DeKalb County, Indiana and Ainu people: Difference between pages

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'''DeKalb County''' is a [[county]] located in the [[U.S. State]] of [[Indiana]]. As of [[2000]], the population is 40,285. The county's [[county seat]] is [[Auburn, Indiana]][[Geographic references|<sup>6</sup>]].
 
The '''Ainu''' ([[International Phonetic Alphabet|pronounced]] {{IPA|/ˈainu/}} or "eye-noo") are an ethnic group [[indigenous peoples|indigenous]] to [[Hokkaido]], the northern part of [[Honshu]] in Northern [[Japan]], the [[Kurile Islands]], much of [[Sakhalin]], and the southernmost third of the [[Kamchatka peninsula]]. The word ainu (&#12450;&#12452;&#12492;) means "human" in the [[Ainu language]]; '''[[Emishi]]''', '''Ezo''', or '''Yezo''', (&#34662;&#22839;) (the second character of which means barbarian) in old [[Japanese language|Japanese]]; '''Utari''',&#12454;&#12479;&#12522;, (meaning "countrymen" in Ainu) is now preferred by some members. There are over 150,000 Ainu today, however the exact figure is not known as many Ainu hide their origins or in many cases are not even aware of them, their parents having kept it from them so as to protect their children from racism.
== Geography ==
According to the [[U.S. Census Bureau]], the county has a total area of 942 [[square kilometer|km&sup2;]] (364 [[square mile|mi&sup2;]]). 940 km&sup2; (363 mi&sup2;) of it is land and 3 km&sup2; (1 mi&sup2;) of it is water. The total area is 0.27% water.
 
{| border="1" cellpadding="2" cellspacing="0" align="right" width="375px"
== Demographics ==
! colspan="2" bgcolor="chocolate"|
As of the [[census]][[Geographic references|<sup>2</sup>]] of [[2000]], there are 40,285 people, 15,134 households, and 10,911 families residing in the county. The [[population density]] is 43/km&sup2; (111/mi&sup2;). There are 16,144 housing units at an average density of 17/km&sup2; (44/mi&sup2;). The racial makeup of the county is 97.76% [[Race (U.S. census)|White]], 0.25% [[Race (U.S. census)|Black]] or [[Race (U.S. census)|African American]], 0.22% [[Race (U.S. census)|Native American]], 0.33% [[Race (U.S. census)|Asian]], 0.05% [[Race (U.S. census)|Pacific Islander]], 0.67% from [[race (U.S. census)|other races]], and 0.73% from two or more races. 1.68% of the population are [[Race (U.S. census)|Hispanic]] or [[Race (U.S. census)|Latino]] of any race.
[[Image:AinuGroup.JPG|375px]] Group of Ainu people, 1904 photograph.
|-
| bgcolor="orange" | Total Population || bgcolor="#ffde80" |
*'''50,000''' people with half or more Ainu ancestry
*'''150,000''' Japanese people with some Ainu ancestry
**(''some estimates on the number of Japanese with some Ainu blood range as high as '''1,000,000'''; the exact number is unknown'')
*Pre-Japanese era: ~'''50,000''', almost all pure Ainu
|-
| bgcolor="orange" | Significant Populations in: || bgcolor="#ffde80" |
*[[Japan]]
*[[Russian Federation]]
|-
| bgcolor="orange" | Language || bgcolor="#ffde80" | '''[[Ainu language|Ainu]]''' is the traditional language, but today somewhere between 1% and 5% of Ainu can speak it fluently, between 5% and 10% are [[passive speakers]] or [[partial speakers]], and about 50% of Ainu have a very basic command of the language
|-
| bgcolor="orange" | Related ethnic groups || bgcolor="#ffde80" | Modern genetics has proven they are East Asians. They are usually grouped with the non-[[Tungus]]ic peoples of [[Sakhalin]], the [[Amur]] river valley, and the [[Kamchatka peninsula]]:
*[[Nivkhs]]
*[[Itelmens]]
*[[Chukchis]]
*[[Koryaks]]
*[[Aleuts]]
|}
 
