fbpx
Wikipedia

Japanese Brazilians

Japanese Brazilians (Japanese: 日系ブラジル人, Hepburn: Nikkei Burajiru-jin, Portuguese: Nipo-brasileiros, [ˌnipobɾaziˈlejɾus]) are Brazilian citizens who are nationals or naturals of Japanese ancestry or Japanese immigrants living in Brazil or Japanese people of Brazilian ancestry.[5]

Japanese Brazilians
Nipo-brasileiros
日系ブラジル人

Japanese descendants in São Paulo.
Total population
c.2 million Brazilians of Japanese descent (2019)[1]
Regions with significant populations
Japan:
208,857 (2019) Japanese Brazilians in Japan[2]
0.2% of Japan's population
Languages
PortugueseJapanese
Religion
Predominantly:
Roman Catholicism[3]
Minority:
Buddhism and Shintoism[4]
Japanese new religions
Protestantism
Related ethnic groups
Japanese, other nikkei groups (mainly those from Latin America and Japanese Americans), Latin Americans in Japan, Asian Latin Americans

The first group of Japanese immigrants arrived in Brazil in 1908.[6] Brazil is home to the largest Japanese population outside Japan. Since the 1980s, a return migration has emerged of Japanese Brazilians to Japan.[7] More recently, a trend of interracial marriage has taken hold among Brazilians of Japanese descent, with the racial intermarriage rate approximated at 50% and increasing.[8]

History edit

Background edit

 
A poster used in Japan to attract immigrants to Brazil and Peru. It reads: "Let's go to South America (Brazil highlighted) with your entire family."

Between the end of the 19th and early 20th centuries, coffee was the main export product of Brazil. At first, Brazilian farmers used African slave labour in the coffee plantations, but in 1850, the slave trade was abolished in Brazil. To solve the labour shortage, the Brazilian elite decided to attract European immigrants to work on the coffee plantations. This was also consistent with the government's push towards "whitening" the country. The hope was that through procreation the large African and Native American groups would be eliminated or reduced.[9] The government and farmers offered to pay European immigrants' passage. The plan encouraged millions of Europeans, most of them Italians,[10] to migrate to Brazil. However, once in Brazil, the immigrants received very low salaries and worked in poor conditions, including long working hours and frequent ill-treatment by their bosses. Because of this, in 1902, Italy enacted the Prinetti Decree, prohibiting subsidized emigration to Brazil.[11]

Japan had been isolated from the rest of the world during the 265 years of the Edo period (Tokugawa Shogunate), without wars, epidemics brought in from abroad or emigration. With the agricultural techniques of the time, Japan produced only the food it consumed, with practically no formation of stocks for difficult periods. Any agricultural crop failure caused widespread famine.[12] The end of the Tokugawa Shogunate gave way to an intense project of modernization and opening to the outside world during the Meiji era. Despite the agrarian reform, mechanization of agriculture made thousands of peasants unemployed. Thousands of other small peasants became indebted or lost their land because they could not pay the high taxes.

The end of feudalism in Japan generated great poverty in the rural population, so many Japanese began to emigrate in search of better living conditions. By the 1930s, Japanese industrialisation had significantly boosted the population. However, prospects for Japanese people to migrate to other countries were limited. The United States had banned non-white immigration from some parts of the world[13] on the basis that they would not integrate into society; this Exclusion Clause, of the 1924 Immigration Act, specifically targeted the Japanese. At the same time in Australia, the White Australia Policy prevented the immigration of non-whites to Australia.

First immigrants edit

 
The Kasato Maru docked in Port of Santos, 1908

In 1907, the Brazilian and the Japanese governments signed a treaty permitting Japanese migration to Brazil. This was due in part to the decrease in the Italian immigration to Brazil and a new labour shortage on the coffee plantations.[14] Also, Japanese immigration to the United States had been barred by the Gentlemen's Agreement of 1907.[15] The first Japanese immigrants (781 people – mostly farmers) came to Brazil in 1908 on the Kasato Maru. About half of these immigrants were Okinawans from southern Okinawa, who had faced 29 years of oppression by the Japanese government following the Ryukyu Islands’s annexation, becoming the first Ryukyuan Brazilians.[16] They travelled from the Japanese port of Kobe via the Cape of Good Hope in South Africa.[17] Many of them worked on coffee plantations.[18]

In the first seven years, 3,434 more Japanese families (14,983 people) arrived. The beginning of World War I in 1914 started a boom in Japanese migration to Brazil; such that between 1917 and 1940 over 164,000 Japanese came to Brazil, 75% of them going to São Paulo, where most of the coffee plantations were located.[19]

Japanese immigration to Brazil by period, 1906–1993[20][21]
Years Immigrants
1906–1910 1,714
1911–1915 13,371
1916–1920 13,576
1921–1925 11,350
1926–1930 59,564
1931–1935 72,661
1936–1941 16,750
1952–1955 7,715
1956–1960 29,727
1961–1965 9,488
1966–1970 2,753
1971–1975 1,992
1976–1980 1,352
1981–1985 411
1986–1990 171
1991–1993 48
Total 242,643

New life in Brazil edit

The vast majority of Japanese immigrants intended to work a few years in Brazil, make some money, and go home. However, "getting rich quick" was a dream that was almost impossible to achieve. This was exacerbated by the fact that it was obligatory for Japanese immigrants to Brazil prior to the Second World War to emigrate in familial units.[22] Because multiple persons necessitated monetary support in these familial units, Japanese immigrants found it nearly impossible to return home to Japan even years after emigrating to Brazil.[22] The immigrants were paid a very low salary and worked long hours of exhausting work. Also, everything that the immigrants consumed had to be purchased from the landowner (see truck system). Soon, their debts became very significant.[19] Contrary to the plan, only 10% of the nearly 190,000 Japanese who immigrated to Brazil before the Second World War returned to Japan.[23]

 
A Japanese Brazilian miko during a festival in Curitiba.

On 1 August 1908, The New York Times remarked that relations between Brazil and Japan at the time were "not extremely cordial", because of "the attitude of Brazil toward the immigration of Japanese labourers."[24]

The landowners in Brazil still had a slavery mentality. Immigrants, although employees, had to confront the rigidity and lack of labour laws. Indebted and subjected to hours of exhaustive work, often suffering physical violence, suicide, yonige (to escape at night), and strikes were some of the attitudes taken by many Japanese because of the exploitation on coffee farms.[25] Even when they were free of their contractual obligations on Brazil's coffee plantations, it was often impossible for immigrants to return home due to their meager earnings.[22]

However, through a system called "partnership farming", in a contract with a landowner, in which the immigrants committed themselves to deforesting the land, sowing coffee, taking care of the plantation and returning the area in seven years' time, when the second harvest would be ready, the immigrants could keep the profits from the first harvest, taking into account that the coffee cultivation is biannual. They also kept everything they planted, in addition to coffee. In this way, many Japanese managed to save some money and buy their first pieces of land in Brazil.[23] The first land purchase by the Japanese in Brazil took place in São Paulo, in 1911.[26]

