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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region Forums17-Year-Old Japanese Student Comes Out During Speech Contest
Back in December, a 17-year-old Japanese student delivered a moving speech on LGBT equality for the Hokkaido Prefectural English Speech Contest held in Sapporo, Japan, reports Towleroad.
The young man began his speech by examining the antigay legislation recently passed in Russia banning so-called gay propaganda and the controversy surrounding the Winter Olympics in Sochi because of the discriminatory law. Why do gay people have to face discrimination? he asked. Is it because they are not heterosexual? Is it a sin to love somebody of the same gender? The law cannot control love or people's feelings.
The student then spoke of Martin Luther Kings iconic I Have a Dream speech and bravely took advantage of the moment to come out as gay and reveal that he also shares Kings dream of equality. I am gay, he told the audience. I realized this when I was a junior high school student; although I never told anybody, somehow my classmates guessed that I was. They rejected me and treated me like I was not a human being; one girl said to me, 'I can't believe someone like you exists.' It made me feel like I was completely alone. In high school I decided to keep my secret safe and never tell anyone about who I really am on the inside. But this year I wanted to stop hiding that part of myself.
http://www.advocate.com/commentary/coming-out/2014/03/18/watch-17-year-old-japanese-student-comes-out-during-speech-contest
Full transcript of speech.
Why do gay people have to face discrimination? Is it because they are not heterosexual? Is it a sin to love somebody of the same gender? The law cannot control love or people's feelings.
Discrimination is the practice of treating one person or group differently from another in an unfair way. In a sense, human history has been repeating itself, one kind of discrimination after another. Racial, sexual, religious discrimination and so on.
This year the United States celebrated the 50th anniversary of the "I Have a Dream" speech made by Martin Luther King. In his speech he was dreaming of the world without any discrimination where his children are living happily with different races. His speech has encouraged African-Americans, Native Americans, as well as minorities all over the world to move forward for civil rights.
I have faced discrimination too. I am gay. I realized this when I was a junior high school student; although I never told anybody, somehow my classmates guessed that I was. They rejected me and treated me like I was not a human being; one girl said to me, "I can't believe someone like you exists." It made me feel like I was completely alone. In high school I decided to keep my secret safe and never tell anyone about who I really am on the inside. But this year I wanted to stop hiding that part of myself.
In Western countries such as the States and in Europe gay people are seen as a normal part of society, just as the difference of white and black, man and woman, Christian and Muslim. Although there are problems, the gay community is visible and is trying to make changes.
In Japan, we are afraid of being different, but we don't show our hate so openly. It is silent discrimination. If nobody talks about the problem, then it doesn't exist. Many gay people in Japan hide who they really are because they are afraid of being rejected, not with angry words or threats of violence, but with isolation. Being gay in Japan is a very lonely existence.
Maybe it will be difficult for me to live my life just like other people. But this is my life. I'm going to live it no matter what people say. Martin Luther King once said, "Take the first step in faith. You don't have to see the whole staircase, just take the first step." When I feel scared I often think of this quote. Making this speech was my first step. I never thought that I could tell people that I am gay.
I too have a dream. One day down in the meadows of Hokkaido, gay people and straight people are chatting together and eating BBQ in the sunshine. I have a dream of a world without any prejudice, hate, or ignorance which causes blind discrimination against what we can't understand. I can see the road ahead will be difficult, but I must be brave. Not just for myself, but for other young people like me.
Aristus
(66,522 posts)Interesting to see the point of view of discrimination in Japan, a country in which conformity is so all-important.
In the US, people are very open, public, and loud in their discrimination against others. It serves as a point of pride to many bigots - "Hey! See whom I'm hatin'? Great isn't it?" It also serves as a dog-whistle rallying cry for other bigots eager to express their hate publicly.
By that same token, organizations formed to express pride among those being discriminated against tend also to be very loud and public; they have to be, if they are going to reach those who believe they are alone and defenseless against the haters.
It sounds like Japan is very different, very isolating.
William769
(55,150 posts)The references he used are spot on.