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Ikuno Korea Town

Ikuno Korea Town (Japanese: 生野コリアタウン, Korean이쿠노 코리아타운) is a Koreatown in Ikuno-ku, Osaka, Japan. It is one of the largest Koreatowns in the country and a significant tourist attraction, with around two million visitors in 2021.

Osaka Ikuno Korea Town
生野コリアタウン
Neighborhood
Miyuki-dori, the main shopping street (2022)
Coordinates: 34°39′38″N 135°32′04″E / 34.66046°N 135.53446°E / 34.66046; 135.53446
CountryJapan
CityOsaka
WardIkuno
Websiteikuno-koreatown.com (in Japanese)

The area has previously gone by a number of names, although its current name is the name the town's organization prefers. Other names include Tsuruhashi Korea Town (鶴橋コリアンタウン, 츠루하시 코리아타운), Osaka Korea Town, Ikaino Korea Town (after the Ikaino [ja] area),[1] and Momodani Korea Town (桃谷コリアタウン, 모모다니 코리아타운).

It is a ten-minute walk from either of the Tsuruhashi and Momodani Stations.[2] Between 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. the main shopping street is a pedestrian-only zone.[3] Nearby is the Osaka Korea Town Museum, which discusses the history of the area and showcases Korean culture.

Description edit

According to a 2020 census, 27,600 or 21.8% of Ikuno-ku's population are foreign nationals.[4][1] This makes Ikuno the ward with the highest number of foreigners in Japan.[1] The area contains around 150 Korean stores and restaurants. Businesses also sell Korean clothing, souvenirs,[2][4] cosmetics,[1] and goods related to Korean dramas and K-pop.[4] Korean street foods like tteokbboki (spicy rice cakes) and gimbap (similar to sushi rolls except often without fish) are sold along the various streets.[5] Twenty of the 150 stores specifically sell kimchi (Korean fermented cabbage).[1] There are also Korean barbecue restaurants.[6] Various places in the area offer classes in the Korean language, culture, and cooking.[2]

As many of the Korean merchants descend from immigrants from Jeju Island, some of the food sold is influenced by styles of that region.[7] There are also some unique local variants of Korean dishes, such as tomato kimchi.[7]

The area has become very popular, especially with young women. In 2021, around two million people visited the area. Around 80% of them were female, with half of them being under the age of 30.[1]

The area has been compared to the Ōkubo Koreatown in Tokyo, which Lee Young-hee of the JoongAng Ilbo describes as having "big shopping malls with famous Korean franchise stores".[1] Some restaurants there represent the latest food trends in South Korea.[7] By contrast, Ikuno "bears the traditional Korean marketplace feel", with homemade food, narrow streets, and merchandise prominently displayed for passersby.[1][7]

History edit

Miyuki-dori, now the main shopping street of the district, has hosted Korean merchants since the Japanese occupation of Korea. Around the 1920s, Koreans, particularly from Jeju Island, moved into the area.[8]

 
Koreans in Osaka, depicted in a book from 1938 by Zainichi Korean author Go Gweon-sam [ko; ja]

Beginning in 1939, millions of Koreans were mobilized to support Japan in World War II, with hundreds of thousands being forced to move to Japan to perform labor in extremely poor conditions.[7] After Korea was liberated in 1945, around 600,000 remained in Japan for various reasons, namely to avoid the poverty and instability that resulted from the division of Korea and the subsequent Korean War.[7] Around this time, Korean-owned businesses increased in density in the area, until the area became largely associated with the Korean community.[9] Since then, both Korean and Japanese people have regularly visited the town to buy Korean food.[1][7]

 
Various Korean banchan (side dishes) being sold in the market (2022)

Korean food in the area is not always considered "authentic"; this is in part intentional and due to the history of the area. After World War II, Koreans had their Japanese citizenships stripped by the 1947 Alien Registration Ordinance [ja]. This prevented them from receiving food rations in a time when food was scarce and poverty amongst Koreans was significant. Dishes were often improvized by necessity; Zainichis often substituted in unorthodox ingredients that they had access to.[7]

