• Tragedy knows no foreignness

    Sometimes it is tragedy that reminds us of the most fundamental human truths. Last week, the world community witnessed the devastation that came upon Christchurch. Nations across the world now hope for and contribute to a swift process of rebuilding and rehabilitation, and they join New Zealand in mourning the victims of this terrible disaster that shook the nation. And of those countries feeling the pain of the Christchurch earthquake, Japan in particular mourns deeply. Among the 100-plus victims still buried under the rubble of the collapsed CTV building in downtown Christchurch are more than twenty Japanese exchange students who were studying English in New Zealand. Their status, along with…

  • Love Your Mother

    Pictures of planet Earth “our home planet” capture our imagination.  This one commemorates Earth Day and its message is simple: we need to love the planet we live on. It’s easy to take our ability to see the whole Earth for granted and to forget that until the ‘Space Age’ at the end of the 1960’s we had simply never seen it that way:  we’d never got the whole thing in perspective. “The Blue Marble”, the photograph that appears in our logo, was taken in 1972 by Harrison Schmitt, one of the astronauts of the Apollo 17 mission.  Robert Poole is his book Earthrise:  How Man First Saw the Earth describes it as ‘A photographic manifesto for…

  • Burakumin leather workers from 1873 photo by SHINICHI SUZUKI

    Hometown Foreigners

    We traditionally define a “foreigner” as someone who comes from a country other than our own. But that definition is too easy. It does not fully encompass the range of people who find themselves “foreigners” in their own hometowns (that is facing exclusion and discrimination): sometimes because of the occupation they hold. The Japanese film “Okuribito,” known among English-speaking audiences as “Departures,” explores the subtle but serious stigma that society can attach to certain lines of work. The movie, which won the 2009 Academy Award for Best Foreign Language Film, focuses on the life of Daigo, the protagonist, who loses his job as a cellist in Tokyo and moves back…

  • Abolish Foreignness

    Eight million children under the age of five die each year from largely preventable causes.  One billion people live in abject poverty. Thousands die crossing international borders while fleeing poverty, war or persecution.  Rich countries reinforce barriers, laws and measures to prevent people crossing their borders.  Hundreds of thousands are held in migration prisons  as if they were criminals. 67 million people live as refugees or are internally displaced as a result of persecution, war, poverty or other causes.   Believing that human beings are “foreigners” makes such profound human rights violations possible.