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User:Glover/Japanese oddities

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  • Odorigui refers to the consumption of live seafood while it is still moving, or the consumption of moving animal parts
  • Sokushinbutsu practice of Buddhist monks observing asceticism to the point of death and entering mummification while alive
  • Comfort women women and girls forced into sexual slavery by the Imperial Japanese Army in occupied territories before and during World War II
  • Nanking Massacre an episode of mass murder and mass rape committed by Japanese troops against the residents of Nanjing (Nanking), then the capital of the Republic of China, during the Second Sino-Japanese War
  • Unit 731 a covert biological and chemical warfare research and development unit of the Imperial Japanese Army that undertook lethal human experimentation during the Second Sino-Japanese War (1937–1945) of World War II
  • Tsujigiri a practice when a samurai, after receiving a new katana or developing a new fighting style or weapon, tests its effectiveness by attacking a human opponent, usually a random defenseless passer-by, in many cases during nighttime
  • Whaling in Japan The UN's International Court of Justice, consider the Japanese research program to be unnecessary and lacking scientific merit, and describe it as a thinly disguised commercial whaling operation. The whale meat from these hunts is sold in shops and restaurants, and is showcased at an annual food festival that, in some cases, features the butchering of a whale for onlookers. A poll in 2014 found that few Japanese people have been eating whale meat regularly since whale-based dishes disappeared from school lunches in 1987
  • Salaryman a Japanese white-collar worker who shows overriding loyalty to the corporation where he works. Salarymen are expected to work long hours,[1] additional overtime, to participate in after-work leisure activities such as drinking, singing karaoke and visiting hostess bars with colleagues, and to value work over all else. Other popular notions surrounding salarymen include karōshi, or death from overwork. In conservative Japanese culture, becoming a salaryman is the expected career choice for young men and those who do not take this career path are regarded as living with a stigma and less prestige. On the other hand, the word salaryman is sometimes used with derogatory connotation for his total dependence on his employer and lack of individuality.