Monday, March 19, 2018

Interiior Secretary doesn't understand how 'Konnichiwa' was an insult

Interior Secretary Ryan Zinke doesn't understand his racist gaffe during a hearing.

SECRETARY OF THE INTERIOR Ryan Zinke thought he was being welcoming by greeting Rep. Colleen Hanabusa with a Japanese greeting "Konnichiwa."

During a House Natural Resources Committee hearing today on the Department of Interior’s Fiscal Year 2019 budget proposal, Secretary Ryan Zinke responded to Rep. Colleen Hanabusa (D-HI) by making a racially insensitive comment in reference to her Japanese heritage.

After hearing her appeal to reinstate funding for a program that would preserve the WWII detention camps for Japanese Americans during which he told the secretary that her own grandparents were placed in those internment camps, Zinke's first response was "Oh,  Konnichiwa," the Japanese afternoon greeting.

Zinke got zinged on social meda for what many Asian/Americans saw as an insensitive remark at best, an insult at worst.

On Saturday (March 17), Zinke asked reporters: "How could ever saying 'good morning' be bad?"

RELATED: Zinke's racist remark mars Congressional hearing
Well, let's count the ways.

First, since it was still morning, the correct greeting in Japanese would be ‘ohayo gozaimasu’ as Hanabusa corrected him.

Secondly, Hanabusa was born and raised in Hawaii, which (in case Zinke needs to be reminded) is one of the states in the U.S.A. She is a fourth-generation American.

“Whether intentional or not, his comments invoke the offensive stereotype that Asian Americans are perpetual foreigners regardless of how long their families have lived in the United States," said Rep. Judy Chu, chair of the Congressional Asian Pacific American Caucus. "What is even more alarming is that Secretary Zinke made this stereotype immediately after my colleague discussed the abhorrent racial prejudice that her grandparents and other Japanese Americans endured during World War II due to government-sanctioned profiling.

“It is absolutely outrageous that Interior Secretary Zinke chose to racialize Congresswoman Hanabusa’s identity after she spoke about the importance of preserving funding for the Japanese American Confinement Sites where nearly 120,000 Japanese Americans were unjustly incarcerated during World War II. Rather than greet her like he would any other Member of Congress, he responded to her as if she did not speak any English.


It would have been especially cool if Hanabusaresponded in German, 
the language of Zinke's immigrant ancestors, "Sprechen wir doch auf Englisch" (Let's speak in English.).

“Secretary Zinke’s remark was both inappropriate for the occasion and insensitive to Congresswoman Hanabusa, who had just imparted a deeply personal story of her grandfathers both being held in internment camps," said the Asian Americans Advancing Justice in a statement. 

"Instead of showing sensitivity toward the subject and Representative Hanabusa, Secretary Zinke chose that inopportune time to share his lack of Japanese cultural knowledge when he responded flippantly, ‘Oh, Konnichiwa’ rather than offer a serious reply to the Congresswoman’s question. His remark also demonstrates the “perpetual foreigner” problem faced by Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders.

Sen. Tammy Duckworth (D-Ill.) tweeted in response: "Nope. Racism is not ok."

The exchange also drew the ire of Sen. Mazie Hirono (D-Hawaii), who slammed Zinke for acting "flippant" and "juvenile" in his response to Hanabusa's question.
Hanabusa tweeted Saturday night she wanted to focus on how the "administration ignored one of the most racially motivated periods in American history by defunding the Japanese American Confinement Sites (JACS) grant program." She also wrote that when Zinke "decided to greet me in Japanese (when no one else was greeted in their ancestral language), I understood this is precisely why Japanese Americans were treated as they were more than 75 years ago."

The most appropriate response Zinke should have made would have been to acknowledge Rep. Hanabusa’s tragic story and respect the history of the incarceration of more than 120,000 Japanese Americans as a shameful, a dark chapter in U.S. history that should be remembered as such by this administration.  

"Zinke’s gaffe demonstrates how little we have learned from our history and why the administration must continue to fund these memorials,” concluded the AAAJ statement.
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