The Korea Times

K-pop and Kimchi: Tokyo’s ‘Little Seoul’ shrugs off spat

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TOKYO (AFP) — In the “little Seoul” area of Tokyo, Japanese shoppers flock to get their fix of K-pop and Korean face cream, seemingly shrugging off a deep freeze in Japan-South Korean ties.

Visitors to Shin-Okubo could be forgiven for thinking they had stumbled into a district in Seoul, with rows of restaurant­s serving kimchi and music shops selling the latest K-pop hits from BTS or Wanna One.

And in contrast to South Korea where anger over a deteriorat­ion in bilateral ties has sparked consumer boycotts of Japanese goods, it seems it takes more than a political spat to put off avid fans of Korean products.

“I love everything, K-pop, the food, the clothes. I would also like the two countries to make up,” said Anna Kaneko, a 19-year-old student making one of her regular trips to Shin-Okubo with a friend.

The latest row is deeply rooted in the bloody history between the two, particular­ly Tokyo’s occupation of the peninsula as a colony, during which hundreds of thousands were forced to come to Japan as labor and women forced into brothels as wartime sex slaves.

Koreans remaining in Japan after Tokyo’s defeat in World War II suffered discrimina­tion and hardship and several exist to this day in a grey zone in terms of citizenshi­p.

The diplomatic friction has culminated in tit-for-tat trade restrictio­ns and the scrapping of a military informatio­n-sharing pact between the two — alarming the United States which has security treaties with both.

Bae Cheo-leun, who runs an organizati­on bringing together South Koreans in Japan, admitted that a few years ago “hate speech” against Koreans could be heard in the streets around Shin-Okubo but this has not been the case during the most recent row.

“There was a law brought in to prevent it which has proved effective, even though there is no real punishment,” Bae told AFP.

“The young Japanese K-pop fans who come to this district have a deep love for South Korean culture,” added Bae, who accuses politician­s on both sides of whipping up “nationalis­t sentiment.”

Kim Heun-hee, a Korean teacher who also runs a cultural cafe in Shin-Okubo, pointed to a difference in attitude between South Koreans living in Japan and those based in their homeland.

“The feeling in South Korea is very severe against Japan now, so some people think it must be dangerous for South Koreans to be in Japan,” said Kim. “On the other hand, Japanese people in Shin-Okubo don’t want to talk about South Korea so much. Japanese people don’t have much interest in politics but many people also seem to be reluctant to respond heatedly to the political difficulti­es.”

Many South Koreans have taken up a “NO Japan” boycott campaign of Japanese products, ranging from beer, clothes and cosmetics to cigarettes, but there has been little apparent retaliatio­n from consumers in the other direction.

South Korean culture has spread globally in recent years, led by the huge success of K-pop stars such as Psy — whose 2012 hit “Gangnam Style” became the first video to top one billion views on YouTube — and BTS, which finally topped charts in the U.S. and Britain earlier this year.

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 ?? AFP-Yonhap ?? A man visits a building of Korean restaurant­s in the Shin-Okubo district, known as Tokyo’s Korean town lined with small shops, most of them selling Korean food and pop culture items, in this Aug. 26 file photo.
AFP-Yonhap A man visits a building of Korean restaurant­s in the Shin-Okubo district, known as Tokyo’s Korean town lined with small shops, most of them selling Korean food and pop culture items, in this Aug. 26 file photo.

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