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Hāfu

Hāfu (ハーフ, "half") is a Japanese language term used to refer to a person of half Japanese and half non-Japanese ancestry. A loanword from English, the term literally means "half," a reference to the individual's non-Japanese heritage.[1][2][3][4] The word can also be used to describe anyone with mixed-racial ancestry in general. As Japan is considered one of the most homogeneous societies on the planet, children who have one non-Japanese parent are called hāfu Japanese and often face prejudice and discrimination from Japanese citizens of full Japanese descent.[5] Hāfu individuals are well represented in Japanese media and abroad, and recent studies in the 2010s estimate that 1 in 30 children born in Japan are born to interracial couples.[6]

In Japanese edit

  • Ainoko (間の子, lit. child in-between or child of love) – An ainoko is a Japanese person with a non-Japanese or gaikokujin (外国人, lit. foreigner), parent. It was historically often associated with discriminating sentiment. The term is almost never used today in Japan.
  • Daburu (ダブル, lit. double) – A daburu is an alternative to Hāfu that focuses on the positive connotations of two cultures instead of one.[7][8]
  • Konketsuji (混血児, lit. mixed-blood child) – A konketsuji is a Japanese person with one non-Japanese parent. It is considered a derogatory term.[9]
  • Kwōtā (クォーター, lit. quarter) – A kwōtā is a Japanese person with one Japanese grandparent. The term is a loanword, based on the English word "quarter" and refers to an individual's 25%, or one quarter, Japanese ancestry.[citation needed]

In other languages edit

  • Japinoy – A person of mixed Japanese and Filipino ancestry.[10]
  • Afro-Asian (also Blasian) – An Afro-Asian is an individual of African and Asian ancestry. Blasian, a portmanteau of Black and Asian, is a slang term and is regularly used among English speakers in North America.
  • Ainoco (f. Ainoca) – An ainoco is an individual with one Japanese parent. The term is a loanword, based on the Japanese word ainoko (間の子, lit. child in-between or child of love) and is used by Portuguese speakers in Brazil and Pohnpeian speakers in Micronesia, both countries with a sizable Japanese populations.
  • Amerasian – An Amerasian is an individual of American and Asian, especially East Asian ancestry. Historically, the term referred to children born to local women and American servicemen stationed in East Asia during the Korean and Vietnam Wars. It should not be confused with Asian American, which describes an American citizen of full or partial Asian ancestry.
  • Eurasian – A Eurasian is an individual of European and Asian ancestry.
  • Hapa – A hapa is an individual of mixed Native Hawaiian, Pacific Islander, East Asian and/or Southeast Asian heritage. The term is a loanword, based on the English word half, as hāfu is; unlike hāfu, the term does not imply an individual is 50%, or half, of a certain race or ethnicity, only that they are mixed race. It is a Hawaiian term, used by English and Hawaiian speakers in Hawaii and California.
  • Mestiço de japonês – A mestiço de japonês (lit. Japanese mestiço) or miscigenado de japonês is an individual, usually an eurasiano, with one Japanese parent, i.e. a nipônico citizen, or a nipo-brasileiro. They are Portuguese terms, used in Brazil, but enjoy less popularity than ainoco and hāfu.

History edit

Prehistoric to feudal Japan edit

Hāfu refers to a person who has one ethnic Japanese parent and one non-ethnic Japanese parent. The term ethnic Japanese refers to the Indigenous Japanese people of the Japanese archipelago. Over the course of centuries, the minority ethnic groups such as the Ainu and Ryukyuans were mostly assimilated into the Yamato population. Mixed race couples and thus hāfu people were rare in feudal Japan. There were mixed Asian couples between ethnic Japanese and other East and Southeast Asian peoples.

The most well-regarded theory is that present-day Yamato Japanese are descendants of both the Indigenous Jōmon people and the immigrant Yayoi people.[11] The Yayoi were an admixture (1,000 BCE–300 CE) of migrants from East Asia, mostly China and the Korean peninsula.

Modern mainland Yamato Japanese have less than 20% Jomon people's genomes.[12] In modern Japan, the term Yamato minzoku is seen as antiquated for connoting racial notions that have been discarded in many circles since Japan's surrender in World War II.[13] The term "Japanese people" or even "Japanese-Japanese" are often used instead.[14]

Genetic and anthropological studies indicate that the Ryukyuans are significantly related to the Ainu people and share the ancestry with the indigenous prehistoric Jōmon period (pre 10,000–1,000 BCE) people, who arrived from Southeast Asia and with the Yamato people.[15][16][17][18][19][20][21] During the Meiji period, the Ryukyuans' distinct culture was suppressed by the Meiji government and faced forced assimilation.[22]

Early modern period edit

Edo period (1603–1867) edit

 
Koxinga was a Chinese monarch who was hāfu Japanese

English sailor William Adams, a navigator for the Dutch East India Company, settled in Japan in April 1600. He was ultimately granted the rank of samurai, one of the few non-Japanese to do so. He wed Oyuki (お雪), a Japanese woman and together, they had two children, Joseph and Susanna, who were hāfu.[23]

Chinese military leader Chenggong Zheng, historically known as Koxinga (1624–1662), was hāfu, born in Japan to a Japanese mother and Chinese father and raised there until the age of seven, known by the Japanese given name, Fukumatsu.[24]

Modern period edit

Meiji, Taishō and pre-war Shōwa period (1868–1945) edit

Since 1899, the Ainu were increasingly marginalized. During a period of only 36 years, the Ainu went from being a relatively isolated group of people to having their land, language, religion and customs assimilated into those of the Japanese.[25] Intermarriage between Japanese and Ainu was actively promoted by the Ainu to lessen the chances of discrimination against their offspring. As a result, many Ainu are indistinguishable from their Japanese neighbors, but some Ainu Japanese are interested in traditional Ainu culture.[26]

