The restaurant example you gave made me think unity is the restaurant (not the earth), diversity are the people in the restaurant, and we are all sharing each other's dishes. Unless you changed the goal post
that's pretty much it.
I can't remember who else here thought I meant "ask permission" I think it was lover. I don't think you understand cultural propriation or cultural ownership.
I'm trying to figure how to explain it briefly. Pretend the PRIDE Flag was around way before Baker was alive. Say it's a historical marker that meant not only equality of all LGBTQ people but PRIDE is actually education for LGBTQ youth as well. It's basically about educating people.
Anyway, say you come along and like the rainbow flag. Fine. It's all cool. Say you come to a PRIDE Parade and wear a Rainbow flag but you are not an ally because you identity homosexuality with an action. Wearing that flag is an insult. It's talking something that is culturally owned, using it in a manner you feel is respectful, and not knowing the disrespect you have by not being part of the group or an ally of that group.
It's really tricky. In Deaf culture, there is no "asking permission". American Sign Language in America, ASL is the Deaf
community's language. It's not individual people so even being one person that, say you're deaf, and you come into the community without associating yourself as Deaf is a insult to even use the word you can use by technicality. Hearing people literally cannot ask permission to say make up an ASL word or some words that are only used (and aka owned) by the Deaf community.
Food is the same thing. It has the same intimate affair with the person who makes it
more so than the person who is not part of that culture. I mean the Vietnamese were very nice to me and all. However, a family member cooked a dish for the monks, and I took the recipe, went home, and made it myself thinking "they like me. this is okay." To me, that's stealing. Stealing from the culture. Stealing from the Sangha. Stealing from the monks.
I wish I knew you more but if I find a video on it or something, I'll post it.
It's the best example I can think of. D-eaf meaning a person who is deaf or hard of hearing who are part of a community built on like growing up experiences, interests, language, cultural norms, and ways of getting around in the hearing world that a hearing person, no matter how close they are to the Deaf community, will not be a part of.
So, if I came in a decided to use ASL for my benefit because "I know Deaf people and we are friends" that's rude. I can't ask permission because permission is embedded in the culture not something you can get by asking.
A lot of Americans are sensitive with people coming out of the country and becoming American citizens here. People from other countries come here daily, but the cultural part is
American's independence-American by culture, language, and nationality....not just nationality an learning about culture and language as a second language.
So some Americans see that as "stealing our independence that is solely for Americans". You can't ask permission because that thought is embedded in the northern and southern states here in the US. (Civil War states) The western states where native americans were taken as slaves and land sold.
It doesn't mean you can't be American. It doesn't mean you can no longer try Japanese dishes. Just note that there is a cultural separation between people and the things they hold dear to their country and ours. Like here I live among a lot of elderly Koreans. Yes, I say hello and how are you in Korean and they gave me "permission" to use it by teaching me more phrases I forgot. But to connect with them on that level just because I am friends with thiem (if I am?) is for me to say that is rude.
That's the difference.
I figure a good video so you don't have to suffer through all this. I can't figure a better way to explain it. We can share meals in the same restaurant. We can find them all delicious, savor the taste, talk about its commonalities, and so forth. There are different cooks in the back, they offer their foods to many different people. Just don't mistake their offerings to all people as a way to make everyone apart of their culture by food. It goes beyond that.
Foods just an analogy.