pass a industrial area where even the breathing was paining because of the dirty air. The 밷oardwalk?(so-called promenade) was just terrible, desert and not nice, not really...

There I made a call to Seoul, to my new friend, that we could meet in the evening at the subway station near to the house where I was staying at that time. I told her that we will finish the trip in Incheon not so late, because we wanted to prepare a German dinner as a special surprise. She said that she will come at the time and that already is happy to meet me...

Of course after the boardwalk we found the areas what for we were searching for the Chinese quarter and some of the most poor areas in Incheon. It was exactly like it was shown in the movie. Actually it was very depressing, even I knew that still many people are forced to life in such terrible conditions..

 

In the afternoon back in Seoul we prepared the dinner and in the evening I was walking, very anxious, to the subway station to pick up... I met her (uhuu~ she was so happy..) and I brought her to the house. Wow, and she brought flowers for the owner of the house (soon she called her "older sister" the first time that I heard this..).

Anyway the German dinner was good, but I think a little unfamiliar to her (perhaps not spicy enough...) and in the beginning ?funny to see ?she had some problems to use fork and knife (haha, like me when I had to use...). Later we were drinking Italian wine (I think it wasn't sweet enough...), we my German friend and me, told about our visit in N. Korea the year before and we showed some of the pictures we made there.

 

After a while our hosts got tired and we, my friend and me, had to move in the room I was staying during the time there. And a really interesting and beautiful time was beginning. She told me many things about her family, I learned a lot about the Korean society and until the late night, early morning she told me traditional stories about Buddha and the small tree, about princess Ba-ri...... Actually this night was the best present for me in all the time I spent in S.K. ?I just felt very, very comfortable... actually the situation was not really explainable. Finally I was learning a lot, but also many things just left me confusing... Finally in the coming morning we뭗 to say good bye, perhaps for a long, long time, because just few hours later the plane would bring me back home, 8,000 KM far away from her...

I know, how I told this story it is to illbred, not sensible enough (ha, usually I just write about class struggle, bloody street battles and stuff like that..)...

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 
 
 
 
 
 
 

진보블로그 공감 버튼트위터로 리트윗하기페이스북에 공유하기딜리셔스에 북마크

反APEC 투쟁...마무리...

So, now the APEC summit, definitely, is over and the protests too!

 

 

A final summary by (f...) Yonhap News you can read here:

http://english.yna.co.kr/Engnews/20051119/410100000020051119173903E6.html

 

 

And one of the few articles in the international media about the protests here:

http://www.mg.co.za/articlePage.aspx?articleid=256952&area=/breaking_news/breaking_news__international_news/

(South Africa)

 

About the "security" in Busan Asia Times (www.atimes.com ) wrote this:

"...the APEC scene is reminiscent of the days of Park Chung-hee, the country's dictator-like president from 1961..., who suspended the constitution."

 

 

 

A picture in the yesterday's online edition of (the German TV station) ARD

 

 

 

 

 

Sooner or later I will write my own opinion about what was going on in the past days! Perhaps a kind of comprehensive comment..


진보블로그 공감 버튼트위터로 리트윗하기페이스북에 공유하기딜리셔스에 북마크

4 년전에 #6

Yesterday, 4 years ago ? it was Monday ? in the early evening I was meeting with my new Korean friend (...remember the night before...) again. Ha, and she was not alone, she just brought a friend (...) with her. Intersting idea, but pehaps not so clever (...).

She wanted to show me her university and during the tour there she told me beautiful stories about it and her experiences, her being there. Following the sightseeing tour through the univ. she invited me to her most famos tea house in the near neighborhood. Wow, she brought just for me, she said, a very special tea ? chrysanthemum tea (hwanghwa-cha ) and the staff in the tea house prepared it for us. Actually a real nice experience it was for me!

Later we took a bus to downtown and just after some stations the friend (...) had obvious enough from us ? the entire time he was just hanging around beside or behind us, without nothing to say, or even to understand ? and just left us alone.