Many Japanese immigrants purchased land in rural Brazil, having been forced to invest what little capital they had into land in order to someday make enough to return to Japan. As independent farmers, Japanese immigrants formed communities that were ethnically isolated from the rest of Brazilian society. The immigrants who settled and formed these communities referred to themselves as shokumin and their settlements as shokuminchi.[22] In 1940, the Superintendence of Coffee Business issued that even though the Japanese living in São Paulo made up only 3.5% of the state's population, they were responsible for 100% of the production of ramie, silk, peaches and strawberries; 99% of mint and tea; 80% of potatoes and vegetables; 70% of eggs; 50% of bananas; 40% of the cotton and 20% of the coffee produced by the state of São Paulo.[27]

Japanese children born in Brazil were educated in schools founded by the Japanese community. Most only learned to speak the Japanese language and lived within the Japanese community in rural areas. Over the years, many Japanese managed to buy their own land and became small farmers. They started to plant strawberries, tea and rice. Only 6% of children were the result of interracial relationships. Immigrants rarely accepted marriage with a non-Japanese person.[28]

By the 1930s, Brazilians complained that the independent Japanese communities had formed quistos raciais, or “racial cysts”, and were unwilling to further integrate the Japanese Brazilians into Brazilian society.[22] The Japanese government, via the Japanese consulate in São Paulo, was directly involved with the education of Japanese children in Brazil. Japanese education in Brazil was modeled after education systems in Japan, and schools in Japanese communities in Brazil received funding directly from the Japanese government.[22] By 1933, there were 140,000-150,000 Japanese Brazilians, which was by far the largest Japanese population in any Latin American country.[29]

With Brazil under the leadership of Getúlio Vargas and the Empire of Japan involved on the Axis side in World War II, Japanese Brazilians became more isolated from their mother country. Japanese leaders and diplomats in Brazil left for Japan after Brazil severed all relations with Japan on 29 January 1942, leading Japanese Brazilians to fend for themselves in an increasingly-hostile country. Vargas's regime instituted several measures that targeted the Japanese population in Brazil, including the loss of freedom to travel within Brazil, censorship of Japanese newspapers (even those printed in Portuguese), and imprisonment if Japanese Brazilians were caught speaking Japanese in public.[22] Japanese Brazilians became divided amongst themselves, and some even turned to performing terrorist acts on Japanese farmers who were employed by Brazilian farmers.[22] By 1947, however, following the end of World War II, tensions between Brazilians and their Japanese population had cooled considerably. Japanese-language newspapers returned to publication and Japanese-language education was reinstituted among the Japanese Brazilian population. World War II had left Japanese Brazilians isolated from their mother country, censored by the Brazilian government, and facing internal conflicts within their own populations, but, for the most part, life returned to normal following the end of the war.

Prejudice and forced assimilation edit

On 28 July 1921, representatives Andrade Bezerra and Cincinato Braga proposed a law whose Article 1 provided: "The immigration of individuals from the black race to Brazil is prohibited." On 22 October 1923, representative Fidélis Reis produced another bill on the entry of immigrants, whose fifth article was as follows: "The entry of settlers from the black race into Brazil is prohibited. For Asian [immigrants] there will be allowed each year a number equal to 5% of those residing in the country..."[30]

Some years before World War II, the government of President Getúlio Vargas initiated a process of forced assimilation of people of immigrant origin in Brazil. The Constitution of 1934 had a legal provision about the subject: "The concentration of immigrants anywhere in the country is prohibited, the law should govern the selection, location and assimilation of the alien". The assimilationist project affected mainly Japanese, Italian, Jewish, and German immigrants and their descendants.[31]

The formation of "ethnic cysts" among immigrants of non-Portuguese origin prevented the realization of the whitening project of the Brazilian population. The government, then, started to act on these communities of foreign origin to force them to integrate into a "Brazilian culture" with Portuguese roots. It was the dominant idea of a unification of all the inhabitants of Brazil under a single "national spirit". During World War II, Brazil severed relations with Japan. Japanese newspapers and teaching the Japanese language in schools were banned, leaving Portuguese as the only option for Japanese descendants. Newspapers in Italian or German were also advised to cease production, as Italy and Germany were Japan's allies in the war.[18] In 1939, research of Estrada de Ferro Noroeste do Brasil, from São Paulo, showed that 87.7% of Japanese Brazilians read newspapers in the Japanese language, a high figure for a country with many illiterate people like Brazil at the time.[32]

The Japanese appeared as undesirable immigrants within the "whitening" and assimilationist policy of the Brazilian government.[32] Oliveira Viana, a Brazilian jurist, historian and sociologist described the Japanese immigrants as follows: "They (Japanese) are like sulfur: insoluble". The Brazilian magazine "O Malho" in its edition of 5 December 1908 issued a charge of Japanese immigrants with the following legend: "The government of São Paulo is stubborn. After the failure of the first Japanese immigration, it contracted 3,000 yellow people. It insists on giving Brazil a race diametrically opposite to ours".[32] In 1941, the Brazilian Minister of Justice, Francisco Campos, defended the ban on admission of 400 Japanese immigrants in São Paulo and wrote: "their despicable standard of living is a brutal competition with the country's worker; their selfishness, their bad faith, their refractory character, make them a huge ethnic and cultural cyst located in the richest regions of Brazil".[32]

The Japanese Brazilian community was strongly marked by restrictive measures when Brazil declared war against Japan in August 1942. Japanese Brazilians could not travel the country without safe conduct issued by the police; over 200 Japanese schools were closed and radio equipment was seized to prevent transmissions on short wave from Japan. The goods of Japanese companies were confiscated and several companies of Japanese origin had interventions, including the newly founded Banco América do Sul. Japanese Brazilians were prohibited from driving motor vehicles (even if they were taxi drivers), buses or trucks on their property. The drivers employed by Japanese had to have permission from the police. Thousands of Japanese immigrants were arrested or expelled from Brazil on suspicion of espionage. There were many anonymous denunciations of "activities against national security" arising from disagreements between neighbors, recovery of debts and even fights between children.[32] Japanese Brazilians were arrested for "suspicious activity" when they were in artistic meetings or picnics. On 10 July 1943, approximately 10,000 Japanese and German and Italian immigrants who lived in Santos had 24 hours to close their homes and businesses and move away from the Brazilian coast. The police acted without any notice. About 90% of people displaced were Japanese. To reside in Baixada Santista, the Japanese had to have a safe conduct.[32] In 1942, the Japanese community who introduced the cultivation of pepper in Tomé-Açu, in Pará, was virtually turned into a "concentration camp". This time, the Brazilian ambassador in Washington, D.C., Carlos Martins Pereira e Sousa, encouraged the government of Brazil to transfer all the Japanese Brazilians to "internment camps" without the need for legal support, in the same manner as was done with the Japanese residents in the United States. No single suspicion of activities of Japanese against "national security" was confirmed.[32]

During the National Constituent Assembly of 1946, the representative of Rio de Janeiro Miguel Couto Filho proposed Amendments to the Constitution as follows: "It is prohibited the entry of Japanese immigrants of any age and any origin in the country". In the final vote, a tie with 99 votes in favour and 99 against. Senator Fernando de Melo Viana, who chaired the session of the Constituent Assembly, had the casting vote and rejected the constitutional amendment. By only one vote, the immigration of Japanese people to Brazil was not prohibited by the Brazilian Constitution of 1946.[32]

