Old Japanese Maps On Google Earth Unveil Secrets

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JAY ALABASTER | May 2, 2009 11:39 AM EST | AP

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In this computer screen image taken from the Google Earth software, a feudal map of a village in central Japan from hundreds of years ago, superimposed on a modern street map, is shown. The village is clearly labeled "eta," an old word for Japan's outclass of untouchables known as "burakumin." The word literally means "filthy mass" and is now considered to be a racial slur. The burakumin still face prejudice based on where they live or their ancestors lived, and fear that Google's software can be used to easily pinpoint the old villages and match them up with modern neighborhoods. (AP Photo/Google Earth)

TOKYO — When Google Earth added historical maps of Japan to its online collection last year, the search giant didn't expect a backlash. The finely detailed woodblock prints have been around for centuries, they were already posted on another Web site, and a historical map of Tokyo put up in 2006 hadn't caused any problems.

But Google failed to judge how its offering would be received, as it has often done in Japan. The company is now facing inquiries from the Justice Ministry and angry accusations of prejudice because its maps detailed the locations of former low-caste communities.

The maps date back to the country's feudal era, when shoguns ruled and a strict caste system was in place. At the bottom of the hierarchy were a class called the "burakumin," ethnically identical to other Japanese but forced to live in isolation because they did jobs associated with death, such as working with leather, butchering animals and digging graves.

Castes have long since been abolished, and the old buraku villages have largely faded away or been swallowed by Japan's sprawling metropolises. Today, rights groups say the descendants of burakumin make up about 3 million of the country's 127 million people.

But they still face prejudice, based almost entirely on where they live or their ancestors lived. Moving is little help, because employers or parents of potential spouses can hire agencies to check for buraku ancestry through Japan's elaborate family records, which can span back over a hundred years.

An employee at a large, well-known Japanese company, who works in personnel and has direct knowledge of its hiring practices, said the company actively screens out burakumin job seekers.

"If we suspect that an applicant is a burakumin, we always do a background check to find out," she said. She agreed to discuss the practice only on condition that neither she nor her company be identified.

Lists of "dirty" addresses circulate on Internet bulletin boards. Some surveys have shown that such neighborhoods have lower property values than surrounding areas, and residents have been the target of racial taunts and graffiti. But the modern locations of the old villages are largely unknown to the general public, and many burakumin prefer it that way.

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Google Earth's maps pinpointed several such areas. One village in Tokyo was clearly labeled "eta," a now strongly derogatory word for burakumin that literally means "filthy mass." A single click showed the streets and buildings that are currently in the same area.

Google posted the maps as one of many "layers" available via its mapping software, each of which can be easily matched up with modern satellite imagery. The company provided no explanation or historical context, as is common practice in Japan. Its basic stance is that its actions are acceptable because they are legal, one that has angered burakumin leaders.

"If there is an incident because of these maps, and Google is just going to say 'it's not our fault' or 'it's down to the user,' then we have no choice but to conclude that Google's system itself is a form of prejudice," said Toru Matsuoka, a member of Japan's upper house of parliament.

Asked about its stance on the issue, Google responded with a formal statement that "we deeply care about human rights and have no intention to violate them."

Google spokesman Yoshito Funabashi points out that the company doesn't own the maps in question, it simply provides them to users. Critics argue they come packaged in its software, and the distinction is not immediately clear.

Printing such maps is legal in Japan. But it is an area where publishers and museums tread carefully, as the burakumin leadership is highly organized and has offices throughout the country. Public showings or publications are nearly always accompanied by a historical explanation, a step Google failed to take.

Matsuoka, whose Osaka office borders one of the areas shown, also serves as secretary general of the Buraku Liberation League, Japan's largest such group. After discovering the maps last month, he raised the issue to Justice Minister Eisuke Mori at a public legal affairs meeting on March 17.

Two weeks later, after the public comments and at least one reporter contacted Google, the old Japanese maps were suddenly changed, wiped clean of any references to the buraku villages. There was no note made of the changes, and they were seen by some as an attempt to quietly dodge the issue.