The first visible usage of the term Hāfu dates to 1930, in the novel Machi No Kokusai Mune (街の國際娘, lit. International Girl in the City) by Japanese author Touma Kitabayashi(北林 透馬). In the chapter Minato no Sakaba no Ainoko Odoriko(港の酒場の混血児踊り子, lit. The Dancing In-Between Child at the Harbour Bar) the furigana Hāfu is used as a synonym for the term "konketsuji" predating the appearance of Hāfu in dictionaries, which would not occur until after 1973.[27]

Contemporary period edit

Shōwa period (post-war) (1945–1989) edit

The presence of the United States Armed Forces in Japan and Asia saw the birth of many children born to American fathers; these children were called Amerasians. It's estimated that by 1952, anywhere from 5,000 to 10,000 Japanese children were fathered by American servicemen, with many of the children placed for adoption by their Japanese mothers due to the stigma of out-of-wedlock pregnancy and miscegenation and the struggles of supporting a child alone in post-war Japan.[28][29]

One orphanage, Seibo Aijien (聖母愛児園, Seibo Aijien, Our Lady of Lourdes Orphanage), in Yokohama, run by Franciscan nuns, opened in 1946. By 1948, staff members were caring for 126 children fathered by American servicemen, by 1950 and 136 children.[28][29] A letter, dated 1948, detailed an incident of a malnourished infant born to a Japanese teenager whose American father refused to support for fear his wife would learn of his extramarital affair.[30] The Elizabeth Saunders Home opened in Ōiso by a Japanese woman named Miki Sawada, cared for more than 700 Amerasian children, none of whom were visited or supported by their American fathers.[30]

Heisei period (1989–2019) edit

 
Naomi Osaka, tennis player (Haitian / Japanese)
 
Naomi Watanabe, actress, comedian, fashion designer (Taiwanese / Japanese)

Fashionable images of the half Japanese people have become prominent especially with the increased appearance of hāfu in the Japanese media.[31] Hāfu models are now seen on television or fill the pages of fashion magazines such as Non-no, CanCam and Vivi as often as newsreaders or celebrities. The appearance of hāfu in the media has provided the basis for such a vivid representation of them in the culture.[32][33] As of 2018, it is estimated that 30% to 40% of runway models in Japanese fashion shows identify as hafu.[34] Most top models in their 20s of popular Japanese fashion magazines are hafu.[34]

One of the earliest terms referring to half Japanese was ainoko, meaning a child born of a relationship between two races. It is still used in Latin America, most prominently Brazil (where spellings such as ainoco, ainoca (f.) and ainocô may be found), to refer to mestizo (broader term in Hispanic America for mixed race in general) or mestiço people of some Japanese ancestry. In Brazil, amarela (yellow) is generally used for people of East Asian origin.

The former term evolved to be an umbrella term for Eurasian or mixed East Asian/mestizo, East Asian/African, East Asian/Arab and East Asian/indigenous heritage in general. At the same time it is possible for people with little Japanese or other East Asian ancestry to be perceivable just by their phenotype to identify mostly as black, white or mestizo/pardo instead of ainoko, while people with about a quarter or less of non-East Asian ancestry may identify on the Brazilian census as being amarela ("yellow" or East Asian).

Soon this too became a taboo term due to its derogatory connotations such as illegitimacy and discrimination. What were central to these labels were the emphasis on "blood impurity" and the obvious separation of the half Japanese from the majority of Japanese. Some English-speaking parents of children of mixed ethnicity use the word "double."[35] Amerasian is another term for children of mixed ancestry, especially those born to Japanese mothers and U.S. military fathers.

Of the one million children born in Japan in 2013, 2.2% had one or more non-Japanese parent.[70] According to the Japanese Ministry of Health, Labor and Welfare, one in forty-nine babies born in Japan today are born into families with one non-Japanese parent.[36] Most intermarriages in Japan are between Japanese men and women from other Asian countries, including China, the Philippines and South Korea.[37] Southeast Asia also has significant populations of people with half Japanese ancestry, particularly in the Philippines.[38][39]

In the 21st century, stereotyping and discrimination against hāfu occurs based on how different their identity, behavior and appearance is from a typical Japanese person.[34] Some experience negative treatment such as being teased or bullied in junior high school, treated like foreigners or stereotyped as bilingual and models.[34] However, being mixed is increasingly seen as cool.[34] The hafu of international marriages between Japanese and other Asians tend to blend in easier in Japanese society. They can have a bicultural identity. Their foreign side could be suppressed in Japan's homogeneous culture.

Smile (スマイル, Sumairu) is a television drama series, broadcast by TBS from April to June 2009. Jun Matsumoto plays the lead role of Vito, a half-Filipino, half-Japanese man who always smiles despite all of the problems and difficulties he faces. The series focused on foreigners and mixed race children who suffered from racism.[40][41] [42]

The documentary film Hafu: The Mixed-Race Experience in Japan was released in April 2013. It is about the experiences of five hāfu living in Japan. It deals with issues of identity, multiculturalism, relationships, hardship and stereotyping that they face.[43][44]

In September 2018, Naomi Osaka is the first Japanese woman and hāfu to contest a Grand Slam singles final and the first Japanese Grand Slam singles champion. Naomi Osaka is the winner of the 2018 US Open Women's Singles.[45][46]