Since 1951, three shopkeeper associations have managed stores in the area.[9] They made numerous attempts to merge for several decades, but talks stalled due to "the different characteristics of the shops and stubbornness of the vendors", according to Hong Sung-ik, who was the chair of the market by 2022.[1] In 1993, they repaved the roads and added four traditional Korean gates at various entrances to the area.[9]

After the growth of the Korean Wave and the joint Korea–Japan hosting of the 2002 FIFA World Cup, the area experienced a boom in popularity and became a major tourist destination.[8][7] However, businesses have sometimes seen drops in the number of visitors due to South Korea and Japan's turbulent diplomatic relationship.[10]

In 2021, the three associations officially named the area "Osaka Ikuno Koreatown".[5]

On April 29, 2023, the history museum Osaka Korea Town Museum was opened near the area.[8][4] The museum discusses the history of the area, showcases Korean popular culture, and houses around 2,000 books on both Korea and Japan.[4]

Anti-Korean sentiment edit

 
A gate to the town (2011)

The area has been viewed with hostility, particularly due to anti-Korean sentiment. One resident reported that he knew people who had stones thrown at them by Japanese people.[11] One point of contention is the fact that Ko Yong-hui, the mother of North Korean leader Kim Jong Un, was born in the area in 1952.[6]

In 2013, a video[12] of a junior high school girl in the area shouting the need for an ethnic cleansing of the Korean residents there went viral.[13][14] The Japanese organization Asia-Pacific Human Rights Information Center translated her speech as follows:[15]

Hello, all shit-Koreans living in Tsuruhashi. And hello to all the fellow Japanese present here. I hate the Koreans so much that I can’t stand it and I just want to kill them all now. If Koreans behave with this arrogance further, we will carry out Tsuruhashi massacre like Nanking massacre! (other participants shouted "yeah that’s right!") If Japanese get angry, it will happen! We will start a massacre! Go back to your country before the massacre gets started! This is Japan, but not Korean peninsula! Go back! (other participants shouted "go back!")

Police officers who were standing nearby did nothing to stop the girl in the video.[13] She is reportedly the daughter of Katsurada Satoshi, who is a member of the far-right anti-Korean group Zaitokukai.[14] Zaitokukai has held similar protests in Korean enclaves in Japan, including one in Ōkubo, Tokyo where their members shouted "It's okay to throw stones at or rape Korean women".[16][17]

