|  Imagine a sweaty 8-year-old boy running home from school, wary   that it is almost 6 p.m., dropping his books carelessly on the kitchen floor and   flicking the switch of a rickety old black-and-white TV. That was 1978, the year   when the Japanese anime Voltes V hit Philippine television and caught all   Filipino children by surprise. For many, it was their first glimpse of Japanese   culture, and for those with black-and-white TV sets, the colors were not so   vivid then.  I was one of those 8-year-old kids, the so-called Martial Law   babies, who got caught in the web of Voltes V mania. Our family TV was then   already decrepit and the outdoor antenna had just been swept by a recent storm.   But despite peeking through the grainy monochrome, my tiny heart still skipped a   beat each time Voltes V got hit by one of those sinister Boazanian robots whose   leader wanted to rule planet Earth. To my young, impressionable mind, Japan’s   Voltes V made everything perfect.  The parade of Japanese robots began with Voltes V, and then   came Mazinger Z, then Daimos, then the Star Rangers, and soon enough, prime time   was swamped by all of these Japanese cartoons, and kids like me then began to   mimic the characters. It was fun acting out Steve Armstrong (or Kenichi Gou),   the venerable pilot of Volt Panzer, or Star 1 of the Star Rangers in our own   make-believe world. Each morning, the previous night’s episodes would fill   classroom talk and everyone would trade stickers or collectibles of their   favorite Japanese heroes.  Forget about Superman and the Superfriends, or Wonder Woman   and Batman! Somehow, in that brief glimpse of time 25 years ago, Japan had   caught the imagination of Filipino children, and their lives would never be the   same. I said "brief" because just when my family could finally afford those very   expensive colored TVs then, former President Marcos banned the showing of all   Japanese anime. If it was just possible to join the rebel groups during those   dark, gloomy days, I would have planted a long, hard kiss on my mom’s cheek and   headed off to the hinterlands with my toy M16 submachine gun.  Imagine the day after Marcos pulled the plug. An eerie silence   soon replaced the animated chatter in the school cafeteria. It was as if someone   in the family had died. Voltes V and the rest of the Japanese heroes are gone.   But life continues, so they speak, but not without the episodes playing and   replaying subliminally in our young minds.  That was my first glimpse of Japan and her rich culture ---   not through the eyes of a venerable sensei but through Japan’s creative   animators and manga artists. Little did I know that 12 years later, in 1990 when   I was 20, I would first set foot on Japanese soil, not to search for my long,   lost superhero, but to experience Japanese culture and life firsthand as a   delegate of the 17th Ship for Southeast Asian Youth Program.  It was on a balmy autumn day in November 1990 when the luxury   liner MS Nippon Maru arrived in Tokyo to the warm greetings of Japanese   kindergarten school kids. More than 200 delegates from Southeast Asian countries   have come for a week’s visit, to snap happily at tourist spots, loiter through   shopping streets, and join Japanese families for home stay. Watching the   5-year-old children, with their immaculately white uniforms and blue caps,   playing various musical instruments and greeting us as we arrived, confirmed   what I had thought about Japan since those Voltes V days. That Japan and her   people are truly warm.  Asakusa in Tokyo was my first glimpse of Japan’s juxtaposition   of sorts. Here, the ancient and modern, the gargantuan and the delicate, the   refined and shabby all combined to create an aura of excitement and mystery. It   was where space-age modernity blended with ancient traditions, where cell   phone-toting, computer-savvy tourists basked in the myths of old, and where the   century-old aroma of rice crackers mixed with hotdog scents. Looking back, I   have realized that my impression of Asakusa then actually mirrored what Japan   really is. That behind the high-tech gizmos and ultramodern technology lies an   ancient culture steeped in tradition. Japan’s modern facade covers an older,   hidden interior. In Asakusa, I was in its midst.  The 1990 junket was not just photo-ops in front of temples,   museums and shrines; it was also an educational tour. A small group of   delegates, including myself, visited Tokyo’s sewage treatment facility, and I   never knew till then that the water that drains through our sinks actually goes   through elaborate processes before it is finally released to the   environment.  It is, therefore, not surprising why Tokyo Bay and Tokyo’s   inland rivers and lakes continue to teem with life. It is a testament to the   Japanese people’s commitment to the environment and to the unsung heroes who   labor in these waste treatment facilities. While back home, garbage is a   perennial problem, here in Tokyo, people sort their garbage well and take them   out only on designated days. It is no wonder why Tokyo is one of the cleanest   metropolitan areas in the world despite its millions of inhabitants. While   thermodynamics’ second law states that everything moves toward chaos or entropy,   it is somehow not applicable in Japan. Indeed, only a people can make this   happen.  My first glimpse of Japanese family life was also in 1990   during a home stay experience in Yamanashi, which is at the foot of the sacred   Mt. Fuji. The names of my hosts escape my memory now but their hospitality and   warmness linger. From them, I caught my first glimpse of the simple pleasures of   a typical Japanese family: delicious food, heartwarming conversations, and close   family ties. Because I hardly knew Nihongo then, smiles, hugs and warm   handshakes replaced words that need not be spoken.  My next trip to Japan came in 1996 as a research trainee   through the auspices of the Japan International Cooperation Agency. From May   1996 to March 1997, I spent most of my time at the Tsukuba-based Microbial   Resources Laboratory of the then National Institute of Bioscience and   Human-Technology, working on oil-degrading microbes with the excellent   scientist, Dr. Takanori Higashihara. From that experience, I caught my first   glimpse of the formidable Japanese work ethic, which is truly the driving force   of Japan’s rise to economic power from the rubbles of the Second World War.  The Japanese people’s drive for excellence was typified by my   lab mates then who had no qualms about staying in the lab from 12 to 14 hours   daily to complete their experiments and write their reports. Scientific   integrity was always stressed and dishonesty in whatever form was intolerable.   