What is your experience with Japan?
What aspects of Japanese culture interest you?
I have fairly strong interest in Japanese literature. I've particularly enjoyed books by Kawabata Yasunari, Endo Shusaku, and Murakami Haruki.:thumbs:
One of the things I miss most about Japan is the food. My mouth still waters when I think about Hokka Hokka. :love2:
Hey, John of Japan!!!
Discussion in 'General Baptist Discussions' started by Ijiwaru Sensei, Jun 12, 2006.
-
-
John of Japan Well-Known MemberSite Supporter
Eat your heart out: on Monday my wife and I will go to our favorite restaurant, "Five Star." It is one of those "all you can eat" barbecue places, you know, where you cook your own meat on the burner set in your table? But this one has an incredible selection, with Japanese, Chinese, Korean and western foods: various meats, sushi, ramen, breads, salads, kimchee, etc. There, is your mouth watering? :smilewinkgrin:
And now that I've done that mean thing to you, I'll answer your questions.
First of all, we celebrated our 25th year in Japan as missionaries on May 6 of this year. It has been quite a ride. We lived in Saitama (Kawagoe City and Tokorozawa City) for the first two years while I went to language school down in Shibuy Ward, Tokyo. Loved it! Tokyo is so huge and fascinating. Then we spent 13 years in Yokohama planting Joy Baptist Church, after which we moved up here to the northern island of Hokkaido, where we have been ever since. Our city of Asahikawa is in a basin, surrounded by 360 degrees of beautiful mountains, and has a population of 360,000.
As to what aspects of Japanese culture I enjoy, I love the history, and I am a martial artist. I have black belts in jujutsu, karate and kung fu, and love to read in both English and Japanese about this part of the culture. I write a regular column in the GMAU Journal (www.gmau.org) which you might enjoy reading.
I have held two Christian martial arts seminars at the Japan Bible Home in Gunma Prefecture, and both times we had a good group from the States and took them on historical trips to Nikko, where the great (and nasty) Shogun Tokugawa Ieyasu is buried. Fascinating! Up here in Hokkaido we recently took a great trip to Hakodate, a famous port city where the last battle against the Meiji Emperor was fought by the famous "Shinsengumi" militia.
As for the literature, I do enjoy it occasionally, but do my recreational reading in American detective books. I do enjoy haiku poetry, and occasionally pick up my bilingual version of Bassho's Narrow Road to a Far Province or the Hyakunin Isshu ("One Hundred Poets").
So, where did you live in Japan? -
-
John of Japan Well-Known MemberSite Supporter
Have you read anything by Ayako Miura, the Christian novelist with Japan-wide fame? I have translations of The Wind is Howling and Shiokari Pass by her. Interestingly enough, she is from right here in Asahikawa, and there is a little museum devoted to her memory. (She died several years ago.) One of these days I plan to take a train to the real Shikari Pass where the incident on which her novel is based occurred.
To be honest? You are a good cut above the average American English teacher in Japan, what with having your MA and all! Good for you! Don't want to tell me where you teach? By PM, maybe? No problem if you don't.
And my deepest apologies for tantalizing you with our upcoming meal at Five Star. :smilewinkgrin: Anything I should eat in your honor? Do you go for sushi? I always start the meal with a salmon sushi. They actually even have beef sushi there, too!
I love ramen, but I don't usually eat it there at Five Star. We have a special little ramen restaurant we go to with Sapporo ramen, which we thought was the best in the country even when we lived in Yokohama. :tongue3: -
-
John of Japan Well-Known MemberSite Supporter
I remember the first time I had a raw egg after swearing I never would. Coming home from language school, I stopped in a train station for a bowl of soba noodles. I was so proud of myself when I read the Chinese characters and ordered "egg soba"--until I saw him break that raw egg over the noodles! Culture shock!! I ate it though, and it was good.:laugh:
So what was your worst culinary culture shock over here? I once bought a chocolate chip ice cream bar--then found myself picking beans out of my teeth instead of chocolate chips!! :confused: :eek:
As for Hokka Hokka, we never have gone there much. We do occasionally get the obento lunches in train stations or convenience stores when we are on a trip.