The Japan News by The Yomiuri Shimbun

Okinawans with U.S. fathers suffer discrimina­tion

- The Yomiuri Shimbun

When she was little, Malia Higa was told by her mother, “Your father was killed in a war.”

She was about 10 years old when her mother revealed that he was actually alive. He was a U.S. soldier who had been stationed in Okinawa Prefecture and, a er ghting in Vietnam, returned to the United States.

Higa is now a homemaker in the city of Uruma. She was born in 1968, four years before Okinawa’s return to Japan. By her appearance, everyone could quickly tell she was a child of a foreigner.

Elementary school classes about the Battle of Okinawa were particular­ly hard — when her classmates saw pictures of American troops attacking Okinawa, they taunted her, saying, “Go home, American.”

A er that, on the memorial day to commemorat­e those who died in the battle, Higa would keep her head down and her breathing quiet in the classroom.

“I think my classmates hated the U.S. bases [in Okinawa] that they remembered when they saw my face,” she said.

In 1995, Higa was refused entry to an eatery where she had been a frequent customer, a er an Okinawan girl was raped by American soldiers. Even though she insisted, “I’m an Uchinanchu (Okinawan),” the owner didn’t relent, saying, “You look American to other customers.” However, as a citizen of the same prefecture, she understood the backlash to U.S. bases and didn’t hate the owner.

STATELESS CHILDREN

A er World War II, many Okinawan women had to support their families by working at restaurant­s or bars for U.S. military personnel or serving as maids for U.S. soldiers’ families. It was not uncommon that they dated or married American men they met at their workplaces and had children.

But U.S. soldiers o en ended contact with their partners a er they were transferre­d out of Okinawa, leaving abandoned mothers and children in nancial trouble.

e children of single mothers were stateless for some time a er Okinawa’s return to Japan, as the father

had to be Japanese to obtain nationalit­y. is situation continued until the enforcemen­t of the revised Nationalit­y Law in 1985.

Stateless children weren’t covered by health insurance and all medical expenses had to be paid out of pocket. ey received no vouchers for vaccinatio­ns and no notices about compulsory education.

ey were admitted to compulsory education schools on probation only a er they applied.

Children born to American servicemen and local women were the targets of frustratio­n and anger over the Battle of Okinawa, the suppressiv­eness of U.S. military rule and the endless incidents and accidents caused by U.S. military personnel.

Among them, Melissa Tomlinson of Yomitan Village was born 15 years a er Okinawa’s return. She cannot forget what a teacher said to her, referring to an incident involving U.S.

soldiers during her school days. As the teacher asked her, “What do you think about it as an American?” she was at a loss for words.

When Tomlinson, now 34, was a university student in the prefecture, she interviewe­d about 50 people with background­s similar to hers, and found many of them had been traumatize­d by such thoughtles­s remarks.

“In Okinawa, where there is

strong opposition to the U.S. military, many people [born to Americans and Japanese] have di culty living” in the local community, she said.

SLOW ASSISTANCE

In the city of Ginowan, there is a private school that accepts children who can’t t into the local community due to discrimina­tion. e school was establishe­d by mothers in 1998 as a place to learn the languages and cultures of Japan and the United States. At rst, the school was like a shelter, but now it aims to develop people who can play an active role in society.

e city’s board of education recognizes students’ attendance at the school as equivalent to going to a public school.

“We aim to raise children who can choose how to live, whether as a Japanese or an American,” said principal Ayako Komine, 38.

However, support for Okinawan women has been generally slow to expand.

In January last year, the prefectura­l government set up a consultati­on center for people experienci­ng trouble related to marriages or romantic relationsh­ips with U.S. soldiers, among others.

Misaki Smith, a 45-year-old resident of the town of Chatan, supports the prefectura­l center while also pursuing consulting work for women through a private-sector project.

“Problems have continued since before Okinawa’s return to Japan, but support for troubled women is inadequate,” said Smith.

COEXISTENC­E CONTINUES

Higa went to the United States when she was 17 and met her biological father for the rst time. Her father had another family and refused to meet her for a while, but in 2000 he visited Okinawa and apologized. ey continued to communicat­e with each other until he passed away in 2011.

Higa has lived her life with a strong awareness that she is an Uchinanchu, despite the harsh gaze of some local residents. At a local market, she talks to sales sta in the Okinawan dialect, which has become less common.

ere are still 31 facilities exclusivel­y used by the U.S. military in Okinawa, and local people will continue to coexist with the military and American soldiers.

“I want Okinawa to be a place that accepts an Uchinanchu like me,” Higa said. (April 2)

 ?? The Yomiuri Shimbun ?? Malia Higa gives an interview on March 22 near a U.S. military base in Kin, Okinawa Prefecture, where she spent her elementary school days.
The Yomiuri Shimbun Malia Higa gives an interview on March 22 near a U.S. military base in Kin, Okinawa Prefecture, where she spent her elementary school days.

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