The group mentality and belongingness was very strong, as exemplified by the   willingness of each one to assist in another’s task just to fulfill the group’s   goals. Indeed, among research groups throughout Japan, cooperation is several   rungs higher than competition, and this translates to numerous scientific papers   and break-throughs, as well as the healthy collaboration between industry and   academe. Those ten months as a JICA participant answered my question as to why   Japan is also a technological superpower.  My stint in Tsukuba did not end in 1997, since two years after   returning home and working at the University of the Philippines, I was back in   Japan as a Monbusho scholarship grantee at the prestigious University of   Tsukuba, the intellectual cradle of three Nobel laureates. From 1999 to 2003, I   was mostly under the tutelage of another excellent scientist, a female at that,   Dr. Hiroko Isoda. In these four years, I had the opportunity to immerse myself   deeper into Japanese culture and experience firsthand the similarities and   contrasts between Philippine and Japanese lifestyles. Among my memorable   impressions are these.  The first thing that struck me is the sensei concept. Here in   Japan, no word elicits more reverence and even fear than the word sensei. For   many, sensei means God, and for a lowly ryugakusei like me then, the sensei   practically had control over my future. There is probably no such equivalent in   the Philippines nor in the Western world. Certainly, there are professors and   teachers, but the connotation of sensei in Japan is sometimes close to that of   an infallible person, as I had observed. However, for many of these so-called   senseis, they do live up to their titles and assume full responsibility for   those under their care.  Bicycles and umbrellas illustrate another peculiar aspect of   Japanese culture. While the Japanese are known for their impeccable honesty and   integrity, their Achilles’ heel lies in two simple things: bicycles and   umbrellas. Somehow, it appears that these two items are everyone’s property, and   there’s absolutely nothing wrong with "borrowing" one for just a while. Maybe it   stems from the society’s homogeneity and for everyone’s willingness to help in   times of need. Well, I am probably stretching the issue a little too much.   <smile>  Certainly, the Japan experience is never complete without the   veritable onsen, with its warm soothing waters and that peculiarly thick   sulfuric smell. Many say that the onsen can cure gastrointestinal and nervous   diseases as well as ease arthritic and rheumatic pain, thereby attracting the   elderly. Other onsens boast of curing gynecological problems. This is where   businessmen close deals, students discuss mathematical problems, women chatter   about their kids, and retirees talk about stock market trends. Undoubtedly,   those who are not used to being stark naked together with other people will   probably find the onsen an uneasy experience. However, I’ve always felt that it   is where you come face to face with our own humanity, free from any masks, just   yourself and the color of your skin. The onsen is where Japan literally bares   itself.Japan’s uniqueness also stems from the ubiquity of the hanko, that   all-important seal fashioned from expensive wood, plastic or ivory. Almost every   Japanese I know has one. It replaces the handwritten signature of other cultures   and is vital to business deals, contracts and financial transactions. It has   brought a new meaning to the word "convenience," Tokyo being the convenience   capital of the world. With the hanko, you don’t have to be personally present to   sign important documents. In fact, you can be dead and yet still transact   business with the hanko that you leave behind. Probably, nowhere in the world is   this possible except in Japan.
  Nowhere in the world, too, can you also find the most number   of karaoke bars, which literally fill to the brim on Friday and Saturday nights,   especially here in Tokyo. Karaoke has likewise invaded the world, for wherever   you find Japanese tourists, be it in South America, Southeast Asia, even in the   Middle East, there will always be karaoke. It is a testament to the Japanese   people’s inherent love for music as an expression of the soul.  With Japan’s aging and dwindling population, I see a gradual   yet imminent change in Japanese society. Gaikokujins or foreigners have become a   vital force in Japan’s growth engine, manning the food and manufacturing   industries. The information technology sector is also slowly being filled by   bilingual experts who can bridge cultural and language gaps in a gradually   shrinking world. I have also seen a growing number of mixed marriages,   particularly between Japanese men and Filipino women, or between Japanese and   Latin Americans. Japan’s gene pool is gradually changing, and for the better, I   suppose. Japan’s culture, which is already rich, will continue to evolve and be   animated by enduring influences from those who have come to Japan, stayed here,   and have loved and adopted the country as their own. I have since entered Japan’s labor force after completing my   graduate studies in March 2003. My job is that of an editor of biology,   chemistry and physics research papers written by Japanese scientists for   submission to peer-reviewed international scientific journals. After completing   my MS and PhD degrees through the auspices of the Japanese government -- in   fact, through the kindness of the Japanese people -- I have stayed to serve and   give back what Japan has so unselfishly given me and other ryugakuseis like me.   Each day, I am privileged to read, before anyone else in the world, the   excellent science that Japanese labs and scientists churn out. My task is to   polish and render them comprehensible to the international scientific   community.  Once in a while, I do get papers on robotics, and I can’t help   but recall those wonderful days more than 25 years ago -- in 1978 -- when I was   still a kid ogling on TV at Japanese robots saving the world against evil   elements. Little did I know then that my destiny would eventually lead me here,   to where Voltes V "lived," except that this land is not fictional. It is as real   as the current summer heat and the mushi atsui weather that reminds me so much   of my own country.  It must have been decades ago since I awoke to the reality   that Voltes V is just a figment of some artist’s imagination and that saving the   world isn’t really some robot’s task. However, one thought remained: that if   Japan is to march more proudly into the 21st century and make the world a better   place, its people and the gaikokujins who contribute to their society can   certainly learn from Kenichi Gou’s battle cry.  In the face of adversity: "Let’s fight together! LET’S VOLT   IN!" |