Reiwa period (2019–) edit

Due to low birthrate, the population of Japan is aging significantly. As of 2019, the fertility rate stood at 1.36 children per woman, far below the 2.1 children per woman required to maintain the same level of population. Japan had 126.5 million people in 2018, with Japanese nationals numbering 124.8 million in January 2019.[47][48] Currently, 1 in 4 Japanese residents are over the age of 65, meaning that if the birthrate does not increase, one-third of the population will be above this age by 2050.[49]

The percentage of hāfu is increasing, but the group is still a minority in Japan. The Government of Japan regards all naturalized Japanese citizens and native-born Japanese nationals with multi-ethnic backgrounds as Japanese, with no official ethnicity census data.[50][51]

Notable hāfu individuals edit

Hāfu in popular culture edit

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Krieger, Daniel (29 November 2010). . CNN. Archived from the original on 3 December 2010. Retrieved 12 April 2011.
  2. ^ Navidi, Nooshin (22 June 2010). "Hafu draws viewers into world of Japanese identity". Japan Times. from the original on 2011-12-01. Retrieved 2011-04-12.
  3. ^ Yamada, Mio (28 February 2009). "Hafu focuses on whole individual". Japan Times. from the original on 2011-12-16. Retrieved 2011-04-12.
  4. ^ Fujioka, Brett (14 January 2011). "The Other Hafu of Japan". Rafu Shimpo. from the original on 2011-01-22. Retrieved 2011-04-12.
  5. ^ "Japan's hafu stars are celebrated. But some mixed-race people say they feel like foreigners in their own country". 23 September 2020.
  6. ^ "Being 'hafu' in Japan: Mixed-race people face ridicule, rejection". America.aljazeera.com. Retrieved 2019-01-24.
  7. ^ Jozuka, Emiko (23 September 2020). ""Japan's hafu stars are celebrated. But some mixed-race people say they feel like foreigners in their own country"". CNN. Retrieved 27 September 2021.
  8. ^ Saberi, Roxana (9 September 2015). ""Being 'hafu' in Japan: Mixed-race people face ridicule, rejection"". AlJazeera. Retrieved 27 September 2021.
  9. ^ Writers, YABAI (28 June 2017). "Hafu's in Japan: Interesting Facts About Japan's Mixed Race Population | YABAI – The Modern, Vibrant Face of Japan". YABAI. Retrieved 2019-01-24.
  10. ^ "What is Japinoy?". 25 April 2007.
  11. ^ Hideaki Kanzawa-Kiriyama; Kirill Kryukov; Timothy A Jinam; Kazuyoshi Hosomichi; Aiko Saso; Gen Suwa; Shintaroh Ueda; Minoru Yoneda; Atsushi Tajima; Ken-ichi Shinoda; Ituro Inoue; Naruya Saitou1 (February 2017). "A partial nuclear genome of the Jomons who lived 3000 years ago in Fukushima, Japan". Journal of Human Genetics. 62 (2): 213–221. doi:10.1038/jhg.2016.110. PMC 5285490. PMID 27581845.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  12. ^ Kanzawa-Kiriyama, H.; Kryukov, K.; Jinam, T. A.; Hosomichi, K.; Saso, A.; Suwa, G.; Ueda, S.; Yoneda, M.; Tajima, A.; Shinoda, K. I.; Inoue, I.; Saitou, N. (2016-06-01). "A partial nuclear genome of the Jomons who lived 3000 years ago in Fukushima, Japan". Journal of Human Genetics. 62 (2): 213–221. doi:10.1038/jhg.2016.110. PMC 5285490. PMID 27581845.
  13. ^ Weiner 2009, xiv-xv.
  14. ^ Levin, Mark (February 1, 2008). "The Wajin's Whiteness: Law and Race Privilege in Japan". Hōritsu Jihō (法律時報). 80 (2): 6–7. SSRN 1551462.
  15. ^ Yuka Suzuki (2012-12-02). "Ryukyuan, Ainu People Genetically Similar Read more from Asian Scientist Magazine". Asian Scientist. Retrieved 7 February 2017.
  16. ^ Hendrickx 2007, p. 65.
  17. ^ Serafim 2008, p. 98.
  18. ^ Robbeets 2015, p. 26.
  19. ^ . Archived from the original on 2015-04-21. Retrieved 2017-08-20.
  20. ^ "Yayoi linked to Yangtze area". Trussel.com. Retrieved 2017-08-20.
  21. ^ Kumar, Ann. (2009). Globalizing the Prehistory of Japan: Language, Genes and Civilisation. London and New York: Routledge Taylor & Francis Group. Page 79 & 88. Retrieved January 23, 2018, from link.
  22. ^ Masami Ito (12 May 2009). "Between a rock and a hard place". The Japan Times. Retrieved 5 February 2017.
  23. ^ Hiromi Rogers (2016). Anjin – The Life and Times of Samurai William Adams, 1564–1620. p. 121. ASIN 1898823227. Adams' marriage with Yuki was arranged by Mukai Shogen, authorised by the Shogun. There is no official record that Magome Kageyu had a daughter, and it is believed that he adopted Yuki, his maid, for marrying to Adams and to advance his own trading activities. Primary source Nishiyama Toshio – Aoime-no-sodanyaku, leyasu-to-Anjin.
  24. ^ Marius B. Jansen; Professor Marius B Jansen (1992). China in the Tokugawa World. Harvard University Press. p. 26. ISBN 978-0-674-11753-2.
  25. ^ Fogarty, Philippa (June 6, 2008). "Recognition at last for Japan's Ainu". BBC News. BBC. Retrieved June 7, 2008.
  26. ^ "アイヌ⇔ダブ越境!異彩を放つOKIの新作". HMV Japan (in Japanese). May 23, 2006. Retrieved March 26, 2011.
  27. ^ 岡村兵衛 (Okamura, Hyoue) (March 25, 2013). "「混血」をめぐる言説 : 近代日本語辞書に現れるその同意語を中心に". 国際文化学 (in Japanese). 26: 36. doi:10.24546/81004802. Retrieved November 30, 2023.
  28. ^ a b "児童養護施設 聖母愛児園". 児童養護施設 聖母愛児園 (in Japanese). Retrieved 2019-01-24.
  29. ^ a b "translate – Google Search". Google.com. Retrieved 2019-01-24.
  30. ^ a b Yoshida, Reiji (2008-09-10). "Mixed-race babies in lurch". The Japan Times Online. ISSN 0447-5763. Retrieved 2019-01-24.
  31. ^ . The Los Angeles Times. Archived from the original on 2014-12-30. Retrieved 2012-03-18.
  32. ^ Douglass, Mike; Roberts, Glenda Susan (2003). Japan and Global Migration: Foreign Workers and the Advent of a ... – Mike Douglass, Glenda Susan Roberts – Google Books. University of Hawaii Press. ISBN 9780824827427. Retrieved 2012-07-26.
  33. ^ Zack, Naomi (1995). American Mixed Race: The Culture of Microdiversity - Naomi Zack – Google Books. Rowman & Littlefield. ISBN 9780847680139. Retrieved 2012-07-26.
  34. ^ a b c d e . CNN. October 25, 2018. Archived from the original on May 5, 2022.
  35. ^ Kosaka, Kristy (2009-01-27). "Half, bi or double? One family's trouble". Japan Times. Retrieved 2011-11-20.
  36. ^ "About the film | Hafu". hafufilm.com. from the original on 2016-10-15. Retrieved 2016-09-14.
  37. ^ "Being 'hafu' in Japan: Mixed-race people face ridicule, rejection". from the original on 2017-05-20. Retrieved 2017-05-01.
  38. ^ Agnote, Dario (October 11, 2017). . The Japan Times. Archived from the original on June 7, 2011. Retrieved August 9, 2016.
  39. ^ "Japanese descendants on Philippine island lighten up from solar power".
  40. ^ "スマイル(2009)" (in Japanese). AllCinema. Retrieved 2015-06-23.
  41. ^ (in Japanese). Oricon Style. 16 March 2009. Archived from the original on 2009-04-22. Retrieved 2015-06-23.
  42. ^ (in Japanese). Nikkan Sports. Archived from the original on 2009-02-13. Retrieved 2015-06-23.
  43. ^ . Ajw.asahi.com. Archived from the original on 2013-10-13. Retrieved 2013-10-20.
  44. ^ Shoji, Kaori (2013-10-03). "Double the trouble, twice the joy for Japan's hafu". The Japan Times. from the original on 2013-10-28. Retrieved 2013-10-20.
  45. ^ Newman, Paul (September 7, 2018). "Naomi Osaka becomes first Japanese woman to reach a Grand Slam final". Evening Standard. Retrieved September 10, 2018.
  46. ^ Kane, David. "Osaka stuns Serena, captures first Grand Slam title at US Open". WTA Tennis. Retrieved November 2, 2018.
  47. ^ . The Mainichi. July 10, 2019. Archived from the original on July 11, 2019. Retrieved July 11, 2019.
  48. ^ "Japan Population". World Bank. 2018. Retrieved 12 July 2019.
  49. ^ "Aging in Japan|ILC-Japan". Ilcjapan.org. Retrieved 2017-03-21.
  50. ^ "平成20年末現在における外国人登録者統計について(Number of Foreign residents in Japan)". Moj.go.jp. Retrieved 2011-11-09.
  51. ^ Emiko Jozuka and Vivien Jones. "Many hafu stars are celebrated in Japan. But for normal mixed-race people it can be a different story". CNN.