"This is like saying those people didn't exist. There are people for whom this is their hometown, who are still living there now," said Takashi Uchino from the Buraku Liberation League headquarters in Tokyo.

The Justice Ministry is now "gathering information" on the matter, but has yet to reach any kind of conclusion, according to ministry official Hideyuki Yamaguchi.

The League also sent a letter to Google, a copy of which was provided to The Associated Press. It wants a meeting to discuss its knowledge of the buraku issue and position on the use of its services for discrimination. It says Google should "be aware of and responsible for providing a service that can easily be used as a tool for discrimination."

Google has misjudged public sentiment before. After cool responses to privacy issues raised about its Street View feature, which shows ground-level pictures of Tokyo neighborhoods taken without warning or permission, the company has faced strong public criticism and government hearings. It has also had to negotiate with Japanese companies angry over their copyrighted materials uploaded to its YouTube property.

An Internet legal expert said Google is quick to take advantage of its new technologies to expand its advertising network, but society often pays the price.

"This is a classic example of Google outsourcing the risk and appropriating the benefit of their investment," said David Vaile, executive director of the Cyberspace Law and Policy Center at the University of New South Wales in Australia.

The maps in question are part of a larger collection of Japanese maps owned by the University of California at Berkeley. Their digital versions are overseen by David Rumsey, a collector in the U.S. who has more than 100,000 historical maps of his own. He hosts more than 1,000 historical Japanese maps as part of a massive, English-language online archive he runs, and says he has never had a complaint.

It was Rumsey who worked with Google to post the maps in its software, and who was responsible for removing the references to the buraku villages. He said he preferred to leave them untouched as historical documents, but decided to change them after the search company told him of the complaints from Tokyo.

"We tend to think of maps as factual, like a satellite picture, but maps are never neutral, they always have a certain point of view," he said.

Rumsey said he'd be willing to restore the maps to their original state in Google Earth. Matsuoka, the lawmaker, said he is open to a discussion of the issue.

A neighborhood in central Tokyo, a few blocks from the touristy Asakusa area and the city's oldest temple, was labeled as an old "eta" village in the maps. It is indistinguishable from countless other Tokyo communities, except for a large number of leather businesses offering handmade bags, shoes and furniture.

When shown printouts of the maps from Google Earth, several older residents declined to comment. Younger people were more open on the subject.

Wakana Kondo, 27, recently started working in the neighborhood, at a new business that sells leather for sofas. She was surprised when she learned the history of the area, but said it didn't bother her.

"I learned about the burakumin in school, but it was always something abstract," she said. "That's a really interesting bit of history, thank you."

TOKYO — When Google Earth added historical maps of Japan to its online collection last year, the search giant didn't expect a backlash. The finely detailed woodblock prints have been around for ...
TOKYO — When Google Earth added historical maps of Japan to its online collection last year, the search giant didn't expect a backlash. The finely detailed woodblock prints have been around for ...
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I guess I am ignorant of Japanese culture. What is shameful about providing services that are essential to a society? Yes, they may be messy, but they are part of life. Why did they get such a bad rap? And why is it still an issue this day an age?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:53 PM on 05/04/2009

"Wakana Kondo, 27, recently started working in the neighborhood, at a new business that sells leather for sofas. She was surprised when she learned the history of the area, but said it didn't bother her."

Somehow I'm not surprised that someone already working in a burakumin trade would be unconcerned about her business being located in a burakumin area?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:39 PM on 05/04/2009
- ibsteve2u I'm a Fan of ibsteve2u 138 fans permalink
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"because employers or parents of potential spouses can hire agencies to check for buraku ancestry through Japan's elaborate family records"

Now that is just sad. Poof! - just like that, my fantasy that Japan was largely becoming a meritocracy disappears.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:06 PM on 05/04/2009
- Hobay I'm a Fan of Hobay 4 fans permalink

Judging others' prejudice helps me excuse my own blind spots. I feel much better!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:13 PM on 05/04/2009
- Chip W I'm a Fan of Chip W 18 fans permalink

Good post.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:35 AM on 05/05/2009
- Wombaticus I'm a Fan of Wombaticus 35 fans permalink
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1. Faulty Logic
The notion that Google is bigoted because they put some facts up on their website is ludicrous. The discriminatory reaction of certain Japanese people is the bigoted element. Would Google be bigoted if they linked to sites about American Slavery? Uh oh...