==History==
There are 15,134 households out of which 36.30% have children under the age of 18 living with them, 59.30% are married couples living together, 8.80% have a female householder with no husband present, and 27.90% are non-families. 23.40% of all households are made up of individuals and 9.30% have someone living alone who is 65 years of age or older. The average household size is 2.63 and the average family size is 3.11.
The origins of the Ainu are uncertain though they have been genetically proven to be [[Mongoloid]] rather than [[Caucasoid]]. Although their traditional homeland has been inhabited since the end of the last [[ice age]], it is impossible to track the movements of the peoples of Northeastern Asia until well after the beginning of the historical period. At first, contact with the [[Japanese people]] was friendly and both were equals in a trade relationship. However, eventually the Japanese started to dominate the relationship, and soon established large settlements on the outskirts of Ainu territory. As the Japanese moved north and took control over their traditional lands, the Ainu often gave up without resistance, but there was occasional resistance as exemplified in wars in [[1457]], [[1669]], and [[1789]], all of which were lost by the Ainu. Japanese policies became increasingly aimed at reforming the Ainu in the [[Meiji period]], outlawing their language and restricting them to farming on government-provided plots. Ainu were also used in near-slavery conditions in the Japanese fishing industry. Japan used to call the Ainu's home island ''Ezo'' or ''Ezo-chi'', but changed the name to ''[[Hokkaido]]'' during the [[Meiji Restoration]].
 
The Ainu are now governed by Japanese laws and judged by Japanese tribunals, but in former times their affairs were administered by hereditary chiefs, three in each village, and for administrative purposes the country was divided into three districts, [[Saru]], [[Usu]] and [[Ishikari]], which were under the ultimate control of Saru, though the relations between their respective inhabitants were not close and intermarriages were avoided. The functions of judge were not entrusted to these chiefs; an indefinite number of a community's members sat in judgement upon its criminals. Capital punishment did not exist, nor was imprisonment resorted to, beating being considered a sufficient and final penalty, except in the case of murder, when the nose and ears of the culprit were cut off or the tendons of his feet severed. Intermarriages between Japanese and Ainu are not infrequent, and at [[Sambutsu]] especially, on the eastern coast, many children of such marriages may be seen.
In the county the population is spread out with 28.00% under the age of 18, 8.60% from 18 to 24, 30.30% from 25 to 44, 21.70% from 45 to 64, and 11.40% who are 65 years of age or older. The median age is 35 years. For every 100 females there are 99.20 males. For every 100 females age 18 and over, there are 96.40 males.
 
Today, many Ainu dislike like the term Ainu and prefer to identify themselves as ''Utari'' (''comrade'' in the Ainu language). In official documents both names are used
The median income for a household in the county is $44,909, and the median income for a family is $51,676. Males have a median income of $37,322 versus $24,120 for females. The per capita income for the county is $19,448. 5.90% of the population and 3.70% of families are below the poverty line. Out of the total people living in poverty, 6.10% are under the age of 18 and 8.50% are 65 or older.
 
==Geography==
== Cities and towns ==
For historical reasons (the [[Russo-Japanese war]] and [[World War II]]), nearly all Ainu live in Japan.
*[[Altona, Indiana|Altona]]
There is, however, a small number of Ainu living on [[Sakhalin]], most of them descendants of Sakhalin Ainu who were evicted and later returned. There is also an Ainu minority living at the southernmost area of the Kamchatka Peninsula and on the Kurile Islands. However, the only Ainu speakers remaining (besides perhaps a few partial speakers) live solely in Japan. There, they are concentrated primarily on the southern and eastern coasts of the island of [[Hokkaido]].
*[[Ashley, Indiana|Ashley]]
*[[Auburn, Indiana|Auburn]]
*[[Butler, Indiana|Butler]]
*[[Corunna, Indiana|Corunna]]
*[[Garrett, Indiana|Garrett]]
*[[Hamilton, Indiana|Hamilton]]
*[[St. Joe, Indiana|St. Joe]]
*[[Waterloo, Indiana|Waterloo]]
 
Due to intermarriage with the Japanese and ongoing absorption into the predominant culture, few living Ainu settlements exist. Many "authentic Ainu villages" advertised in Hokkaido are simply tourist attractions.
{{Indiana}}
 
