Indian Express, Agencies : London, An Australian girl is the first Westerner
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the notoriously tight geisha world. “Being white is absolutely no advantage whatsoever in the geisha community,” the Daily mail quoted her as telling BBC. “Customers looking for geisha are not looking to find white geisha. So I had a very much more difficult time than the average geisha,” she said. In 2007, on her debut, she was given her geisha name Sayuki, which means “transparent happiness”. Graham lives in Asakusa, Tokyo’s oldest geisha district and won’t reveal her age because geisha’s hierarchy comes from their position in the household not when they were born. Far from being mute female decoration, as is often depicted in Western television and books, geisha always have been strong, independent businesswomen. So it’s no surprise that Graham has now turned her love of geisha into a venture with the Japanese tourist board. The first westerner to attempt to enter the hallowed, hugely closeted world of traditional Japanese female entertainers was Liza Dalby, an American scholar in the Seventies, but she never completed her training. Source: Indian Express