The Japanese immigrants appeared to the Brazilian government as undesirable and non-assimilable immigrants. As Asian, they did not contribute to the "whitening" process of the Brazilian people as desired by the ruling Brazilian elite. In this process of forced assimilation the Japanese, more than any other immigrant group, suffered the ethno-cultural persecution imposed during this period.[32]

Prestige edit

For decades, Japanese Brazilians were seen as a non-assimilable people. The immigrants were treated only as a reserve of cheap labour that should be used on coffee plantations and that Brazil should avoid absorbing their cultural influences. This widespread conception that the Japanese were negative for Brazil was changed in the following decades. The Japanese were able to overcome the difficulties along the years and drastically improve their lives through hard work and education; this was also facilitated by the involvement of the Japanese government in the process of migration. The image of hard working agriculturists that came to help develop the country and agriculture helped erase the lack of trust of the local population and create a positive image of the Japanese. In the 1970s, Japan became one of the richest countries of the world, synonymous with modernity and progress. In the same period, Japanese Brazilians achieved a great cultural and economic success, probably the immigrant group that most rapidly achieved progress in Brazil. Due to the powerful Japanese economy and due to the rapid enrichment of the Nisei, in the last decades Brazilians of Japanese descent achieved a social prestige in Brazil that largely contrasts with the aggression with which the early immigrants were treated in the country.[32][33]

In the early 1960s, the Japanese Brazilian population in the cities already surpassed that of the countryside. As the vast majority of families that moved to São Paulo and cities in Paraná had few resources and were headed by first and second-generation Japanese, it was imperative that their business did not require a large initial investment or advanced knowledge of the Portuguese language. Thus, a good part of the immigrants began to dedicate themselves to small trade or to the provision of basic services, where dyeing stood out. In the 1970s, 80% of the 3,500 establishments that washed and ironed the clothes of São Paulo citizens were Japanese. According to anthropologist Célia Sakurai: "The business was convenient for the families, because they could live at the back of the dye shop and do all the work without having to hire employees. In addition, the communication required by the activity was brief and simple".[23]

In the Brazilian urban environment, the Japanese began to work mainly in sectors related to agriculture, such as traders or owners of small stores, selling fruit, vegetables or fish. Working with greengrocers and market stalls was facilitated by the contact that urban Japanese had with those who had stayed in the countryside, as suppliers were usually friends or relatives. Whatever the activity chosen by the family, it was up to the eldest children to work together with their parents. The custom was a Japanese tradition of delegating to the eldest son the continuation of the family activity and also the need to help pay for the studies of the younger siblings. While the older ones worked, the younger siblings enrolled in technical courses, such as Accountancy, mainly because it was easier to deal with numbers than with the Portuguese language. As for college, the Japanese favored engineering, medicine and law, which guaranteed money and social prestige. In 1958, Japanese descendants already represented 21% of Brazilians with education above secondary. In 1977, Japanese Brazilians, who made up 2.5% of the population of São Paulo, added up to 13% of those approved at the University of São Paulo, 16% of those who were admitted to the Technological Institute of Aeronautics (ITA) and 12% of those selected at the Getulio Vargas Foundation (FGV).[34] According to a 1995 research conducted by Datafolha, 53% of adult Japanese Brazilians had a college degree, compared to only 9% of Brazilians in general.[35]

According to the newspaper Gazeta do Povo, in Brazil "common sense is that Japanese descendants are studious, disciplined, do well at school, pass the admission exams more easily and, in most cases, have great affinity for the exact science careers". According to a 2009 survey carried out with data from the University of São Paulo and Unesp, even though Japanese descendants were 1.2% of the population of the city of São Paulo and made up less than 4% of those enrolled in the entrance exams, they were about 15% of those approved.[36]

A 2017 survey revealed that Brazilians of Japanese descent are the wealthiest group in Brazil. The survey concluded that Brazilians with a Japanese surname are the ones who earn the most (73.40 reais per hour):[37]

Salary of Brazilians, according to their last name and color.[37]
Ethnic origin (based on last name and color/race) Salary (in Brazilian real per hour)
Japanese 73,40
Italian 51,80
German 48,10
Eastern European 47,60
Iberian (whites) 33,90
Pardo (brown) 27,80
Black 26,50
Indigenous 26,10

Integration and intermarriage edit

Intermarriage in the Japanese Brazilian community[28]
Generation Denomination in Proportion of each generation in all community (%) Proportion of mixed-race in each generation (%)
Japanese English
1st Issei Immigrants 12.51% 0%
2nd Nisei Children 30.85% 6%
3rd Sansei Grandchildren 41.33% 42%
4th Yonsei Great-grandchildren 12.95% 61%

As of 2008, many Japanese Brazilians belong to the third generation (sansei), who make up 41.33% of the community. First generation (issei) are 12.51%, second generation (nisei) are 30.85% and fourth generation (yonsei) 12.95%.[28]

A more recent phenomenon in Brazil is intermarriages between Japanese Brazilians and non-ethnic Japanese. Though people of Japanese descent make up only 0.8% of the country's population, they are the largest Japanese community outside Japan, with over 1.4 million people. In areas with large numbers of Japanese, such as São Paulo and Paraná, since the 1970s, large numbers of Japanese descendants started to marry into other ethnic groups. Jeffrey Lesser's work has shown the complexities of integration both during the Vargas era, and more recently during the dictatorship (1964–1984)

Nowadays, among the 1.4 million Brazilians of Japanese descent, 28% have some non-Japanese ancestry.[38] This number reaches only 6% among children of Japanese immigrants, but 61% among great-grandchildren of Japanese immigrants.

Religion edit

Immigrants, as well as most Japanese, were mostly followers of Shinto and Buddhism. In the Japanese communities in Brazil, there was a strong effort by Brazilian priests to proselytize the Japanese. More recently, intermarriage with Catholics also contributed to the growth of Catholicism in the community.[39] Currently, 60% of Japanese-Brazilians are Roman Catholics and 25% are adherents of a Japanese religion.[39]

Martial arts edit

The Japanese immigration to Brazil, in particular the immigration of the judoka Mitsuyo Maeda, resulted in the development of one of the most effective modern martial arts, Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu. Japanese immigrants also brought sumo wrestling to Brazil, with the first tournament in the country organized in 1914.[40] The country has a growing number of amateur sumo wrestlers, with the only purpose-built sumo arena outside Japan located in São Paulo.[41] Brazil also produced (as of January 2022) sixteen professional wrestlers, with the most successful being Kaisei Ichirō.[42]

Language edit

 
Cherry blossom in Japan's Square in Curitiba, Paraná.

