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CJK
In the 19th Century, Japanese people called the northern island of Hokkaido "Ezochi".

It meant "Land of the Ainu", a reference to the fair-skinned, long-haired people who had lived there for hundreds of years.

The Ainu were hunters and fishermen with animist beliefs.

But their communities and traditions were eroded by waves of Japanese settlement and subsequent assimilation policies.

Today only small numbers of Ainu remain, and they constitute one of Japan's most marginalised groups.

On Friday they will have something to celebrate.

Japan's parliament is to adopt a resolution that, for the first time, formally recognises the Ainu as "an indigenous people with a distinct language, religion and culture".

In a nation that has always preferred to perceive itself as ethnically homogenous, it is a highly significant move.

"This resolution has great meaning," says Tadashi Kato, director of the Ainu Association of Hokkaido. "It has taken the Japanese government 140 years to recognise us as an indigenous people."

Language banned

There is no definitive theory as to where the Ainu came from.

What is clear is that they have lived in Hokkaido and parts of the Russian Far East - the disputed Kurile Islands and southern Sakhalin Island - for hundreds of years.
Map

Traditionally they lived off the land, worshipping natural landmarks and animals, especially bears.

Japanese settlers started moving into Hokkaido in the 15th Century and gradually pushed the Ainu north.

They brought infectious diseases and so Ainu populations fell. Then, when the Meiji government came to power in 1868, the pace of Japanese settlement increased.

Ainu land was redistributed to Japanese farmers. Ainu language was banned and children put into Japanese schools. Japanese names became compulsory.

Finally, in 1899, the Japanese government passed an act which labelled the Ainu "former Aborigines". The idea was that, henceforth, they would assimilate.

This act stood for almost 100 years. Successive governments held that there was no "Ainu issue" and insisted that Japan did not have any ethnic minority groups.

Ainu lived off the land, and suffered when Japanese farmers moved in

Ainu culture was not seen as something to be celebrated or preserved, so many grew up ignorant or ashamed of their cultural heritage.

Discrimination was and still is a problem - in schools, in the workplace and for marriage - with some Ainu choosing not to reveal their background.

Today, there is still a gap in terms of standards of living and levels of education between the Ainu and their compatriots.

Events in 1997, however, signalled the start of a shift.

After a legal challenge, the Sapporo district court ruled the government had illegally taken Ainu land to build a dam and failed to consider "the unique culture of the indigenous Ainu minority".

It was the first official acknowledgment of any kind of separate Ainu identity.

Four months later, the government replaced the act of 1899 with a law that allocated government funds to promote Ainu culture.

Efforts to revive language, traditional dances and music gathered steam, contributing to a more positive appreciation of Ainu culture.

But the government still did not recognise the Ainu as an indigenous people or offer substantive proposals to support them on a day to day basis.

'Symbolic value'

Now it is taking another step.

The parliamentary resolution will give the Ainu formal recognition. It will also call on the government to establish an expert panel to advise on Ainu policy.
Ainu plaintiffs arrive at the Sapporo district court in March 2002
Ainu activism has gathered strength in recent decades

Teruki Tsunemoto, director of Hokkaido University's Centre for Ainu and Indigenous Studies, says the move will put the issue on the national agenda.

"It will help the government formulate comprehensive general policies towards Ainu people that will improve their economic and social position," he said.

It will also have a more long-term effect of bolstering Ainu ethnic pride, he believes.

"People felt they were discriminated against because they were Ainu, so being Ainu used to be a minus. Now maybe this resolution will help people to feel pride," he said.

Immediate concrete benefits of the resolution are less clear.

Dr Richard Siddle, author of Race, Resistance and the Ainu of Japan, says the resolution's significance is primarily symbolic.

"This admission puts no obligations on the government," he says. "Very little will change for the Ainu because of this. It's a step forward, but not an epoch-making step as some people are portraying."

As to the timing of the resolution, there are several factors.

International focus on the issue of indigenous rights has increased in recent years, putting more pressure on the government.

There is also the issue of the Kurile Islands - both Russia and Japan claim them but the Ainu were their original inhabitants.

It could be that the Japanese government has come to perceive the Ainu as a potential asset in the negotiations on this issue, Dr Siddle says.

A third factor is the upcoming G8 summit in Hokkaido in July.

"The Ainu want to be involved in the summit and want to do a ceremony to open it," he says. "Involvement in the summit has given them some leverage."

Whatever the reason, Japan is finally going to acknowledge that it is host to an indigenous people.

After more than a century of being told they do not exist, it is a big day for the Ainu.
Chillin
Wow, finally recognize them after 2 of them are left. icon_rolleyes.gif

Thats like Abolitionism occurring only after there were 10 African-Americans remaining.
DatFlipGuy
are the ainu like Japan's cuacasian ancestors??