Bibliography edit

  • Hendrickx, Katrien (2007). The Origins of Banana-fibre Cloth in the Ryukyus, Japan. Leuven University Press. ISBN 978-90-5867-614-6.
  • Robbeets, Martine (2015). Diachrony of Verb Morphology: Japanese and the Transeurasian Languages. De Gruyter. ISBN 978-3-11-039994-3.
  • Serafim, Leon (2008). "The uses of Ryukyuan in understanding Japanese language history". In Frellesvig, Bjarke; Whitman, John (eds.). Proto-Japanese: Issues and Prospects. John Benjamins Publishing. ISBN 978-90-272-4809-1.

Further reading edit

  • Okamura, Hyoue (Spring 2017). "The "Human Duty" to Deracialize Nationality" (PDF). Asia Pacific Perspectives. 14 (2). Center for Asia Pacific Studies, University of San Francisco: 91–94.
  • Okamura, Hyoue (Spring 2017). "The Language of "Racial Mixture" in Japan: How Ainoko became Haafu, and the Haafu-gao Makeup Fad" (PDF). Asia Pacific Perspectives. 14 (2). Center for Asia Pacific Studies, University of San Francisco: 41–79.
  • Mori Want, Kaori (Winter 2016). "Haafu Identities Inside and Outside of Japanese Advertisements" (PDF). Asia Pacific Perspectives. 13 (2). Center for Asia Pacific Studies, University of San Francisco.

External links edit

List includes archived websites.