The knowledge of the Japanese and Portuguese languages reflects the integration of the Japanese in Brazil over several generations. Although first generation immigrants will often not learn Portuguese well or not use it frequently, most second generation are bilingual. The third generation, however, are most likely monolingual in Portuguese or speak, along with Portuguese, non-fluent Japanese.[43]

A study conducted in the Japanese Brazilian communities of Aliança and Fukuhaku, both in the state of São Paulo, released information on the language spoken by these people. Before coming to Brazil, 12.2% of the first generation interviewed from Aliança reported they had studied the Portuguese language in Japan, and 26.8% said to have used it once on arrival in Brazil. Many of the Japanese immigrants took classes of Portuguese and learned about the history of Brazil before migrating to the country. In Fukuhaku only 7.7% of the people reported they had studied Portuguese in Japan, but 38.5% said they had contact with Portuguese once on arrival in Brazil. All the immigrants reported they spoke exclusively Japanese at home in the first years in Brazil. However, in 2003, the figure dropped to 58.5% in Aliança and 33.3% in Fukuhaku. This probably reflects that through contact with the younger generations of the family, who speak mostly Portuguese, many immigrants also began to speak Portuguese at home.

The first Brazilian-born generation, the Nisei, alternate between the use of Portuguese and Japanese. Regarding the use of Japanese at home, 64.3% of Nisei informants from Aliança and 41.5% from Fukuhaku used Japanese when they were children. In comparison, only 14.3% of the third generation, Sansei, reported to speak Japanese at home when they were children. It reflects that the second generation was mostly educated by their Japanese parents using the Japanese language. On the other hand, the third generation did not have much contact with their grandparent's language, and most of them speak the national language of Brazil, Portuguese, as their mother tongue.[44]

Japanese Brazilians usually speak Japanese more often when they live along with a first generation relative. Those who do not live with a Japanese-born relative usually speak Portuguese more often.[45] Japanese spoken in Brazil is usually a mix of different Japanese dialects, since the Japanese community in Brazil came from all regions of Japan, influenced by the Portuguese language. The high numbers of Brazilian immigrants returning from Japan will probably produce more Japanese speakers in Brazil.[28]

Distribution and population edit

2000 IBGE estimates
for Japanese Brazilians[46]
State Population of
Japanese Brazilians
São Paulo 693,495
Paraná 143,588
Bahia 78,449
Minas Gerais 75,449
Others 414,704
Total 1,435,490

In 2008, IBGE published a book about the Japanese diaspora and it estimated that, as of 2000 there were 70,932 Japanese-born immigrants living in Brazil (compared to the 158,087 found in 1970). Of the Japanese, 51,445 lived in São Paulo.[46]: 37  Most of the immigrants were over 60 years old, because the Japanese immigration to Brazil has ended since the mid-20th century.[47]

According to the IBGE, as of 2000, there were 1,435,490 people of Japanese descent in Brazil. The Japanese immigration was concentrated to São Paulo and, still in 2000, 48% of Japanese Brazilians lived in this state. There were 693,495 people of Japanese origin in São Paulo, followed by Paraná with 143,588. More recently, Brazilians of Japanese descent are making presence in places that used to have a small population of this group. For example: in 1960, there were 532 Japanese Brazilians in Bahia, while in 2000 they were 78,449, or 0.6% of the state's population.[46] Northern Brazil (excluding Pará) saw its Japanese population increase from 2,341 in 1960 (0.2% of the total population) to 54,161 (0.8%) in 2000. During the same period, in Central-Western Brazil they increased from 3,583 to 66,119 (0.7% of the population).[46][48] However, the overall Japanese population in Brazil is shrinking, secondary to a decreased birth rate and an aging population; return immigration to Japan,[49][50][51] as well as intermarriage with other races and dilution of ethnic identity.

For the whole Brazil, with over 1.4 million people of Japanese descent, the largest percentages were found in the states of São Paulo (1.9% of Japanese descent), Paraná (1.5%) and Mato Grosso do Sul (1.4%). The smallest percentages were found in Roraima and Alagoas (with only 8 Japanese). The percentage of Brazilians with Japanese roots largely increased among children and teenagers. In 1991, 0.6% of Brazilians between 0 and 14 years old were of Japanese descent. In 2000, they were 4%, as a result of the returning of Dekasegis (Brazilians of Japanese descent who work in Japan) to Brazil.[52]

Image gallery edit

Japanese from Maringá edit

A 2008 census revealed details about the population of Japanese origin from the city of Maringá in Paraná, making it possible to have a profile of the Japanese-Brazilian population.[53]

  • Numbers

There were 4,034 families of Japanese descent from Maringá, comprising 14,324 people.

  • Dekasegi

1,846 or 15% of Japanese Brazilians from Maringá were working in Japan.

  • Generations

Of the 12,478 people of Japanese origin living in Maringá, 6.61% were Issei (born in Japan); 35.45% were Nisei (children of Japanese); 37.72% were Sansei (grandchildren) and 13.79% were Yonsei (great-grandchildren).

  • Average age

The average age was of 40.12 years old

  • Gender

52% of Japanese Brazilians from the city were women.

  • Average number of children per woman

2.4 children (similar to the average Southern Brazilian woman)

  • Religion

Most were Roman Catholics (32% of Sansei, 27% of Nisei, 10% of Yonsei and 2% of Issei). Protestant religions were the second most followed (6% of Nisei, 6% of Sansei, 2% of Yonsei and 1% of Issei) and next was Buddhism (5% of Nisei, 3% of Issei, 2% of Sansei and 1% of Yonsei).

  • Family

49.66% were married.

  • Knowledge of the Japanese language

47% can understand, read and write in Japanese. 31% of the second generation and 16% of the third generation can speak Japanese.

  • Schooling

31% elementary education; 30% secondary school and 30% higher education.

  • Mixed-race

A total of 20% were mixed-race (have some non-Japanese origin).

The Dekasegi edit

During the 1980s, the Japanese economic situation improved and achieved stability. Many Japanese Brazilians went to Japan as contract workers due to economic and political problems in Brazil, and they were termed "Dekasegi". Working visas were offered to Brazilian Dekasegis in 1990, encouraging more immigration from Brazil.

In 1990, the Japanese government authorized the legal entry of Japanese and their descendants until the third generation in Japan. At that time, Japan was receiving a large number of illegal immigrants from Pakistan, Bangladesh, China, and Thailand. The legislation of 1990 was intended to select immigrants who entered Japan, giving a clear preference for Japanese descendants from South America, especially Brazil. These people were lured to Japan to work in areas that the Japanese refused (the so-called "three K": Kitsui, Kitanai and Kiken – hard, dirty and dangerous). Many Japanese Brazilians began to immigrate. The influx of Japanese descendants from Brazil to Japan was and continues to be large: there are over 300,000 Brazilians living in Japan today, mainly as workers in factories.[54]

Because of their Japanese ancestry, the Japanese government believed that Brazilians would be more easily integrated into Japanese society. In fact, this easy integration did not happen, since Japanese Brazilians and their children born in Japan are treated as foreigners by native Japanese.[55][56] This apparent contradiction between being and seeming causes conflicts of adaptation for the migrants and their acceptance by the natives.[57]

They also constitute the largest number of Portuguese speakers in Asia, greater than those of formerly Portuguese East Timor, Macau and Goa combined. Likewise, Brazil, alongside the Japanese American population of the United States, maintains its status as home to the largest Japanese community outside Japan.