[[Category:DeKalb County, Indiana]]
[[Image:Page 269.jpg|right|thumb|200px|"Time's long shadow creeps over an Ainu grandmother who sees the distinctive life of her people–aboriginal inhabitants of Japan's Hokkaido island–drawing to a close. Lip tattooing in her youth, a custom now obsolete, helped her attract a husband." ––Sister Mary Inez Hilger, from National Geographic article, ''Japan's "Sky People", the Vanishing Ainu'', February 1967]]
[[Category:Indiana counties]]
==Culture==
Traditional Ainu culture was quite different from Japanese culture. Never shaving after a certain age, the men had full [[beard]]s and [[moustache]]s. Men and women alike cut their [[hair]] level with the shoulders at the sides of the head, but trimmed it semicircularly behind. The [[women]] [[tattoo]]ed their [[mouth]]s, [[arm]]s, [[Clitoris|clitorides]], and sometimes their [[forehead]]s, starting at the onset of [[puberty]]. The soot deposited on a pot hung over a fire of birch bark was used for [[colour]]. Their traditional [[dress]] is a robe spun from the bark of the elm tree. It has long sleeves, reaches nearly to the feet, is folded round the body, and is tied with a girdle of the same material. Women also wear an undergarment of Japanese cloth. In winter the skins of animals were worn, with leggings of deerskin and boots made from the skin of dogs or [[salmon]]. Both sexes are fond of earrings, which are said to have been made of [[grape]]vine in former times, as also are bead necklaces called [[tamasay]], which the women prize highly. Their cuisine consisted of the flesh of the [[bear]], the [[fox]], the [[wolf]], the [[badger]], the [[ox]] or the [[horse]], as well as [[fish]], [[fowl]], [[millet]], [[vegetable]]s, [[herb]]s, and [[root]]s. They never ate raw [[fish]] or flesh, but always either boiled or roasted it. Their habitations were reed-thatched huts, the largest 20 ft. square, without partitions and having a fireplace in the centre. There was no chimney, but only a hole at the angle of the roof; there was one window on the eastern side and there were two doors. The house of the village head was used as a public meeting place when one is needed. Instead of using furniture, they sat on the floor, which was covered with two layers of mats, one of rush, the other of flag; and for beds they spread planks, hanging mats around them on poles, and employing skins for coverlets. The men use [[chopstick]]s when eating; the women had wooden [[spoon]]s.
 
===Religion===
The Ainu believe in [[Animism]], or that everything in nature has a "[[kami]]" (spirit or god) on the inside. There is a hierarchy of the kami. The most important is grandmother hearth ([[fire]]), then kami of the [[mountain]] (animals), then kami of the [[sea]] ([[Marine biology|sea animals]]), lastly everything else. They have no [[priests]] by profession. The village chief performs whatever religious ceremonies are necessary; ceremonies are confined to making libations of [[wine]], uttering [[prayers]], and offering [[willow]] sticks with wooden shavings attached to them. These sticks are called [[Inau]] (singular) and [[Inau|nusa]] (plural). They are placed on an altar used to sacrifice the heads of killed animals. The Ainu people give thanks to the gods before eating and pray to the deity of fire in time of [[sickness]]. They believe their spirits are [[immortal]], and that their spirits will be rewarded hereafter by ascending to ''kamui mosir'' (Land of the Gods).
 
Some Ainus in the north are members of the [[Russian Orthodox Church]].
 
==Institutions==
There are many different organizations of Ainu trying to further their cause in many different ways. There is an umbrella group of which most Hokkaido Ainu and some other Ainu are members, called the [[Hokkaido Utari Association]], originally controlled by the government with the intention of speeding Ainu assimilation and integration into the Japanese nation-state but which now operates independent of the government and is run exclusively by Ainu.
 
[[Image:FlagofAinuNation.png|thumb|300px|Flag of the Ainu people. The Ainu flag was designed by the late Mr. Bikki Sunazawa in 1973. [[Cerulean blue]] stands for sky and sea, white for snow and red for arrow which is running in the snow beneath big Hokkaido's sky. As a whole, the flag is a symbol of the Ainu people's mind and culture which never disappear. --''Nozomi Kariyasu'', March 21, 1999]]
 
===Subgroups===
*[[Tohoku Ainu]] (from [[Honshu]], no known living population)
*[[Hokkaido Ainu]]
*[[Sakhalin Ainu]]
*[[Kuril Ainu]] (no known living population)
*[[Kamchatka Ainu]]
*[[Amur Valley Ainu]] (probably none remain)
 
== See Also ==
*[[Honshu]]
*[[Hokkaido]]
*[[Sakhalin]]
*[[Kuril Islands]]
*[[Kamchatka peninsula]]
*[[Shogun]]
 
==References==
*[[1911 Encyclopædia Britannica]].
*Article on the Ainu in ''Japan's Minorities: The Illusion of Homogeneity''.
==External links==
*[http://www.ainu-museum.or.jp/english/english.html The Ainu Museum]
*[http://www.ainu-assn.or.jp/ Nippon Utari Kyokai]
 
[[Category:Indigenous peoples of Asia]]
[[Category:Indigenous peoples of East Asia]]
[[Category:Ethnic groups of Asia]]
[[Category:Japanese demographics]]
[[Category:Ainu]]
 
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[[th:ชาวไอนุ]]
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