Why Should Black People Care About What Happens To Japan? Because Black People Live and Work in Japan, That’s Why
• March 16, 2011 • 1 CommentPosted in SGI Nichiren Buddhism, Black People, Race, Music, Who I Am, Television, Education, Love, Homelessness, Joblessness, New Orleans, Film, The Mainstream Media (MSM), Class, Health, People of Color, American Foreign Policy, Japan, Asians/Asian Pacific/Asian Americans, Natural Disasters, Post-Traumatic Stress Syndrome, World War II, Documentary, African American History, Cultural History, Travel, World History, Black Expatriates
Tags: New Orleans, Nichiren Buddhism, Japanese, Daimoku, Gongyo, Earthquake, Jackson Street, Pioneers, Bush II, 50 Cent, SGI Buddhism, UCLA, Expatriates, Payback, Japan Earthquake, Sendai, Miyagi Prefecture, Tsunami, Nuclear Reactors, Assistance, Akafia, Dear Life Japan, Jero, Jerome White, Jerome White Jr., Tremors, Pearl Harbor, 東北地方太平洋沖地震, City, Country, Aid, The Katrina Diaspora, Nuclear Weapons, Living in Japan, Working in Japan, Foreigners, Gai-jin, Takara in Tokyo, Fulbright Fellow, Black Tokyo, Eric L. Robinson, Takara Swoopes Bullock, Meltdown, Reggie Life, "The African American Experience in Japan", Okinawans, Ainu, Outsiders, "The Japan Times", Gunjin, Kokujin, Gaijin, Homogeneity, Purity, Dobashi's, Nichi Bei Bussan, Nichiren Daishonin's Buddhism, Tofu Factory, Alexandra Wallace, Rastafarianism


























Recent Comments