‘Saitama Kimchi Diary’ celebrates grassroots resistance to discrimination

A short film released on YouTube about a group of mothers in Saitama selling handmade kimchi to support a cash-strapped ethnic Korean school offers an intimate look at how grassroots efforts to resist discrimination can expand outward to help create a more tolerant society.

The 15-minute film, titled “Saitama Kimchi Diary,” sees cultural anthropologist Kohei Inose, 42, join the women on a day in March, following them from the arrival of some vegetables for pickling to an end-of-day cleanup and chat.

The women have been selling the traditional Korean dish every other month since 2017 to help their children’s school, which is affiliated with a North Korean-backed organization of Korean residents of Japan, financially survive after Saitama Prefecture cut off subsidies in fiscal 2010 over the issue of Japanese nationals who were abducted by North Korea.

At the mothers’ 25th kimchi sale, one woman speaks enthusiastically to Inose about how her daughters have helped out at the events, leading to more conversations at home.

She also discusses how the group’s perspective on what they view as the prefecture’s discriminatory measure has broadened through their participation in a bazaar run by an organization of people with disabilities, whose members are also regular customers at the kimchi-selling events.

“I hope people will change their thoughts little by little so that those who’ve been hurt by discrimination can heal and be freed,” she says.

Inose has an elder brother with a disability, as does his cameraman and editor of the short film, 31-year-old Yuki Morita. Inose’s brother works at a farm established by his parents for people with disabilities in the city’s Minuma district.

The school, called Saitama Korean Elementary and Middle School, is also located in the district. It has extensive green areas, and formed an exchange with the farm a few years ago.

Inose learned the school’s history through repeated conversations with its graduates. “If you permit discrimination against one group, it will lead to discrimination against others,” he says.

This feeling prompted Inose to form an association in 2018, calling for the resumption of subsidies to the school to make Saitama into a prefecture “where anyone and everyone can live together.” Inose serves as co-leader of the association, and the organization of people with disabilities also participates in it.

The Saitama prefectural assembly adopted a resolution in 2012 to suspend the provision of subsidies to the school until the question of the abduction of Japanese nationals by North Korea is settled. It was just one of many local governments across Japan that took similar steps toward schools linked to North Korea between 2010 and 2014. The central government has also excluded such high schools from being part of a tuition waiver program.

The schools are managed under the supervision of the General Association of Korean Residents in Japan, which acts as North Korea’s de facto embassy in the absence of diplomatic ties. In recent years, student numbers at the schools have been in sharp decline, but in 2018 there were 5,800 students at 66 schools. They use a similar curriculum to that of Japanese schools and most parents reportedly opt for them primarily to give their children a grounding in Korean language and culture rather than as a result of any political support for North Korea.

The association led by Inose maintains that while the abductions are a serious diplomatic problem, the infringement of children’s rights to study is a separate issue, and one that will lead to discrimination against the students based on guilt by association.

Inose, Morita (who was Inose’s student at university) and others produced the documentary to commemorate the 60th anniversary of the ethnic Korean school’s founding.

The resolution adopted by the prefectural assembly stated that the provision of subsidies to the school “could not gain the understanding of citizens in the prefecture.” But Inose thinks such a stance is the wrong way to view the issue.

“We want to give visual form to the hearts of people willing to live in coexistence,” Inose says. He plans to produce a sequel focusing on fathers of students at the school.

To learn more about “Saitama Kimchi Diary,” visit tomoni-saitama-koreanschool.org (Japanese only).

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