Muslims Tried To Make NO GO Zones In Japan…And The Japanese Did This…
Muslims Tried To Make NO GO Zones In Japan…And The Japanese Did This…
TOKYO — For decades, Japan has maintained a reputation as one of the most culturally homogeneous and socially insular democracies in the world. It is a nation where social harmony, or wa, is elevated to a premier civic virtue, and where assimilation is not merely encouraged—it is expected. Yet, as a demographic crisis forces the country to cautiously open its doors to foreign labor, a simmering cultural friction is beginning to spill out onto the clean, orderly streets of its urban centers.
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At the heart of this friction is a growing clash over the visible expansion of Islamism and multiculturalism in a society deeply rooted in Shinto and Buddhist traditions. A series of tense confrontations, grassroots protests, and viral altercations have ignited a fierce domestic debate over whether Japan can retain its unique identity, or if it is destined to repeat what many conservative Japanese view as the failed integration policies of Western Europe.
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