Cities and prefectures with the most Brazilians in Japan are: Hamamatsu, Aichi, Shizuoka, Kanagawa, Saitama, and Gunma. Brazilians in Japan are usually educated. However, they are employed in the Japanese automotive and electronics factories.[58] Most Brazilians go to Japan attracted by the recruiting agencies (legal or illegal) in conjunction with the factories. Many Brazilians are subjected to hours of exhausting work, earning a small salary by Japanese standards.[59] Nevertheless, in 2002, Brazilians living in Japan sent US$2.5 billion to Brazil.[60]

Due to the financial crisis of 2007–2010, many Brazilians returned from Japan to Brazil. From January 2011 to March, it is estimated that 20,000 Brazilian immigrants left Japan.[61]

Brazilian identity in Japan edit

In Japan, many Japanese Brazilians suffer prejudice because they do not know how to speak Japanese fluently. Despite their Japanese appearance, Brazilians in Japan are culturally Brazilians, usually only speaking Portuguese, and are treated as foreigners.[62]

The children of Dekasegi Brazilians encounter difficulties in Japanese schools.[63] Thousands of Brazilian children are out of school in Japan.[62]

The Brazilian influence in Japan is growing. Tokyo has the largest carnival parade outside of Brazil itself. Portuguese is the third most spoken foreign language in Japan, after Chinese and Korean, and is among the most studied languages by students in the country. In Oizumi, it is estimated that 15% of the population speak Portuguese as their native language. Japan has two newspapers in the Portuguese language, besides radio and television stations spoken in that language. The Brazilian fashion and Bossa Nova music are also popular among Japanese.[64] In 2005, there were an estimated 302,000 Brazilian nationals in Japan, of whom 25,000 also hold Japanese citizenship.

100th anniversary edit

In 2008, many celebrations took place in Japan and Brazil to remember the centenary of Japanese immigration.[65] Then-Prince Naruhito of Japan arrived in Brazil on 17 June to participate in the celebrations. He visited Brasília, São Paulo, Paraná, Minas Gerais and Rio de Janeiro. Throughout his stay in Brazil, the Prince was received by a crowd of Japanese immigrants and their descendants. He broke the protocol of the Japanese Monarchy, which prohibits physical contact with people, and greeted the Brazilian people. In the São Paulo sambódromo, the Prince spoke to 50,000 people and in Paraná to 75,000. He also visited the University of São Paulo, where people of Japanese descent make up 14% of the 80,000 students.[66] Naruhito, then the crown prince of Japan, gave a speech that he concluded with a thank you in Portuguese.[67][68]

Media edit

In São Paulo there are two Japanese publications, the São Paulo Shimbun and the Nikkey Shimbun. The former was established in 1946 and the latter was established in 1998. The latter has a Portuguese edition, the Jornal Nippak, and both publications have Portuguese websites. The Jornal Paulista, established in 1947, and the Diário Nippak, established in 1949, are the predecessors of the Nikkey Shimbun.[69]

The Nambei, published in 1916, was Brazil's first Japanese newspaper. In 1933 90% of East Asian-origin Brazilians read Japanese publications, including 20 periodicals, 15 magazines, and five newspapers. The increase of the number of publications was due to Japanese immigration to Brazil. The government banned publication of Japanese newspapers during World War II.[69]

Tatiane Matheus of Estadão stated that in the pre-World War II period the Nippak Shimbun, established in 1916; the Burajiru Jiho, established in 1917; and two newspapers established in 1932, the Nippon Shimbun and the Seishu Shino, were the most influential Japanese newspapers. All were published in São Paulo.[69]

Education edit

 
 
Curitiba
 
Belo Horizonte
 
Belém
 
Vitória
 
Porto Alegre
 
Salvador
class=notpageimage|
Locations of Japanese international schools, day and supplementary, in Brazil recognized by MEXT (grey dots are for closed facilities)
 
Beneficência Nipo-Brasileira de São Paulo Building. The Association owns hospitals and social institutions across Brazil.[70]

Japanese international day schools in Brazil include the Escola Japonesa de São Paulo ("São Paulo Japanese School"),[71] the Associação Civil de Divulgação Cultural e Educacional Japonesa do Rio de Janeiro in the Cosme Velho neighborhood of Rio de Janeiro,[72] and the Escola Japonesa de Manaus.[73] The Escola Japonesa de Belo Horizonte (ベロ・オリゾンテ日本人学校),[74] and Japanese schools in Belém and Vitória previously existed; all three closed, and their certifications by the Japanese education ministry (MEXT) were revoked on March 29, 2002 (Heisei 14).[75]

There are also supplementary schools teaching the Japanese language and culture. As of 2003, in southern Brazil there are hundreds of Japanese supplementary schools. The Japan Foundation in São Paulo's coordinator of projects in 2003 stated that São Paulo State has about 500 supplementary schools. Around 33% of the Japanese supplementary schools in southeastern Brazil are in the city of São Paulo. As of 2003 almost all of the directors of the São Paulo schools were women.[76]

MEXT recognizes one part-time Japanese school (hoshu jugyo ko or hoshuko), the Escola Suplementar Japonesa Curitiba in Curitiba.[77] MEXT-approved hoshukos in Porto Alegre and Salvador have closed.[78]

History of education edit

The Taisho School, Brazil's first Japanese language school, opened in 1915 in São Paulo.[79] In some areas full-time Japanese schools opened because no local schools existed in the vicinity of the Japanese settlements.[80] In 1932 over 10,000 Nikkei Brazilian children attended almost 200 Japanese supplementary schools in São Paulo.[81] By 1938 Brazil had a total of 600 Japanese schools.[80]

In 1970, 22,000 students, taught by 400 teachers, attended 350 supplementary Japanese schools. In 1992 there were 319 supplementary Japanese language schools in Brazil with a total of 18,782 students, 10,050 of them being female and 8,732 of them being male. Of the schools, 111 were in São Paulo State and 54 were in Paraná State. At the time, the São Paulo Metropolitan Area had 95 Japanese schools, and the schools in the city limits of São Paulo had 6,916 students.[76]

In the 1980s, São Paulo Japanese supplementary schools were larger than those in other communities. In general, during that decade a Brazilian supplementary Japanese school had one or two teachers responsible for around 60 students.[76]

Hiromi Shibata, a PhD student at the University of São Paulo, wrote the dissertation As escolas japonesas paulistas (1915–1945), published in 1997. Jeff Lesser, author of Negotiating National Identity: Immigrants, Minorities, and the Struggle for Ethnicity in Brazil, wrote that the author "suggests" that the Japanese schools in São Paulo "were as much an affirmation of Nipo-Brazilian identity as they were of Japanese nationalism."[82]

