Nibutani

Coordinates: 42°38′10″N 142°09′35″E / 42.63611°N 142.15972°E / 42.63611; 142.15972
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Reconstruction of a traditional Ainu dwelling (cise, pronounced "chee-seh"), outside of the Nibutani Ainu Culture Museum

Nibutani (Japanese: 二風谷), or Niptani (Ainu: ニㇷ゚タニ), is a district in the town of Biratori in Hokkaidō, Japan. It was once known as Pipaushi,[1][2] which means "a place rich in shells."[3] The population as of 2010 was 395 people. A particularly large proportion of the population of the district is of the indigenous Ainu ethnicity. As of 2000, over 80% of the residents were Ainu, making it the settlement with the largest percentage of its residents being Ainu in the country.[4]

It is also the site of the Nibutani Dam, and the hometown of Shigeru Kayano. Nibutani is also the site of two Ainu museums "Kayano Shigeru Nibutani Ainu museum" and the "Nibutani Ainu Culture Museum", as well as the Nibutani Family Land.

History[edit]

In the Edo period, Hokkaidō was assigned to the provincial government of the Matsumae clan. Ainu were forced into laboring for one-seventh to one-fifth pay by Matsumae retainers, which the Ainu regarded as slavery. Nibutani Ainu were taken as slaves to Atsukeshi, over 350 kilometers away on the other side of the island. Work-related deaths had reduced the eastern population of Ainu, leading to labor relocation from the Saru and Yufutsu areas.

In 1858, according to Matsuura Takeshirō's "Saru Journal" quoted by Shigeru Kayano, the combined populations of Niputani (as it was called then), Pipaus and Kankan villages were 116 villagers among twenty-six households. Of that number, 43 were drafted for forced labor, including Kayano's grandfather Totkaram at the age of 11. Detailed information about the names, ages and households of each village were provided by the Saru Journal.

Kayano relates that it was Matsuura Takeshirō "who, angered by the cruelty of the Matsumae province and the 'location' contractors, made repeated proposals that eventually led to the abolition of forced labor."[5]

References[edit]

  1. ^ Peng, Fred C. C.; Ricketts, Robert; Imamura, Nario (1974). "The Socioeconomic Status of the Ainu: The Past in the Present". American Ethnologist. 1 (4): 731–750. doi:10.1525/ae.1974.1.4.02a00080. ISSN 0094-0496. JSTOR 643377.
  2. ^ Honda, Katsuichi; 本多, 勝一 (2000). Harukor : an Ainu woman's tale. Translated by Kyoko Iriye Selden. Berkeley, Calif.: University of California Press. ISBN 0-520-21019-0. OCLC 42598364.
  3. ^ Alia, Valerie (2010). The new media nation : indigenous peoples and global communication. New York: Berghahn Books. ISBN 978-1-84545-420-3. OCLC 326626790.
  4. ^ Hiwasaki, Lisa (2000). "Ethnic Tourism in Hokkaido and the Shaping of Ainu Identity". Pacific Affairs. 73 (3): 393–412. doi:10.2307/2672026. ISSN 0030-851X. JSTOR 2672026.
  5. ^ Kayano, Shigeru (1994). Our Land was a Forest: An Ainu Memoir. Westview Press, Inc. pp. 27–36. ISBN 0-8133-1880-7.

42°38′10″N 142°09′35″E / 42.63611°N 142.15972°E / 42.63611; 142.15972