  • Elizabeth Saunders Home Reunion Facebook Page. The Elizabeth Saunders Home in Japan included many Japanese Amerasians (early Hafus).
  • Hafu Japanese Facebook Page. Active Hafu group with over 7300 members.
  • Planet Hafu (Half Japanese Facebook Page. Active Hafu group with over 2400 members.
  • Takuan Amaru – Author. Son of a Black/Native American military man and a Japanese woman.
  • AmerasianWorld.com's "Salaam Central Asia", by Kevin Miller, Jr., MPA. Calls himself a Japanese Amerasian, not a Hafu.
  • Biracial Beauty Queen Challenges Japan’s Self-Image, NYT.
  • Die Kreuzungsstelle – Voices of half Japanese, mixed race/multiracial or multiethnic persons.
  • Hafu Film.
  • at the Wayback Machine (archived January 30, 2018). By artist Natalie Maya Willer and researcher Marcia Yumi Lise.
  • Halvsie
  • HAPA JAPAN FEST 2017 BIOS – Large list of speakers to the event.
  • "“This Is Who I Am”: Jero, Young, Gifted, Polycultural" (Fellezs 2012).

hāfu, other, uses, hafu, disambiguation, ハーフ, half, japanese, language, term, used, refer, person, half, japanese, half, japanese, ancestry, loanword, from, english, term, literally, means, half, reference, individual, japanese, heritage, word, also, used, des. For other uses see Hafu disambiguation Hafu ハーフ half is a Japanese language term used to refer to a person of half Japanese and half non Japanese ancestry A loanword from English the term literally means half a reference to the individual s non Japanese heritage 1 2 3 4 The word can also be used to describe anyone with mixed racial ancestry in general As Japan is considered one of the most homogeneous societies on the planet children who have one non Japanese parent are called hafu Japanese and often face prejudice and discrimination from Japanese citizens of full Japanese descent 5 Hafu individuals are well represented in Japanese media and abroad and recent studies in the 2010s estimate that 1 in 30 children born in Japan are born to interracial couples 6 Contents 1 In Japanese 2 In other languages 3 History 3 1 Prehistoric to feudal Japan 3 2 Early modern period 3 2 1 Edo period 1603 1867 3 3 Modern period 3 3 1 Meiji Taishō and pre war Shōwa period 1868 1945 3 4 Contemporary period 3 4 1 Shōwa period post war 1945 1989 3 4 2 Heisei period 1989 2019 3 4 3 Reiwa period 2019 4 Notable hafu individuals 5 Hafu in popular culture 6 See also 7 References 8 Bibliography 9 Further reading 10 External linksIn Japanese editAinoko 間の子 lit child in between or child of love An ainoko is a Japanese person with a non Japanese or gaikokujin 外国人 lit foreigner parent It was historically often associated with discriminating sentiment The term is almost never used today in Japan Daburu ダブル lit double A daburu is an alternative to Hafu that focuses on the positive connotations of two cultures instead of one 7 8 Konketsuji 混血児 lit mixed blood child A konketsuji is a Japanese person with one non Japanese parent It is considered a derogatory term 9 Kwōta クォーター lit quarter A kwōta is a Japanese person with one Japanese grandparent The term is a loanword based on the English word quarter and refers to an individual s 25 or one quarter Japanese ancestry citation needed In other languages editJapinoy A person of mixed Japanese and Filipino ancestry 10 Afro Asian also Blasian An Afro Asian is an individual of African and Asian ancestry Blasian a portmanteau of Black and Asian is a slang term and is regularly used among English speakers in North America Ainoco f Ainoca An ainoco is an individual with one Japanese parent The term is a loanword based on the Japanese word ainoko 間の子 lit child in between or child of love and is used by Portuguese speakers in Brazil and Pohnpeian speakers in Micronesia both countries with a sizable Japanese populations Amerasian An Amerasian is an individual of American and Asian especially East Asian ancestry Historically the term referred to children born to local women and American servicemen stationed in East Asia during the Korean and Vietnam Wars It should not be confused with Asian American which describes an American citizen of full or partial Asian ancestry Eurasian A Eurasian is an individual of European and Asian ancestry Hapa A hapa is an individual of mixed Native Hawaiian Pacific Islander East Asian and or Southeast Asian heritage The term is a loanword based on the English word half as hafu is unlike hafu the term does not imply an individual is 50 or half of a certain race or ethnicity only that they are mixed race It is a Hawaiian term used by English and Hawaiian speakers in Hawaii and California Mestico de japones A mestico de japones lit Japanese mestico or miscigenado de japones is an individual usually an eurasiano with one Japanese parent i e a niponico citizen or a nipo brasileiro They are Portuguese terms used in Brazil but enjoy less popularity than ainoco and hafu History editPrehistoric to feudal Japan edit Hafu refers to a person who has one ethnic Japanese parent and one non ethnic Japanese parent The term ethnic Japanese refers to the Indigenous Japanese people of the Japanese archipelago Over the course of centuries the minority ethnic groups such as the Ainu and Ryukyuans were mostly assimilated into the Yamato population Mixed race couples and thus hafu people were rare in feudal Japan There were mixed Asian couples between ethnic Japanese and other East and Southeast Asian peoples The most well regarded theory is that present day Yamato Japanese are descendants of both the Indigenous Jōmon people and the immigrant Yayoi people 11 The Yayoi were an admixture 1 000 BCE 300 CE of migrants from East Asia mostly China and the Korean peninsula Modern mainland Yamato Japanese have less than 20 Jomon people s genomes 12 In modern Japan the term Yamato