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View Full Version : Paris drives the Japanese insane. Literally.



meshou
24 Oct 2006, 04:30 PM
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/15391010/?GT1=8618

PARIS - Around a dozen Japanese tourists a year need psychological treatment after visiting Paris as the reality of unfriendly locals and scruffy streets clashes with their expectations, a newspaper reported on Sunday.

"A third of patients get better immediately, a third suffer relapses and the rest have psychoses," Yousef Mahmoudia, a psychologist at the Hotel-Dieu hospital, next to Notre Dame cathedral, told the newspaper Journal du Dimanche.

Already this year, Japan's embassy in Paris has had to repatriate at least four visitors -- including two women who believed their hotel room was being bugged and there was a plot against them.

Previous cases include a man convinced he was the French "Sun King", Louis XIV, and a woman who believed she was being attacked with microwaves, the paper cited Japanese embassy official Yoshikatsu Aoyagi as saying.

"Fragile travelers can lose their bearings. When the idea they have of the country meets the reality of what they discover it can provoke a crisis," psychologist Herve Benhamou told the paper.

It's a city of cafes and palaces and conversations. It's the City of Love - and more.

The phenomenon, which the newspaper dubbed "Paris Syndrome", was first detailed in the psychiatric journal Nervure in 2004.

Bernard Delage of Jeunes Japon, an association that helps Japanese families settle in France, said:

"In Japanese shops, the customer is king, whereas here assistants hardly look at them ... People using public transport all look stern, and handbag snatchers increase the ill feeling."

A Japanese woman, Aimi, told the paper:

"For us, Paris is a dream city. All the French are beautiful and elegant ... And then, when they arrive, the Japanese find the French character is the complete opposite of their own."

What the hell, France?

Ghost-Girl
24 Oct 2006, 04:34 PM
What were you expecting? Hospitality?

meshou
24 Oct 2006, 04:40 PM
What were you expecting? Hospitality?Well, I hadn't expected the amount of dog shit. Really, it's impressive.

dubbeltop
24 Oct 2006, 04:47 PM
' Since the 1970s, many inner suburbs of Paris (especially the eastern ones) have experienced deindustrialization, and the once-thriving cités have gradually become ghettos for immigrants and oases of unemployment. At the same time, the City of Paris (within its Périphérique ring) and the western and southern suburbs have successfully shifted their economic base from traditional manufacturing to high value-added services and high-tech manufacturing, generating great wealth for their residents whose per capita income is among the highest in Europe. The resulting widening social gap between these two areas has led to periodic unrest since the mid-1980s, such as the 2005 riots which largely concentrated in the northeastern suburbs. '

source:
(http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Paris)...

Poverty and Rascism and the french elitist way of thinking (le roi ces't moi) don't make the french society a bastion for equality and that is surprising for a country which has the slogan liberte, egalite, fraternite which means freedom ,equality and brotherhood.....

Dunearhp
24 Oct 2006, 05:24 PM
Already this year, Japan's embassy in Paris has had to repatriate at least four visitors -- including two women who believed their hotel room was being bugged and there was a plot against them.

Previous cases include a man convinced he was the French "Sun King", Louis XIV, and a woman who believed she was being attacked with microwaves, the paper cited Japanese embassy official Yoshikatsu Aoyagi as saying.

Paris didn't make them crazy. It just brought out their latent insanity.
Sort of like a french bread poultice.

PiccoloNamek
24 Oct 2006, 05:41 PM
"Fragile travelers can lose their bearings. When the idea they have of the country meets the reality of what they discover it can provoke a crisis,"

http://www.outpostnine.com