In popular culture edit

The area was the setting for the 2004 Japanese novel and film Blood and Bones, which covers the semi-autobiographical story of an ethnic Korean living there.[1] Parts of the 2022 American TV series Pachinko, which is based on a 2017 novel of the same name, takes place in this area. It focuses on several generations of an ethnic Korean family.[18]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Lee, Young-hee (2022-03-21). "From symbol of discrimination to K-pop mecca". Korea JoongAng Daily. Retrieved 2023-09-20.
  2. ^ a b c "Miyuki-dori Shopping Street (Korea town)". OSAKA INFO. Retrieved 2023-09-20.
  3. ^ "アクセス | 一般社団法人大阪コリアタウン(御幸通商店街)". osaka-koreatown.com. Retrieved 2023-10-08.
  4. ^ a b c d e "Museum Spotlighting Korean Residents to Open in Osaka". Yomiuri Shimbun. 2023-02-14. Retrieved 2023-09-20.
  5. ^ a b Rogers, Krista (2022-01-31). "We visit Osaka's newly dubbed Koreatown for the first time and set our sights on all of the food". SoraNews24 -Japan News-. Retrieved 2023-09-20.
  6. ^ a b Carrigan, Liam (2020-03-06). "Ikuno Ward: Osaka's Own Korea Town". Osaka.com. Retrieved 2023-09-20.
  7. ^ a b c d e f g h i Laurent, Christopher (2020-08-04). "Asia Pacific Perspectives Journal - v16n2 Fall 2020 - Diaspora, Exclusion and Appropriation: The Cuisine of the Korean Minority in Japan". University of San Francisco. Retrieved 2023-09-20.
  8. ^ a b c "Osaka Korea Town Museum – Founding Mission Statement". Osaka Korea Town Museum. Retrieved 2023-09-20.
  9. ^ a b c Kaufman, Matt (2019-06-22). "Discovering a Japanese-Korean fusion feast in Osaka Ikuno Koreatown". The Japan Times. Retrieved 2023-09-20.
  10. ^ Miller, KK (2015-06-11). "The changing face of Tokyo's Shin-Okubo and the decline of Japan's biggest Korea Town". SoraNews24 -Japan News-. Retrieved 2023-09-20.
  11. ^ McCurry, Justin (2022-04-21). "'A difficult time': why popular TV series Pachinko was met with silence in Japan". The Guardian. ISSN 0261-3077. Retrieved 2023-09-20.
  12. ^ "女子中学生が大阪最大のコリアタウン鶴橋で大虐殺予告【在特会】" [A Junior High School Girl Warns of a "Tsuruhashi Massacre" in Osaka's Biggest Koreatown [Zaitokukai]], Niconico (in Japanese), 2013-04-03, retrieved 2023-09-29
  13. ^ a b Arudou, Debito (2016-01-31). "Osaka's move on hate speech should be just the first step". The Japan Times. Retrieved 2023-09-20.
  14. ^ a b Cho, Ki-weon (March 9, 2018). "[Correspondent's Column] The concerning response of the Japanese public to Chongryon shooting". The Hankyoreh. Retrieved 2023-09-20.
  15. ^ "Rise of Hate Speech in Japan* | ヒューライツ大阪". www.hurights.or.jp. Retrieved 2023-09-30.
  16. ^ 김, 표향 (2018-08-14). "전직 야쿠자, 日 혐한 시위에 어퍼컷 날리다". Hankook Ilbo (in Korean). Retrieved 2023-10-04.
  17. ^ 김, 희원 (2018-08-09). "혐오·차별 맞선 양심의 외침". Segye Ilbo (in Korean). Retrieved 2023-10-04.
  18. ^ Rosario, Alexandra Del (2022-06-15). "Inside 'Pachinko', The Apple TV+ Hit From Soo Hugh That Captured Hearts". Deadline. Retrieved 2023-09-20.

External links edit

  • Osaka Korea Town Museum Homepage (in English)
  • [재일동포] 일본 최대의 재일동포 밀집지역,오사카 이쿠노구의 고향의 맛 (KBS 20111027 방송) on YouTube – a 2011 Korean-language documentary about the enclave and its cuisine