minzoku is seen as antiquated for connoting racial notions that have been discarded in many circles since Japan s surrender in World War II 13 The term Japanese people or even Japanese Japanese are often used instead 14 Genetic and anthropological studies indicate that the Ryukyuans are significantly related to the Ainu people and share the ancestry with the indigenous prehistoric Jōmon period pre 10 000 1 000 BCE people who arrived from Southeast Asia and with the Yamato people 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 During the Meiji period the Ryukyuans distinct culture was suppressed by the Meiji government and faced forced assimilation 22 Early modern period edit Edo period 1603 1867 edit nbsp Koxinga was a Chinese monarch who was hafu Japanese English sailor William Adams a navigator for the Dutch East India Company settled in Japan in April 1600 He was ultimately granted the rank of samurai one of the few non Japanese to do so He wed Oyuki お雪 a Japanese woman and together they had two children Joseph and Susanna who were hafu 23 Chinese military leader Chenggong Zheng historically known as Koxinga 1624 1662 was hafu born in Japan to a Japanese mother and Chinese father and raised there until the age of seven known by the Japanese given name Fukumatsu 24 Modern period edit Meiji Taishō and pre war Shōwa period 1868 1945 edit Since 1899 the Ainu were increasingly marginalized During a period of only 36 years the Ainu went from being a relatively isolated group of people to having their land language religion and customs assimilated into those of the Japanese 25 Intermarriage between Japanese and Ainu was actively promoted by the Ainu to lessen the chances of discrimination against their offspring As a result many Ainu are indistinguishable from their Japanese neighbors but some Ainu Japanese are interested in traditional Ainu culture 26 The first visible usage of the term Hafu dates to 1930 in the novel Machi No Kokusai Mune 街の國際娘 lit International Girl in the City by Japanese author Touma Kitabayashi 北林 透馬 In the chapter Minato no Sakaba no Ainoko Odoriko 港の酒場の混血児踊り子 lit The Dancing In Between Child at the Harbour Bar the furigana Hafu is used as a synonym for the term konketsuji predating the appearance of Hafu in dictionaries which would not occur until after 1973 27 Contemporary period edit Shōwa period post war 1945 1989 edit See also Amerasian Japan The presence of the United States Armed Forces in Japan and Asia saw the birth of many children born to American fathers these children were called Amerasians It s estimated that by 1952 anywhere from 5 000 to 10 000 Japanese children were fathered by American servicemen with many of the children placed for adoption by their Japanese mothers due to the stigma of out of wedlock pregnancy and miscegenation and the struggles of supporting a child alone in post war Japan 28 29 One orphanage Seibo Aijien 聖母愛児園 Seibo Aijien Our Lady of Lourdes Orphanage in Yokohama run by Franciscan nuns opened in 1946 By 1948 staff members were caring for 126 children fathered by American servicemen by 1950 and 136 children 28 29 A letter dated 1948 detailed an incident of a malnourished infant born to a Japanese teenager whose American father refused to support for fear his wife would learn of his extramarital affair 30 The Elizabeth Saunders Home opened in Ōiso by a Japanese woman named Miki Sawada cared for more than 700 Amerasian children none of whom were visited or supported by their American fathers 30 Heisei period 1989 2019 edit nbsp Naomi Osaka tennis player Haitian Japanese nbsp Naomi Watanabe actress comedian fashion designer Taiwanese Japanese Fashionable images of the half Japanese people have become prominent especially with the increased appearance of hafu in the Japanese media 31 Hafu models are now seen on television or fill the pages of fashion magazines such as Non no CanCam and Vivi as often as newsreaders or celebrities The appearance of hafu in the media has provided the basis for such a vivid representation of them in the culture 32 33 As of 2018 it is estimated that 30 to 40 of runway models in Japanese fashion shows identify as hafu 34 Most top models in their 20s of popular Japanese fashion magazines are hafu 34 One of the earliest terms referring to half Japanese was ainoko meaning a child born of a relationship between two races It is still used in Latin America most prominently Brazil where spellings such as ainoco ainoca f and ainoco may be found to refer to mestizo broader term in Hispanic America for mixed race in general or mestico people of some Japanese ancestry In Brazil amarela yellow is generally used for people of East Asian origin The former term evolved to be an umbrella term for Eurasian or mixed East Asian mestizo East Asian African East Asian Arab and East Asian indigenous heritage in general At the same time it is possible for people with little Japanese or other East Asian ancestry to be perceivable just by their phenotype to identify mostly as black white or mestizo pardo instead of ainoko while people with about a quarter or less of non East Asian ancestry may identify on the Brazilian census as being amarela yellow or East Asian Soon this too became a taboo term due to its derogatory connotations such as illegitimacy and discrimination What were central to these labels were the emphasis on blood impurity and the obvious separation of the half Japanese from the majority of Japanese Some English speaking parents of children of mixed ethnicity use the word double 35 Amerasian is another term for children of mixed ancestry especially those born to Japanese mothers and U S military fathers Of the one million children born in Japan in 2013 2 2 had one or more non Japanese parent 70 According to the