Notable persons edit

 
Liberdade, São Paulo

Arts edit

Business edit

Politics edit

Religious edit

Sports edit

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ "Japan-Brazil Relations". Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Japan. November 26, 2019. from the original on February 25, 2021. Retrieved November 17, 2021. Number of Japanese nationals residing in Brazil: 50,205 (2018); Number of Japanese descendants: 2 million (estimated)
  2. ^ "ブラジル連邦共和国(Federative Republic of Brazil)基礎データ|外務省". 外務省 (in Japanese). June 9, 2021. from the original on June 21, 2021. Retrieved November 17, 2021.
  3. ^ Adital – Brasileiros no Japão July 13, 2006, at the Wayback Machine
  4. ^ "Brazil". state.gov. September 14, 2007. Retrieved May 4, 2018.
  5. ^ Gonzalez, David (September 25, 2013). "Japanese-Brazilians: Straddling Two Cultures". Lens Blog. The New York Times. from the original on October 2, 2013. Retrieved September 27, 2013.
  6. ^ Nakamura, Akemi (January 15, 2008). "Japan, Brazil mark a century of settlement, family ties". The Japan Times Online. from the original on November 11, 2021. Retrieved November 17, 2021.
  7. ^ Takeyuki Tsuda (April 2003). Strangers in the Ethnic Homeland – Japanese Brazilian Return Migration in Transnational Perspective. Columbia University Press. ISBN 9780231502344. from the original on January 4, 2015. Retrieved June 27, 2017.
  8. ^ Jillian Kestler-D'Amours (June 17, 2014). "Japanese Brazilians celebrate mixed heritage". Aljazeera. from the original on July 6, 2017. Retrieved June 27, 2017.
  9. ^ dos Santos, Sales Augusto (January 2002). "Historical Roots of the 'Whitening' of Brazil". Latin American Perspectives. 29 (1): 61–82. doi:10.1177/0094582X0202900104. JSTOR 3185072. S2CID 220914100.
  10. ^ Brasil 500 anos May 30, 2008, at the Wayback Machine
  11. ^ "HISTÓRICA - Revista Eletrônica do Arquivo do Estado". www.historica.arquivoestado.sp.gov.br. from the original on September 19, 2017. Retrieved May 4, 2018.
  12. ^ "Imigração Japonesa no Brasil". InfoEscola. December 22, 2008. Archived from the original on August 31, 2014. Retrieved June 18, 2012.
  13. ^ Mosley, Leonard (1966). Hirohito, Emperor of Japan. London: Prentice Hall International, Inc. pp. 97–98.
  14. ^ Imigração Japonesa no Brasil December 18, 2007, at the Wayback Machine
  15. ^ Barone, Michael (2013). Shaping Our Nation: How Surges of Migration Transformed America and Its Politics. Crown Forum. ISBN 9780307461513.
  16. ^ "A little corner of Brazil that is forever Okinawa", BBC News, February 4, 2018, from the original on February 5, 2018
  17. ^ Osada, Masako. (2002). Sanctions and Honorary Whites: Diplomatic Policies and Economic Realities in Relations Between Japan and South Africa, p. 33.
  18. ^ a b "A Imigração Japonesa em Itu". itu.com.br. from the original on January 6, 2017. Retrieved May 4, 2018.
  19. ^ a b "Governo do Estado de São Paulo". Governo do Estado de São Paulo. from the original on December 31, 2016. Retrieved May 4, 2018.
  20. ^ IBGE – Instituto Brasileiro de Geografia e Estatística Archived October 13, 1996, at the Portuguese Web Archive (visitado 4 de setembro de 2008)
  21. ^ 日系移民データ – 在日ブラジル商業会議所 – CCBJ June 5, 2012, at the Wayback Machine, which cites: "1941年までの数字は外務省領事移住部 『我が国民の海外発展-移住百年のあゆみ(資料集)』【東京、1971年】p140参照。 1952年から1993年の数字は国際協力事業団『海外移住統計(昭和27年度~平成5年度)』【東京、1994年】p28,29参照。"
  22. ^ a b c d e f g h Nishida, Mieko (2018). Diaspora and Identity: Japanese Brazilians in Brazil and Japan. Honolulu: University of Hawai'i Press. pp. 25–28. ISBN 9780824874292.
  23. ^ a b c . veja.abril.com.br. Archived from the original on March 31, 2013. Retrieved April 27, 2014.
  24. ^ An extensive quotation from this article appears in [[Minas Geraes-class battleship|Minas Geraes-class battleship]].
  25. ^ . Scribd. October 17, 2008. Archived from the original on May 10, 2013. Retrieved June 14, 2009.
  26. ^ . Uol. Archived from the original on February 3, 2014. Retrieved August 17, 2008.
  27. ^ . usp.br. Archived from the original on January 24, 2015. Retrieved January 24, 2015.
  28. ^ a b c d Enciclopédia das Línguas no Brasil – Japonês May 22, 2011, at the Wayback Machine (Accessed September 4, 2008)
  29. ^ Normano, J. F. (March 1934). "Japanese Emigration to Brazil". Pacific Affairs. 7 (1): 45. doi:10.2307/2750689. JSTOR 2750689 – via JSTOR.
  30. ^ RIOS, Roger Raupp. Text excerpted from a judicial sentence concerning crime of racism. Federal Justice of 10ª Vara da Circunscrição Judiciária de Porto Alegre, November 16, 2001[permanent dead link] (Accessed September 10, 2008)
  31. ^ Memória da Imigração Japonesa May 10, 2013, at the Wayback Machine
  32. ^ a b c d e f g h i j SUZUKI Jr, Matinas. História da discriminação brasileira contra os japoneses sai do limbo in Folha de S.Paulo, 20 de abril de 2008 October 15, 2012, at the Wayback Machine (visitado em 17 de agosto de 2008)
  33. ^ Darcy Ribeiro. O Povo Brasileiro, Vol. 07, 1997 (1997), pp. 401.
  34. ^ . Revista Made in Japan. Archived from the original on April 28, 2014. Retrieved May 17, 2014.
  35. ^ Lesser 2001, p. 301
  36. ^ "Valores impulsionam alunos nipo-brasileiros - Educação - Gazeta do Povo". Gazeta do Povo. Archived from the original on May 4, 2014. Retrieved May 4, 2014.
  37. ^ a b O sobrenome influencia no sucesso profissional de um brasileiro?
  38. ^ Hiramatsu, Daniel Afonso; Franco, Laércio Joel; Tomita, Nilce Emy (November 2006). "Influência da aculturação na autopercepção dos idosos quanto à saúde bucal em uma população de origem japonesa" [Influence of acculturation on self-perceived oral health among Japanese-Brazilian elderly]. Cadernos de Saúde Pública (in Portuguese). 22 (11): 2441–2448. doi:10.1590/S0102-311X2006001100018. PMID 17091181.
  39. ^ a b . Archived from the original on June 29, 2008.
  40. ^ Benson, Todd (January 27, 2005). "Brazil's Japanese Preserve Sumo and Share It With Others". The New York Times. Retrieved November 21, 2016.
  41. ^ Kwok, Matt (August 2, 2016). "'Sumo feminino': How Brazil's female sumo wrestlers are knocking down gender barriers". CBC News. Retrieved November 21, 2016.
  42. ^ "Find Rikishi - Brazil Shusshin". Sumo Reference. Retrieved January 13, 2022.
  43. ^ Birello, Verônica Braga; Lessa, Patrícia (December 31, 2008). "A Imigração Japonesa do Passado e a Imigração Inversa, Questão Gênero e Gerações Na Economia" [The Japanese Immigration From the Past and the Inverse Immigration, Gender and Generations Issues in the Economy of Brazil and Japan]. Divers@! (in Portuguese). 1 (1). doi:10.5380/diver.v1i1.34039.
  44. ^ Ota, Junko; Gardenal, Luiz Maximiliano Santin (2006). "As línguas japonesa e portuguesa em duas comunidades nipo-brasileiras: a relação entre os domínios e as gerações" [The Japanese and Portuguese languages in two Japanese-Brazilian communities: the relationship between domains and generations]. Lingüísticos (in Portuguese). 35: 1062–1071.
  45. ^ Doi, Elza Taeko (2006). "O ensino de japonês no Brasil como língua de imigração" [Japanese teaching in Brazil as an immigration language]. Estudos Lingüísticos (in Portuguese). 35: 66–75.