2. Before you start throwing stones...
Is there any culture ever on the face of the earth that was/is not bigoted against somebody? So far I don't know of any, but I am not an expert on anthropology.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:21 PM on 05/04/2009

I don't think Google is bigoted, just culturally unaware.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:22 AM on 05/05/2009
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Super fascinating. I'm totally looking into this stuff. And making sure none of my friends are from those lower classes.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:52 PM on 05/04/2009
- ElTommo I'm a Fan of ElTommo 12 fans permalink
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i lol'd

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:57 AM on 05/05/2009
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I'ts amazing that this horrible practice (which was established by Commodore Matthew Perry back in 1852) still continues!
White racism has ruined this world!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:11 PM on 05/04/2009

How is Japanese hating other Japanese just because they dug graves part of "white racism"? What are you even talking about?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:26 PM on 05/04/2009
- flossophy I'm a Fan of flossophy 334 fans permalink
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For CJ337, it's always America's fault...

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:40 PM on 05/04/2009

CJ337,

The practice started in the 1600's. Commodore Perry didn't arrive until the 1800's. He had nothing to do with anything. Get a clue...

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:19 PM on 05/04/2009
- ibsteve2u I'm a Fan of ibsteve2u 138 fans permalink
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One of us can't read.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:09 PM on 05/04/2009
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While I'm all for calling out white supremacy, this is actually a product of the importation of Buddhism to Japan. Butchers, tanners, and grave diggers are unclean in some interpretations of Buddhist theology, sort of like the Untouchable caste in Hinduism. They provide services considered taboo, and pass that down to their children. The way of marking people involved restricting burakumin to ghettos. All Japanese have records of "ancestral homes" that cannot be changed, basically creating a paper trail that follow burakumin their whole lives.

The question they should obviously be asking is not "should these maps be publicly available," but "why are we not aggressively taking action against people who discriminate in our country." Japan has almost nonexistent laws against racial, ethnic, and gender discrimination. The burden is for burakumin, Korean-Japanese, or Ainu (in the North) to hide their difference, not for the society at large to change their ways. You regularly hear bigoted comments from national public officials, without so much as an apology or a modicum of public outrage. Why apologize? It's basically a one-party system; there's no danger of being voted out.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:36 AM on 05/05/2009

Your information is inaccurate. This goes back way before westerners reached Japan.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:27 PM on 05/05/2009

Dirty laundry stops smelling if it is aired out.

Get real Japan.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:00 PM on 05/04/2009
- wadenelson1 I'm a Fan of wadenelson1 230 fans permalink
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Japan's got any number of "dirty little secrets" they'd rather not expose to sunlight. They'd prefer the whole world to think of them as happy little Toyota employees.

One is the illegality of birth control pills, ensuring huge continuing profits for abortion clinics there.

Japanese organized crime is another --- and they probably run #1.

Another is their mistreatment of China during WWII -- along with Allied prisoners.

Discrimination against the "burakumin" and those of Korean descent is another.

Instead of dealing with their past, healing their predjudices, they try and hide it, bury it. And then something as silly as a map exposes it.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:55 PM on 05/04/2009
- regg62 I'm a Fan of regg62 4 fans permalink

Birth control pills are not illegal in Japan.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:50 AM on 05/05/2009

Methinks the "backlash" has more to do with Matsuoka-san justifying his group's purpose and reason for existence than anything else. Anyone who cares about the current/former burakuin areas already knows where they are. The story didn't mention it, but there's a bigger backlash against Google's Streetview and and other services that is drawing attention in Japan, and this I think may tie into that.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:31 PM on 05/04/2009

Secrets my a$$. Every japanese knows this sordid history. They are just sore that their dirty laundry has now been put online by a foreign company.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:07 PM on 05/04/2009
- victorsays I'm a Fan of victorsays 7 fans permalink

It is banned right. America is worst with it segregated neighbor and discrimination. Have your WASP been to a poor neighbor lately? The US still discriminate against people from poor neighborr in term of schools, education, health care, and over all standard of living.

