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Japan Remains a Safe Haven for Foreign Travelers
Japanese who travel abroad are repeatedly warned in travel literature, by their travel
agents, by friends, and by the news media that once they leave Japan they will be in danger of being robbed, injured
or even killed if they do not remain alert and take special measures to protect themselves.
The Japanese are cautioned never to set their bags down in a hotel lobby or in any kind of transportation terminal;
to never walk in certain areas of cities at night; to be wary of conmen, touts, and so on.
Unfortunately, these warnings are not exaggerated or based on unwarranted fears. Given the number of Japanese who
are robbed and often beaten while they are abroad it is remarkable that so many -- some 14 to 15 million -- continue
to travel overseas each year.
In contrast to this, it is so rare for a foreign traveler in Japan to be robbed, beaten, killed or even harassed
in any way that when it does happen it makes national headlines.
The incidence of violent crimes has gone up dramatically in Japan since the introduction of democracy and Western
culture following the end of World War II in 1945, but the crime rate is still far below that of Western countries,
and generally does not involve foreign victims.
One often hears that in Japan women can walk alone, at all hours of the night, in city districts that are notorious
for their low life and the presence of street thugs and professional gangsters without fear of being accosted,
robbed or raped. And that is true.
One also hears that foreign women are even safer when they are out and about in Japan --wherever they may be and
whatever the hour -- because Japanese males, including the criminal element, are less likely to harm foreigners.
And that is true.
The continuing low level of crime in Japan, in particular the low incidence of people being attacked in the streets
-- day or night -- can be attributed to Shinto and Buddhist standards established in the culture very early in
Japan’s history, and reinforced politically and socially during the long Shogunate period (1185-1868), when armed
samurai warriors
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administered the country and were empowered to severely punish law and custom breakers.
During the early decades of the Tokugawa Shogunate (1603-1867), samurai warriors were legally permitted to kill
people on the spot for violations of etiquette or the law that today would be consider minor infractions.
Given the combined influence of the Shintoism and Buddhism, both of which advocated non-violence, and the social
morality mandated and enforced by the samurai rulers of Japan, ordinary Japanese became paragons of honesty and
good manners.
Still today, people routinely leave unlocked bicycles on the sidewalks and in front of stores and stations. As
a rule, you can leave a bag or some other possession virtually anywhere in public and it will be there when you
get back. Shops routinely put product displays outside, and leave them unguarded.
It is said that the extraordinary success of vending machine marketing in Japan occurred because it was possible
to set them up out in the open, unprotected places, with virtually no chance that they would be vandalized and
robbed.
Stories abound of the time and effort people expend to return lost or forgotten property, especially where foreign
travelers are concerned. This is not only a manifestation of the honesty that is built into the character of the
Japanese. It is also because the Japanese feel that they and the whole country are responsible for the welfare
of visitors.
This security factor is one of Japan’s greatest assets, and is an integral part of the attraction that the country
has as a travel destination. It is also one of the reasons why foreign residents are so attracted to life in Japan.
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John Erskine Banta is the General Manager & Director of Radisson Miyako Hotel Tokyo
Source: Amazing Japan http://amazingjapan.info
Courtesy PRWeb at http://www.prweb.com, with resort information
provided by The Timeshare Beat
January 2004
Contacts: john-banta@tokyo.miyakohotels.ne.jp
boye@amazingjapan.info
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