ikuno, korea, town, japanese, 生野コリアタウン, korean, 이쿠노, 코리아타운, koreatown, ikuno, osaka, japan, largest, koreatowns, country, significant, tourist, attraction, with, around, million, visitors, 2021, osaka, 生野コリアタウンneighborhoodmiyuki, dori, main, shopping, street, . Ikuno Korea Town Japanese 生野コリアタウン Korean 이쿠노 코리아타운 is a Koreatown in Ikuno ku Osaka Japan It is one of the largest Koreatowns in the country and a significant tourist attraction with around two million visitors in 2021 Osaka Ikuno Korea Town 生野コリアタウンNeighborhoodMiyuki dori the main shopping street 2022 Coordinates 34 39 38 N 135 32 04 E 34 66046 N 135 53446 E 34 66046 135 53446CountryJapanCityOsakaWardIkunoWebsiteikuno koreatown wbr com in Japanese The area has previously gone by a number of names although its current name is the name the town s organization prefers Other names include Tsuruhashi Korea Town 鶴橋コリアンタウン 츠루하시 코리아타운 Osaka Korea Town Ikaino Korea Town after the Ikaino ja area 1 and Momodani Korea Town 桃谷コリアタウン 모모다니 코리아타운 It is a ten minute walk from either of the Tsuruhashi and Momodani Stations 2 Between 10 a m to 6 p m the main shopping street is a pedestrian only zone 3 Nearby is the Osaka Korea Town Museum which discusses the history of the area and showcases Korean culture Contents 1 Description 2 History 2 1 Anti Korean sentiment 3 In popular culture 4 See also 5 References 6 External linksDescription editAccording to a 2020 census 27 600 or 21 8 of Ikuno ku s population are foreign nationals 4 1 This makes Ikuno the ward with the highest number of foreigners in Japan 1 The area contains around 150 Korean stores and restaurants Businesses also sell Korean clothing souvenirs 2 4 cosmetics 1 and goods related to Korean dramas and K pop 4 Korean street foods like tteokbboki spicy rice cakes and gimbap similar to sushi rolls except often without fish are sold along the various streets 5 Twenty of the 150 stores specifically sell kimchi Korean fermented cabbage 1 There are also Korean barbecue restaurants 6 Various places in the area offer classes in the Korean language culture and cooking 2 As many of the Korean merchants descend from immigrants from Jeju Island some of the food sold is influenced by styles of that region 7 There are also some unique local variants of Korean dishes such as tomato kimchi 7 The area has become very popular especially with young women In 2021 around two million people visited the area Around 80 of them were female with half of them being under the age of 30 1 The area has been compared to the Ōkubo Koreatown in Tokyo which Lee Young hee of the JoongAng Ilbo describes as having big shopping malls with famous Korean franchise stores 1 Some restaurants there represent the latest food trends in South Korea 7 By contrast Ikuno bears the traditional Korean marketplace feel with homemade food narrow streets and merchandise prominently displayed for passersby 1 7 History editSee also Koreans in Japan History Miyuki dori now the main shopping street of the district has hosted Korean merchants since the Japanese occupation of Korea Around the 1920s Koreans particularly from Jeju Island moved into the area 8 nbsp Koreans in Osaka depicted in a book from 1938 by Zainichi Korean author Go Gweon sam ko ja Beginning in 1939 millions of Koreans were mobilized to support Japan in World War II with hundreds of thousands being forced to move to Japan to perform labor in extremely poor conditions 7 After Korea was liberated in 1945 around 600 000 remained in Japan for various reasons namely to avoid the poverty and instability that resulted from the division of Korea and the subsequent Korean War 7 Around this time Korean owned businesses increased in density in the area until the area became largely associated with the Korean community 9 Since then both Korean and Japanese people have regularly visited the town to buy Korean food 1 7 nbsp Various Korean banchan side dishes being sold in the market 2022 Korean food in the area is not always considered authentic this is in part intentional and due to the history of the area After World War II Koreans had their Japanese citizenships stripped by the 1947 Alien Registration Ordinance ja This prevented them from receiving food rations in a time when food was scarce and poverty amongst Koreans was significant Dishes were often improvized by necessity Zainichis often substituted in unorthodox ingredients that they had access to 7 Since 1951 three shopkeeper associations have managed stores in the area 9 They made numerous attempts to merge for several decades but talks stalled due to the different characteristics of the shops and stubbornness of the vendors according to Hong Sung ik who was the chair of the market by 2022 1 In 1993 they repaved the roads and added four traditional Korean gates at various entrances to the area 9 After the growth of the Korean Wave and the joint Korea Japan hosting of the 2002 FIFA World Cup the area experienced a boom in popularity and became a major tourist destination 8 7 However businesses have sometimes seen drops