suzukyさんがリツイート
変化の兆しのない日本の人種差別問題
— VICE Japan (@VICEJapan) May 25, 2021
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「スウェーデンにでも移住したいです。早くこの国を出たいです。あまりに長くいすぎました」https://t.co/IxI3o7Nbql
‘It Might’ve Gotten Worse’: How Racial Injustice Hasn’t Changed in Japan
— Hanako Montgomery (@HanakoMontgome1) May 25, 2021
For @VICE #stillhere series https://t.co/s8mZ3BVjcR
つらい思いをしてきたのだろう。こういう言い方をしてしまう気持ちはわからなくもない。
While some Black families in the United States have considered moving abroad to protect their families, especially their Black sons, Europe is no different. We are living in, and raising European children in, mostly homogeneous societies brimming with microaggressions, where racism and prejudice aren’t adequately discussed openly, and it is often seen as an “American” problem.
‘Sweden doesn’t acknowledge that it has a huge problem with racism’
“I wasn't inspired to organise this event as much as I was frustrated. I'm frustrated with the way the system works, with how black people are always targeted, not only in the US but also in Sweden and everywhere else. It was only the most recent happenings in America that made me tip over. Something has to be done, I thought. The world is just standing by passively,” Jones said
“The biggest problem in Sweden is that the country doesn't acknowledge that it has a huge problem with racism. In certain respects Sweden is just a very hypocritical country. It wants to be the friend that everybody likes. But Sweden has in fact participated in slavery. Sweden portrays itself as anti-war yet sells a large amount of war-weapons,” she noted.
Jones herself experiences racism every day. “The question is just how I face it in any given moment, and in which form it comes. Will it be the old lady next to me on the subway? Will it be the security guard who is supposed to protect me?”
スエーデンもそんなに変わらんような気もするが、スエーデンで頑張るもよし。日本で 問題を解決していく努力をするのもよし。ただ、今回のインタビューは気持ちを吐き出せたかもしれないけど、解決の緒(いとぐち)にはならんなああ。
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