Japanese Ministry of Health Labor and Welfare one in forty nine babies born in Japan today are born into families with one non Japanese parent 36 Most intermarriages in Japan are between Japanese men and women from other Asian countries including China the Philippines and South Korea 37 Southeast Asia also has significant populations of people with half Japanese ancestry particularly in the Philippines 38 39 In the 21st century stereotyping and discrimination against hafu occurs based on how different their identity behavior and appearance is from a typical Japanese person 34 Some experience negative treatment such as being teased or bullied in junior high school treated like foreigners or stereotyped as bilingual and models 34 However being mixed is increasingly seen as cool 34 The hafu of international marriages between Japanese and other Asians tend to blend in easier in Japanese society They can have a bicultural identity Their foreign side could be suppressed in Japan s homogeneous culture Smile スマイル Sumairu is a television drama series broadcast by TBS from April to June 2009 Jun Matsumoto plays the lead role of Vito a half Filipino half Japanese man who always smiles despite all of the problems and difficulties he faces The series focused on foreigners and mixed race children who suffered from racism 40 41 42 The documentary film Hafu The Mixed Race Experience in Japan was released in April 2013 It is about the experiences of five hafu living in Japan It deals with issues of identity multiculturalism relationships hardship and stereotyping that they face 43 44 In September 2018 Naomi Osaka is the first Japanese woman and hafu to contest a Grand Slam singles final and the first Japanese Grand Slam singles champion Naomi Osaka is the winner of the 2018 US Open Women s Singles 45 46 Reiwa period 2019 edit Due to low birthrate the population of Japan is aging significantly As of 2019 the fertility rate stood at 1 36 children per woman far below the 2 1 children per woman required to maintain the same level of population Japan had 126 5 million people in 2018 with Japanese nationals numbering 124 8 million in January 2019 47 48 Currently 1 in 4 Japanese residents are over the age of 65 meaning that if the birthrate does not increase one third of the population will be above this age by 2050 49 The percentage of hafu is increasing but the group is still a minority in Japan The Government of Japan regards all naturalized Japanese citizens and native born Japanese nationals with multi ethnic backgrounds as Japanese with no official ethnicity census data 50 51 Notable hafu individuals editMain article List of half Japanese peopleHafu in popular culture editMain article List of hafu in popular cultureSee also editAmerasian Anglo Burmese people Anglo Indian people Afro Asians Bụi đời Burgher people Demography of Japan Aging of Japan Half caste Hapa Hunxuer Indo people Kristang people Luk khrueng Mestizo Metis CastizoReferences edit Krieger Daniel 29 November 2010 The whole story on being hafu CNN Archived from the original on 3 December 2010 Retrieved 12 April 2011 Navidi Nooshin 22 June 2010 Hafu draws viewers into world of Japanese identity Japan Times Archived from the original on 2011 12 01 Retrieved 2011 04 12 Yamada Mio 28 February 2009 Hafu focuses on whole individual Japan Times Archived from the original on 2011 12 16 Retrieved 2011 04 12 Fujioka Brett 14 January 2011 The Other Hafu of Japan Rafu Shimpo Archived from the original on 2011 01 22 Retrieved 2011 04 12 Japan s hafu stars are celebrated But some mixed race people say they feel like foreigners in their own country 23 September 2020 Being hafu in Japan Mixed race people face ridicule rejection America aljazeera com Retrieved 2019 01 24 Jozuka Emiko 23 September 2020 Japan s hafu stars are celebrated But some mixed race people say they feel like foreigners in their own country CNN Retrieved 27 September 2021 Saberi Roxana 9 September 2015 Being hafu in Japan Mixed race people face ridicule rejection AlJazeera Retrieved 27 September 2021 Writers YABAI 28 June 2017 Hafu s in Japan Interesting Facts About Japan s Mixed Race Population YABAI The Modern Vibrant Face of Japan YABAI Retrieved 2019 01 24 What is Japinoy 25 April 2007 Hideaki Kanzawa Kiriyama Kirill Kryukov Timothy A Jinam Kazuyoshi Hosomichi Aiko Saso Gen Suwa Shintaroh Ueda Minoru Yoneda Atsushi Tajima Ken ichi Shinoda Ituro Inoue Naruya Saitou1 February 2017 A partial nuclear genome of the Jomons who lived 3000 years ago in Fukushima Japan Journal of Human Genetics 62 2 213 221 doi 10 1038 jhg 2016 110 PMC 5285490 PMID 27581845 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a CS1 maint numeric names authors list link Kanzawa Kiriyama H Kryukov K Jinam T A Hosomichi K Saso A Suwa G Ueda S Yoneda M Tajima A Shinoda K I Inoue I Saitou N 2016 06 01 A partial nuclear genome of the Jomons who lived 3000 years ago in Fukushima Japan Journal of Human Genetics 62 2 213 221 doi 10 1038 jhg 2016 110 PMC 5285490 PMID 27581845 Weiner 2009 xiv xv Levin Mark February 1 2008 The Wajin s Whiteness Law and Race Privilege in Japan Hōritsu Jihō 法律時報 80 2 6 7 SSRN 1551462 Yuka Suzuki 2012 12 02 Ryukyuan Ainu People Genetically Similar Read more from Asian Scientist Magazine Asian Scientist Retrieved 7 February 2017 Hendrickx 2007 p 65 Serafim 2008 p 98 Robbeets 2015 p 26 日本人はるかな旅展 Archived from the original on 2015 04 21 Retrieved 2017 08 20 Yayoi linked to Yangtze area Trussel com Retrieved 2017 08 20 Kumar Ann 2009 Globalizing the Prehistory of Japan Language Genes and Civilisation London and New York Routledge Taylor amp Francis Group Page 79 amp 88 Retrieved January 23 2018 from link Masami Ito 12 May 2009 Between a rock and a hard place The Japan Times Retrieved 5 February 