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Article Directory :: Social Articles
I bumped into Fred in a bar last night. He had just come back from a trip to the states and was reflecting on language choices, ethnicity, Asian languages, and English. Fred has traveled a bit around Asia and seen some of the same paradigms repeated in different environments: beliefs that Caucasians are unable to speak Asian languages, that all Caucasians speak English, that one should always speak English to a Caucasian, and that Caucasians are unable to truly understand the local culture.
This time Fred was going on about a flight he took on Japan Airlines (JAL). Fred spoke Japanese pretty well, and he knew it. He wasn't offended when Japanese staff at airports and on airlines and such persisted in speaking English to him, even when he spoke Japanese to them and his Japanese was better than their English. Fred just followed a different world view, believing that when people shared two or more common languages they should speak in whatever language offered the maximum understanding to both of them.
Fred's world view differed from many of the Japanese he met though. They believed that they should soldier on in English, even when Fred's Japanese was better than their English. Some did this because they liked to speak English, while others thought it was their obligation as people working in the travel service sector with Westerners. Not all Japanese believed this and some would speak Japanese with Fred.
Fred was speaking with a fellow expat, and was just moving to his key point as I walked in the room. "What is it that makes so many Asians see Caucasian faces and assume that they do not and cannot speak whatever the language of the country is?" I didn't even try to reply as Fred went on, "Actually an even better question might be what makes many Asians see a Caucasian face and be unable to recognize that they are speaking whatever the language is. I remember once when I was hitchhiking between Tokyo and Osaka and a trucker picked me up. We had been talking for about 10 minutes, in Japanese, when he asked me if I could speak Japanese."
Fred concluded with a sweep of his hand, "It never fails to blow me away when people have beliefs so strong that they can ignore reality. How could we have talked for 10 minutes in Japanese and the truck driver didn't figure out what language we were speaking in?" And with that Fred took a large drink of his beer as if he had said everything worth saying.
I had heard Fred's stories before of other Westerners in Korea and China who had had similar experiences. We all wondered why some Japanese, Koreans, and Chinese didn't think more before saying things that totally ignored the reality in front of them. I guess it all just comes down to perception. Reality is as you perceive it to be.
You can find Aaron Language Services on the Web at http://www.aaronlanguage.com/ . We provide translation from Japanese to other European languages and back to Japanese, edit English and other European languages, and offer online English coaching to a primarily Japanese client base. If you can't read Japanese, you can always reach us via our personnel page.
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