in the number of visitors due to South Korea and Japan s turbulent diplomatic relationship 10 In 2021 the three associations officially named the area Osaka Ikuno Koreatown 5 On April 29 2023 the history museum Osaka Korea Town Museum was opened near the area 8 4 The museum discusses the history of the area showcases Korean popular culture and houses around 2 000 books on both Korea and Japan 4 Anti Korean sentiment edit See also Anti Korean sentiment in Japan nbsp A gate to the town 2011 The area has been viewed with hostility particularly due to anti Korean sentiment One resident reported that he knew people who had stones thrown at them by Japanese people 11 One point of contention is the fact that Ko Yong hui the mother of North Korean leader Kim Jong Un was born in the area in 1952 6 In 2013 a video 12 of a junior high school girl in the area shouting the need for an ethnic cleansing of the Korean residents there went viral 13 14 The Japanese organization Asia Pacific Human Rights Information Center translated her speech as follows 15 Hello all shit Koreans living in Tsuruhashi And hello to all the fellow Japanese present here I hate the Koreans so much that I can t stand it and I just want to kill them all now If Koreans behave with this arrogance further we will carry out Tsuruhashi massacre like Nanking massacre other participants shouted yeah that s right If Japanese get angry it will happen We will start a massacre Go back to your country before the massacre gets started This is Japan but not Korean peninsula Go back other participants shouted go back Police officers who were standing nearby did nothing to stop the girl in the video 13 She is reportedly the daughter of Katsurada Satoshi who is a member of the far right anti Korean group Zaitokukai 14 Zaitokukai has held similar protests in Korean enclaves in Japan including one in Ōkubo Tokyo where their members shouted It s okay to throw stones at or rape Korean women 16 17 In popular culture editThe area was the setting for the 2004 Japanese novel and film Blood and Bones which covers the semi autobiographical story of an ethnic Korean living there 1 Parts of the 2022 American TV series Pachinko which is based on a 2017 novel of the same name takes place in this area It focuses on several generations of an ethnic Korean family 18 See also editŌkubo Tokyo Koreatown in Tokyo Amerikamura An Americatown in OsakaReferences edit a b c d e f g h i j k Lee Young hee 2022 03 21 From symbol of discrimination to K pop mecca Korea JoongAng Daily Retrieved 2023 09 20 a b c Miyuki dori Shopping Street Korea town OSAKA INFO Retrieved 2023 09 20 アクセス 一般社団法人大阪コリアタウン 御幸通商店街 osaka koreatown com Retrieved 2023 10 08 a b c d e Museum Spotlighting Korean Residents to Open in Osaka Yomiuri Shimbun 2023 02 14 Retrieved 2023 09 20 a b Rogers Krista 2022 01 31 We visit Osaka s newly dubbed Koreatown for the first time and set our sights on all of the food SoraNews24 Japan News Retrieved 2023 09 20 a b Carrigan Liam 2020 03 06 Ikuno Ward Osaka s Own Korea Town Osaka com Retrieved 2023 09 20 a b c d e f g h i Laurent Christopher 2020 08 04 Asia Pacific Perspectives Journal v16n2 Fall 2020 Diaspora Exclusion and Appropriation The Cuisine of the Korean Minority in Japan University of San Francisco Retrieved 2023 09 20 a b c Osaka Korea Town Museum Founding Mission Statement Osaka Korea Town Museum Retrieved 2023 09 20 a b c Kaufman Matt 2019 06 22 Discovering a Japanese Korean fusion feast in Osaka Ikuno Koreatown The Japan Times Retrieved 2023 09 20 Miller KK 2015 06 11 The changing face of Tokyo s Shin Okubo and the decline of Japan s biggest Korea Town SoraNews24 Japan News Retrieved 2023 09 20 McCurry Justin 2022 04 21 A difficult time why popular TV series Pachinko was met with silence in Japan The Guardian ISSN 0261 3077 Retrieved 2023 09 20 女子中学生が大阪最大のコリアタウン鶴橋で大虐殺予告 在特会 A Junior High School Girl Warns of a Tsuruhashi Massacre in Osaka s Biggest Koreatown Zaitokukai Niconico in Japanese 2013 04 03 retrieved 2023 09 29 a b Arudou Debito 2016 01 31 Osaka s move on hate speech should be just the first step The Japan Times Retrieved 2023 09 20 a b Cho Ki weon March 9 2018 Correspondent s Column The concerning response of the Japanese public to Chongryon shooting The Hankyoreh Retrieved 2023 09 20 Rise of Hate Speech in Japan ヒューライツ大阪 www hurights or jp Retrieved 2023 09 30 김 표향 2018 08 14 전직 야쿠자 日 혐한 시위에 어퍼컷 날리다 Hankook Ilbo in Korean Retrieved 2023 10 04 김 희원 2018 08 09 혐오 차별 맞선 양심의 외침 Segye Ilbo in Korean Retrieved 2023 10 04 Rosario Alexandra Del 2022 06 15 Inside Pachinko The Apple TV Hit From Soo Hugh That Captured Hearts Deadline Retrieved 2023 09 20 External links editOsaka Korea Town Museum Homepage in English 재일동포 일본 최대의 재일동포 밀집지역 오사카 이쿠노구의 고향의 맛 KBS 20111027 방송 on YouTube a 2011 Korean language documentary about the enclave and its cuisine Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Ikuno Korea Town amp oldid 1211661663, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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