  46. ^ a b c d Resistência & integração : 100 anos de imigração japonesa no Brasil (in Portuguese). Rio de Janeiro: Brazilian Institute of Geography and Statistics. 2008. p. 71. ISBN 978-85-240-4014-6. from the original on March 3, 2021.
    • p59 Tabela 1 has errors:
      • Total for year 2000 (1,405,685) is wrong, missing data for Mato Grosso do Sul. p71 Apêndice 2 Total 1,435,490 is correct.
      • População nikkey for year 1991 are all wrong, mistakenly duplicating numbers from População total.
    • direct link to pdf [1]
  47. ^ Japoneses IBGE February 19, 2009, at the Wayback Machine
  48. ^ . www.japao100.com.br. Archived from the original on August 13, 2017. Retrieved May 4, 2018.
    • Centro-Oeste (5) 1960 and Total 2000 conflict with IBGE 2008 p71.
  49. ^ Naoto Higuchi (February 27, 2006). "BRAZILIAN MIGRATION TO JAPAN TRENDS, MODALITIES AND IMPACT" (PDF). United Nations. (PDF) from the original on March 29, 2012. Retrieved February 22, 2013.
  50. ^ Richard Gunde (January 27, 2004). . 2013. The Regents of the University of California. All rights reserved. Archived from the original on February 4, 2012. Retrieved February 22, 2013.
  51. ^ Higuchi, Naoto; Tanno, Kiyoto (November 2003). "What's Driving Brazil-Japan Migration? The Making and Remaking of the Brazilian Niche in Japan". International Journal of Japanese Sociology. 12 (1): 33–47. doi:10.1111/j.1475-6781.2003.00041.x.
  52. ^ [IBGE does a profile of immigrants] (in Portuguese). madeinjapan.uol.com.br. June 21, 2008. Archived from the original on June 24, 2008.
  53. ^ [ Japoneses e descendentes em Maringá passam de 14 mil . Archived from the original on July 21, 2011. Retrieved August 22, 2009.]
  54. ^ . May 6, 2008. Archived from the original on May 6, 2008. Retrieved May 4, 2018.
  55. ^ Sugimoto, Luiz (June 2002). "Parece, mas não é" [It seems, but it is not]. Jornal da Unicamp (in Portuguese).
  56. ^ Carlos Vogt; Mônica Macedo; Anna Paula Sotero; Bruno Buys; Rafael Evangelista; Marianne Frederick; Marta Kanashiro; Marcelo Knobel; Roberto Belisário; Ulisses Capozoli; Sérgio Varella Conceicao; Marilissa Mota; Rodrigo Cunha; Germana Barata; Beatriz Singer; Flávia Tonin; Daisy Silva de Lara. "Brasil: migrações internacionais e identidade". www.comciencia.br. from the original on August 19, 2016. Retrieved May 4, 2018.
  57. ^ Beltrão, Kaizô Iwakami; Sugahara, Sonoe (June 2006). "Permanentemente temporário: dekasseguis brasileiros no Japão". Revista Brasileira de Estudos de População. 23 (1). doi:10.1590/S0102-30982006000100005.
  58. ^ "Estadao.com.br :: Especiais :: Imigração Japonesa". www.estadao.com.br. from the original on September 24, 2015. Retrieved May 4, 2018.
  59. ^ "Folha Online - BBC - Lula ouve de brasileiros queixas sobre vida no Japão - 28/05/2005". www1.folha.uol.com.br. Retrieved May 4, 2018.
  60. ^ Untitled Document September 12, 2012, at the Wayback Machine
  61. ^ Brasileiros que trabalharam no Japão estão retornando ao Brasil October 14, 2010, at the Wayback Machine
  62. ^ a b Onishi, Norimitsu. "An Enclave of Brazilians Is Testing Insular Japan," February 2, 2017, at the Wayback Machine New York Times. November 1, 2008.
  63. ^ Tabuchi, Hiroko. "Despite Shortage, Japan Keeps a High Wall for Foreign Labor," New York Times. January 3, 2011; excerpt, "...the government did little to integrate its migrant populations. Children of foreigners are exempt from compulsory education, for example, while local schools that accept non-Japanese-speaking children receive almost no help in caring for their needs."
  64. ^ "Japão: imigrantes brasileiros popularizam língua portuguesa". correiodoestado.com.br. from the original on October 11, 2017. Retrieved May 4, 2018.
  65. ^ "Site Oficial da ACCIJB - Centenário da Imigração Japonesa no Brasil - Comemorações". www.centenario2008.org.br. from the original on September 25, 2017. Retrieved May 4, 2018.
  66. ^ (PDF). June 20, 2008. Archived from the original (PDF) on October 30, 2008. Retrieved October 23, 2008.
  67. ^ Kumasaka, Alyne. "Site Oficial da ACCIJB - Centenário da Imigração Japonesa no Brasil - Festividade no Sambódromo emociona público". www.centenario2008.org.br. from the original on March 27, 2016. Retrieved May 4, 2018.
  68. ^ Após visita, príncipe Naruhito deixa o Brasil
  69. ^ a b c Matheus, Tatiane. "O outro lado da notícia March 17, 2014, at the Wayback Machine." Estadão. February 9, 2008. Retrieved on March 17, 2014. "O primeiro jornal japonês no País foi o Nambei,[...]"
  70. ^ DIGITAL, DIN. "Enkyo - Beneficência Nipo-Brasileira de São Paulo". ENKYO. from the original on March 22, 2018. Retrieved May 4, 2018.
  71. ^ Home page March 17, 2014, at the Wayback Machine. Escola Japonesa de São Paulo. Retrieved on March 18, 2014. "Estrada do Campo Limpo,1501, São Paulo-SP"
  72. ^ "学校紹介 January 12, 2015, at the Wayback Machine." Associação Civil de Divulgação Cultural e Educacional Japonesa do Rio de Janeiro. Retrieved on March 18, 2014. "Rua Cosme Velho,1166, Cosme Velho RIO DE JANEIRO,R.J,BRASIL,CEP22241-091"
  73. ^ Home page Archived May 6, 2015, at Wikiwix. Escola Japonesa de Manaus. Retrieved on March 18, 2014. "Caixa Postal 2261 Agencia Andre Araujo Manaus AM. Brasil CEP69065-970"
  74. ^ Home page May 7, 2015, at the Wayback Machine. Escola Japonesa de Belo Horizonte. Retrieved on January 15, 2015.
  75. ^ "過去に指定・認定していた在外教育施設" (). Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology. Retrieved on January 15, 2015.
  76. ^ a b c Carvalho, Daniela de. Migrants and Identity in Japan and Brazil: The Nikkeijin. Routledge, August 27, 2003. ISBN 1135787654, 9781135787653. Page number unstated (Google Books PT46).
  77. ^ "中南米の補習授業校一覧(平成25年4月15日現在)" (). Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology (MEXT). Retrieved on May 10, 2014.
  78. ^ "." MEXT. October 29, 2000. Retrieved on January 11, 2017. "ポルト・アレグレ 休 校 中 サルバドール 休 校 中 " (states the Porto Alegre and Salvador schools closed)
  79. ^ Goto, Junichi (Kyoto University). Latin Americans of Japanese Origin (Nikkeijin) Working in Japan: A Survey. World Bank Publications, 2007. p. 7-8.
  80. ^ a b Laughton-Kuragasaki, Ayami, VDM Publishing, 2008. p. 10. "The immigrants opened Japanese schools for their children as they were living in the rural areas where there were no local schools for their children and no support from the local authorities. About 600 Japanese schools were open by 1938. The children were full-time students,[...]"
  81. ^ Goto, Junichi (Kyoto University). Latin Americans of Japanese Origin (Nikkeijin) Working in Japan: A Survey. World Bank Publications, 2007. p. 8.
  82. ^ Lesser, Jeff. Negotiating National Identity: Immigrants, Minorities, and the Struggle for Ethnicity in Brazil. Duke University Press, 1999. ISBN 0822322927, 9780822322924. p. 231.
  83. ^ Ordem do Sol Nascente (December 16, 2008). . yamagishi.com.br. Archived from the original on July 26, 2012. Retrieved May 4, 2018.
  84. ^ "Meet the Teen Spearheading Brazil's Protests Against its President". Time. October 27, 2015. from the original on December 1, 2015.
  85. ^ a b Tatame Magazine >> Mario Masaki Interview November 30, 2010, at the Wayback Machine. URL accessed on October 16, 2010.