Later my she showed me the King?s Palace (Gyeongbok-gung, she called it the imperial palace...hihi..) and some places she like in downtown Seoul. Wow... and during this short tour she also promised me that when I would come the next time to visit her in S. Korea, she would "speak much better English like now". This night we spent not so long time together because she had to be "at the right time" in her dormitory. And before we left each other, I brought her to a taxi, we made an appointment for the next evening (actually I wanted to invite her for a trip to Incheon, to visit the places in which many scenes of the movie "Take Care of my Cat" were playing, but unfortunately she had to go to the univ.). But on the other side I could promising her, that on the coming evening (actually my last evening/night in S. Korea, before the day later I?d to fly back...) there would be a surprise waiting for her...

진보블로그 공감 버튼트위터로 리트윗하기페이스북에 공유하기딜리셔스에 북마크

11.18 부산

Actually  - till now - I can't get in contact with my comrade there (I really hope that she is still in "freedom"!).

At 2 pm Voice of the People (VoP)reported 3,000 people on the demonstration. Later at 4 pm they reported 10,000 (Pressian was writing about 20,000) in Busan/Haeundae. At around 5 pm in front of the bridge near BEXCO (one of the summit centers) clashes between thousands of protestors and the riot cops errupted. The cops blocked all the ways with huge container boxes (usually for mass trade transportation).

When I was reading well the clashes continued until the late afternoon/early evening. S. Korean bourgeois media reported 20 injuries.

Right now the protestors are back in Busan University for to prepare the next demonstrations for today.

...and still I can't get in contact with my friend there... (uhuu~ I'm worrying...).



 

Check it out: the cops are using bamboo rods (source of the pics: VoP)

Please read this article (in Korean):

http://www.voiceofpeople.org/new/2005111832865.html

 

Source of the pics: Pressian

 

Please check out also for the latest news this:

http://www.newscham.net/news/view.php?board=news&id=34513

(Chamsesang News)

 

 

The S.K. bourgeois media reported:

http://times.hankooki.com/lpage/nation/200511/kt2005111822154011990.htm

(Korea Times)

http://english.yna.co.kr/Engnews/20051118/610000000020051118191910E7.html

(Yonhap News)

 

 

ALSO ON TODAY'S PROTESTS: JUST BE CAREFUL, PLEASE!!!

AND FIGHT THEM BACK...



진보블로그 공감 버튼트위터로 리트윗하기페이스북에 공유하기딜리셔스에 북마크

Right now in Busan

Actually I can't get in contact with my comrade there (I really hope that she is still in "freedom"!). But it seems that there are already fights on the way to BEXCO (one of the summit centers in Busan/Haeundae).

The ways to BEXCO are blocked by buses of the cops and mass transportation containers. It seems that the demonstrators want to open this blocked ways and the cops are using water cannons. (source of the pics: Voice of the People)



 

 

 

Right now I have only a computer where I can't read Hangeul, but I will try my best to get/bring more informations as soon as possible.

진보블로그 공감 버튼트위터로 리트윗하기페이스북에 공유하기딜리셔스에 북마크

4 년전에 #5

Yesterday, four years ago, I had the first night together with my new Korean friend ? I think at least at that day we became friends ? in Seoul.

Actually we met the last time two days ago in Busan during the last day of PIFF 2001. Then on the next day in the morning she?d to go back by bus to Seoul. We, a Korean and a German friend, were I was staying in Seoul, already had tickets for the train in the coming night.

So we arrived there in the early Sunday morning hours and just went to rest.

In the afternoon me and my new Korean friend called each other made an appointnment to meet together with the friends I was staying (actually I was a little to nervous to meet her alone... harhar...).

We went together to our, my Germans friend and mine, most famous restaurant (actually you can?t call it like that, because it is just a overcrowded wood hut) in Pimatgol/Insa-dong. After two hours my companions got tired and went home... and I was alone with my new Korean friend... uhuu~ how "terrible"... (haha..). So we went the entire night from one tea house to the other and had very interesting and beautiful conversations until the early morning hours, when we had to say good bye, but not without to promis to meet each other in the following evening again.

Finally this was my first really beautiful day/night in Seoul, since I arrived there about two weeks ago.

진보블로그 공감 버튼트위터로 리트윗하기페이스북에 공유하기딜리셔스에 북마크

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