2017 Hiromi Rogers 2016 Anjin The Life and Times of Samurai William Adams 1564 1620 p 121 ASIN 1898823227 Adams marriage with Yuki was arranged by Mukai Shogen authorised by the Shogun There is no official record that Magome Kageyu had a daughter and it is believed that he adopted Yuki his maid for marrying to Adams and to advance his own trading activities Primary source Nishiyama Toshio Aoime no sodanyaku leyasu to Anjin Marius B Jansen Professor Marius B Jansen 1992 China in the Tokugawa World Harvard University Press p 26 ISBN 978 0 674 11753 2 Fogarty Philippa June 6 2008 Recognition at last for Japan s Ainu BBC News BBC Retrieved June 7 2008 アイヌ ダブ越境 異彩を放つOKIの新作 HMV Japan in Japanese May 23 2006 Retrieved March 26 2011 岡村兵衛 Okamura Hyoue March 25 2013 混血 をめぐる言説 近代日本語辞書に現れるその同意語を中心に 国際文化学 in Japanese 26 36 doi 10 24546 81004802 Retrieved November 30 2023 a b 児童養護施設 聖母愛児園 児童養護施設 聖母愛児園 in Japanese Retrieved 2019 01 24 a b translate Google Search Google com Retrieved 2019 01 24 a b Yoshida Reiji 2008 09 10 Mixed race babies in lurch The Japan Times Online ISSN 0447 5763 Retrieved 2019 01 24 Growing Up Different but Never Alienated The Los Angeles Times Archived from the original on 2014 12 30 Retrieved 2012 03 18 Douglass Mike Roberts Glenda Susan 2003 Japan and Global Migration Foreign Workers and the Advent of a Mike Douglass Glenda Susan Roberts Google Books University of Hawaii Press ISBN 9780824827427 Retrieved 2012 07 26 Zack Naomi 1995 American Mixed Race The Culture of Microdiversity Naomi Zack Google Books Rowman amp Littlefield ISBN 9780847680139 Retrieved 2012 07 26 a b c d e What it means to be a mixed race model in Japan CNN October 25 2018 Archived from the original on May 5 2022 Kosaka Kristy 2009 01 27 Half bi or double One family s trouble Japan Times Retrieved 2011 11 20 About the film Hafu hafufilm com Archived from the original on 2016 10 15 Retrieved 2016 09 14 Being hafu in Japan Mixed race people face ridicule rejection Archived from the original on 2017 05 20 Retrieved 2017 05 01 Agnote Dario October 11 2017 A glimmer of hope for castoffs The Japan Times Archived from the original on June 7 2011 Retrieved August 9 2016 Japanese descendants on Philippine island lighten up from solar power スマイル 2009 in Japanese AllCinema Retrieved 2015 06 23 椎名林檎 5年半ぶりのソロ新曲は松潤主演ドラマ主題歌 in Japanese Oricon Style 16 March 2009 Archived from the original on 2009 04 22 Retrieved 2015 06 23 松潤フィリピンとのハーフ役でドラマ主演 in Japanese Nikkan Sports Archived from the original on 2009 02 13 Retrieved 2015 06 23 Documentary shows hardships of mixed race individuals in Japan AJW by The Asahi Shimbun Ajw asahi com Archived from the original on 2013 10 13 Retrieved 2013 10 20 Shoji Kaori 2013 10 03 Double the trouble twice the joy for Japan s hafu The Japan Times Archived from the original on 2013 10 28 Retrieved 2013 10 20 Newman Paul September 7 2018 Naomi Osaka becomes first Japanese woman to reach a Grand Slam final Evening Standard Retrieved September 10 2018 Kane David Osaka stuns Serena captures first Grand Slam title at US Open WTA Tennis Retrieved November 2 2018 Japan population drops by record number to 124 8 mil gov t The Mainichi July 10 2019 Archived from the original on July 11 2019 Retrieved July 11 2019 Japan Population World Bank 2018 Retrieved 12 July 2019 Aging in Japan ILC Japan Ilcjapan org Retrieved 2017 03 21 平成20年末現在における外国人登録者統計について Number of Foreign residents in Japan Moj go jp Retrieved 2011 11 09 Emiko Jozuka and Vivien Jones Many hafu stars are celebrated in Japan But for normal mixed race people it can be a different story CNN Bibliography editHendrickx Katrien 2007 The Origins of Banana fibre Cloth in the Ryukyus Japan Leuven University Press ISBN 978 90 5867 614 6 Robbeets Martine 2015 Diachrony of Verb Morphology Japanese and the Transeurasian Languages De Gruyter ISBN 978 3 11 039994 3 Serafim Leon 2008 The uses of Ryukyuan in understanding Japanese language history In Frellesvig Bjarke Whitman John eds Proto Japanese Issues and Prospects John Benjamins Publishing ISBN 978 90 272 4809 1 Further reading editOkamura Hyoue Spring 2017 The Human Duty to Deracialize Nationality PDF Asia Pacific Perspectives 14 2 Center for Asia Pacific Studies University of San Francisco 91 94 Okamura Hyoue Spring 2017 The Language of Racial Mixture in Japan How Ainoko became Haafu and the Haafu gao Makeup Fad PDF Asia Pacific Perspectives 14 2 Center for Asia Pacific Studies University of San Francisco 41 79 Mori Want Kaori Winter 2016 Haafu Identities Inside and Outside of Japanese Advertisements PDF Asia Pacific Perspectives 13 2 Center for Asia Pacific Studies University of San Francisco External links editList includes archived websites Elizabeth Saunders Home Reunion Facebook Page The Elizabeth Saunders Home in Japan included many Japanese Amerasians early Hafus Hafu Japanese Facebook Page Active Hafu group with over 7300 members Planet Hafu Half Japanese Facebook Page Active Hafu group with over 2400 members Takuan Amaru Author Son of a Black Native American military man and a Japanese woman AmerasianWorld com s Salaam Central Asia by Kevin Miller Jr MPA Calls himself a Japanese Amerasian not a Hafu Biracial Beauty Queen Challenges Japan s Self Image NYT Die Kreuzungsstelle Voices of half Japanese mixed race multiracial or multiethnic persons Hafu Film The Hafu Project at the Wayback Machine archived January 30 2018 By artist Natalie Maya Willer and researcher Marcia Yumi Lise Halvsie HAPA JAPAN FEST 2017 BIOS Large list of speakers to the event This Is Who I Am Jero Young Gifted Polycultural Fellezs 2012 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Hafu amp oldid 1212637792, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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