I always wondered why Japan seemed the most caucasian out of Asia
wonda51
QUOTE(DatFlipGuy @ Jun 6 2008, 11:55 AM) [snapback]3739529[/snapback]
are the ainu like Japan's cuacasian ancestors??

I always wondered why Japan seemed the most caucasian out of Asia


Ainu is the Jomon ppl. it means the Japanese has Ainu bloods.
however, hokkaido ainu was isolated without mixing until that bacause it is cold there
wonda51
delete..................
higginm
Didn't the chinese do something similar to the native people of Taiwan?

Right enough, they perhaps want to assimilate Tibet also...
wonda51
QUOTE(higginm @ Jun 6 2008, 10:48 PM) [snapback]3740638[/snapback]
Didn't the chinese do something similar to the native people of Taiwan?

Right enough, they perhaps want to assimilate Tibet also...


according to Japanese Y chromosome, It was opposite in Japan

QUOTE
distinct language, religion and culture


i think it was same in ancient time
bigboy
iono, i always thought ainu blooded japanese looked more latino than caucasian
kunomchu
QUOTE(higginm @ Jun 6 2008, 11:48 PM) [snapback]3740638[/snapback]
Didn't the chinese do something similar to the native people of Taiwan?

Right enough, they perhaps want to assimilate Tibet also...



Chinese as the taiwanese government? The DPP recognized the minorities alright but fu-ked them over. As for tibet.. it is part of the prc and the tibetan people are officially recognized as one of the over 50 minorities in china. No one is denying that.
Darkblade
QUOTE(higginm @ Jun 6 2008, 11:48 PM) [snapback]3740638[/snapback]
Didn't the chinese do something similar to the native people of Taiwan?

Right enough, they perhaps want to assimilate Tibet also...


True, and Korea and Japan will be next ~ Then we'll mix with the Indian and assimilate every race on earth including europeans and blacks.
xeemlauj
funny, all austronesian groups in TAIWAN are known as Gaoshan. LOL

yay, Ainu people barely exist today.

They remind me of the Manchurian who have been 100% assimilated.
Henry123
To CJK could you kindly provide a source for the article.

Interesting article btw!
CheolSu
I can't help thinking it's like saying 'We finally recognise that the Maple is a tree'. The Ainu are the indigenous people of Japan? Um, yeah, what else would they be?
Kiss_the_Girls
from wikidpedia.

Ainu men generally have dense hair development. Many early investigators proposed a Caucasian ancestry, although recent DNA tests have found no traces of Caucasian ancestry. Genetic testing of the Ainu people has shown them to belong mainly to Y-haplogroup D.[5] The only places outside of Japan in which Y-haplogroup D is common are Tibet and the Andaman Islands in the Indian Ocean.Some have speculated that the Ainu may be descendants of a prehistoric race that also produced indigenous Australian peoples.

hmm explains why some look Aboriginal.







xeemlauj
Would it be that the Ainu are related to the Aboriginals of Taiwan?????

The rDNA do not prove $hit... why do we always have to look at DNA to prove $hit...
seriouly, DNA have prove that we all came from AFRiCA.

anyways, how are the AINU related to TIBETAN and etc?? they are two completely different cultures....

We as Human also have the same material as trees and etc.... lol. anyways, love the AINU CLOTHES.. very beautiful.
huntermoguh
A lot of Japanese people have haplogroup D, in common with Ainu. However many Japanese also have Y-Haplogroup O2b, which is also found in Koreans, Manchurians and Daur (modern Khitans).
punjabtrini
QUOTE
Many early investigators proposed a Caucasian ancestry, although recent DNA tests have found no traces of Caucasian ancestry.


Many times, social constructs get in the way of scientific inquiry. The Ainu, as an aboriginal group isolated in Hokaido implies that, where ever they came from originally, they adapted to that location best suited to their survival. The modern Japanese show more 'drift', though less, due to their island's location. That means whoever arrived as early inhabitants, stayed there, hence the homogenous nature of the society.

By definition, Caucasian ancestry is limited to people from the Caucasian republics like Georgians, Turkic groups, Armenians and other former Muslim areas now or formerly associated with the Soviet Union. If we claim that Ainu were associated with Europe, then this is also a fraud though it has some following with those who want to revisionist history.

Should/Would the Greek people of Lesbos want to be associated with the modern day Lesbian sisterhood, from which some say is associated with the island of Lesbos! Should the Corsicans of today embrace their French status or go back to their Italian roots? Choices!
yhellothar
The Ainu descended from Sakhalin and parts of Siberia, iirc. With the Oroks and Nivkhi being related to them.
maersk
ainu attushes cost an arm and a leg. havent seen a good one for under 3 grand.
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