Stop being a damn hypocrites.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:55 PM on 05/04/2009

Yea, but we don;t discriminate against leatherworkers. Score one for the good guys.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:27 PM on 05/04/2009
- Tundrapat I'm a Fan of Tundrapat 11 fans permalink

Oh, I do. I can live easily with a 'poor nieghborr' just fine, but I won't have any d@mned leatherworkers near my kin!

And don't get me started on dog groomers!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:20 PM on 05/04/2009
- JohnSawyer I'm a Fan of JohnSawyer 41 fans permalink
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American employers don't keep databases of where a person's ancestors lived hundreds of years ago, and refuse to give them a job based on that, or their ancestor's ways of making a living. This Japanese buraku issue is part of Japan's old religious/­superstiti­ous/caste-­oriented heritage. At worst, a few American employers might discriminate against hiring someone, based on where they currently live--not where their parents, etc. lived--and their race. Though various forms of discrimination exist in America, they're nothing as bizarre as buraku.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:45 PM on 05/04/2009
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Listen, the United States has problems, but as far as racial, ethnic, and gender discrimination we have a pretty good report card compared to most other countries. We just talk openly about our problems, instead of ignoring and hiding them.

Japan not only discriminates against internal minorities (burakumin, Ainu) and external minorities (Chinese, Koreans, Filipinos), but they even discriminate against immigrants OF JAPANESE DESCENT. Japanese-B­razilians, -Peruvians, etc. face terrible discrimination and our now being asked to leave because of the economic downturn. An official publicly stated that Japan "should never be a multi-ethnic society."

I'm a Latino in the U.S. and while I'm critical of my country and want it to be the best it can be, it's pretty easy to recognize that we're LIGHT YEARS ahead of that. Call us when immigrants have a path to citizenship in Japan, then we can start to have a debate.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:43 AM on 05/05/2009

In typically Japanese fashion, the practice of shunning burakumin is as much a bureaucratically created issue as anything.

On your birth certificate and family register, it lists your name, address, parents names and, here's the kicker, your parents birthplace­...So even if you move away and put miles between yourself and one of these towns, an enterprising background checker can track you back a couple of generations to this "heritage.­" When you add in all the prejudice of the past, it was common for marraige brokers, landlords, and companies to use this to screen applicants legally up til the 1970's, you can see how it would be difficult for someone with this on their "family register" to move out, get a good job, marry into a different class, etc. And, in a country where arranged marraiges were the majority into late last century...­well you can see the trouble.

The strange thing is that it isn't really racial predjudice as these people are 100% Japanese and the country hardly follows the buddist principles - see Kobe beef and the love of Coach, Gucci, and Prada bags, it has devolved to some strange geographic prejudice. Like when you meet someone from New Jersey (zing)

It is one of those banality of evil things, good clerical work and a love for family history make the bureaucrats happy and it doesn't impact 97% of the country, so it just can't overcome the intertia to change.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:38 PM on 05/04/2009
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Like they say; "You can take the boy out of the country, but you can't take the country out of the boy!" Every nation has had or has it's caste or class system.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:59 AM on 05/04/2009

This is too funny. Can you imagine the horrible things that would be said, if the Japanese were to consider a burakumin for prime minister? Why it would be just like what was said to Americans, as they considered a black President.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:48 PM on 05/04/2009

Oh, you don't have to imagine. In 2001 the current PM of Japan Taro Aso in a backroom meeting now known as the Nonaka incident said: "We are not going to let someone from the buraku become the prime minister of Japan, are we?"

Nonaka Hiromu stepped down his candidacy after this.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:29 AM on 05/07/2009
- kgb999 I'm a Fan of kgb999 21 fans permalink

Yeah, but most of them don't demand the rest of us dumb-down/purge historical facts as a result.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:59 PM on 05/04/2009
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Methinks Japan is the one with prejudice. I actually know a Japanese person of Burakumin descent. He's a young man who says he's still being discriminated against. Publicizing old maps doesn't matter. The Japanese still know where Burakumin villages are.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:10 AM on 05/04/2009
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