References edit

  • Masterson, Daniel M. and Sayaka Funada-Classen. (2004), The Japanese in Latin America: The Asian American Experience. Urbana, Illinois: University of Illinois Press. ISBN 978-0-252-07144-7; OCLC 253466232
  • Lesser, Jeffrey (2001). Negociando a Identidade Nacional: Imigrantes, Minorias e a Luta pela Etnicidade no Brasil. UNESP.
  • , A Discontented Diaspora: Japanese-Brazilians and the Meanings of Ethnic Militancy, 1960–1980 (Durham: Duke University Press, 2007); Portuguese edition: Uma Diáspora Descontente: Os Nipo-Brasileiros e os Significados da Militância Étnica, 1960–1980 (São Paulo: Editora Paz e Terra, 2008).
  • , Negotiating National Identity: Immigrants, Minorities and the Struggle for Ethnicity in Brazil (Durham: Duke University Press, 1999); Portuguese edition: Negociando an Identidade Nacional: Imigrantes, Minorias e a Luta pela Etnicidade no Brasil (São Paulo: Editora UNESP, 2001).

Further reading edit

  • Shibata, Hiromi. As escolas Japonesas paulistas (1915–1945) (Ph.D. dissertation, University of Sao Paulo, 1997).
  • Sasaki, Elisa (August 2006). "A imigração para o Japão". Estudos Avançados. 20 (57): 99–117. doi:10.1590/S0103-40142006000200009.

External links edit

  • Sociedade Brasileira de Cultura Japonesa March 7, 2011, at the Wayback Machine
  • Fundação Japão em São Paulo
  • Centenário da Imigração Japonesa no Brasil (1908–2008) May 11, 2008, at the Wayback Machine
  • Site da Imigração Japonesa no Brasil
  • Center for Japanese-Brazilian Studies (Centro de Estudos Nipo-Brasileiros)

japanese, brazilians, japanese, 日系ブラジル人, hepburn, nikkei, burajiru, portuguese, nipo, brasileiros, ˌnipobɾaziˈlejɾus, brazilian, citizens, nationals, naturals, japanese, ancestry, japanese, immigrants, living, brazil, japanese, people, brazilian, ancestry, nip. Japanese Brazilians Japanese 日系ブラジル人 Hepburn Nikkei Burajiru jin Portuguese Nipo brasileiros ˌnipobɾaziˈlejɾus are Brazilian citizens who are nationals or naturals of Japanese ancestry or Japanese immigrants living in Brazil or Japanese people of Brazilian ancestry 5 Japanese BraziliansNipo brasileiros 日系ブラジル人Japanese descendants in Sao Paulo Total populationc 2 million Brazilians of Japanese descent 2019 1 Regions with significant populationsJapan 208 857 2019 Japanese Brazilians in Japan 2 0 2 of Japan s populationLanguagesPortuguese JapaneseReligionPredominantly Roman Catholicism 3 Minority Buddhism and Shintoism 4 Japanese new religionsProtestantismRelated ethnic groupsJapanese other nikkei groups mainly those from Latin America and Japanese Americans Latin Americans in Japan Asian Latin AmericansThe first group of Japanese immigrants arrived in Brazil in 1908 6 Brazil is home to the largest Japanese population outside Japan Since the 1980s a return migration has emerged of Japanese Brazilians to Japan 7 More recently a trend of interracial marriage has taken hold among Brazilians of Japanese descent with the racial intermarriage rate approximated at 50 and increasing 8 Contents 1 History 1 1 Background 1 2 First immigrants 1 3 New life in Brazil 1 4 Prejudice and forced assimilation 1 5 Prestige 2 Integration and intermarriage 2 1 Religion 2 2 Martial arts 2 3 Language 2 4 Distribution and population 3 Image gallery 3 1 Japanese from Maringa 4 The Dekasegi 4 1 Brazilian identity in Japan 5 100th anniversary 6 Media 7 Education 7 1 History of education 8 Notable persons 8 1 Arts 8 2 Business 8 3 Politics 8 4 Religious 8 5 Sports 9 See also 10 Notes 11 References 12 Further reading 13 External linksHistory editBackground edit nbsp A poster used in Japan to attract immigrants to Brazil and Peru It reads Let s go to South America Brazil highlighted with your entire family Between the end of the 19th and early 20th centuries coffee was the main export product of Brazil At first Brazilian farmers used African slave labour in the coffee plantations but in 1850 the slave trade was abolished in Brazil To solve the labour shortage the Brazilian elite decided to attract European immigrants to work on the coffee plantations This was also consistent with the government s push towards whitening the country The hope was that through procreation the large African and Native American groups would be eliminated or reduced 9 The government and farmers offered to pay European immigrants passage The plan encouraged millions of Europeans most of them Italians 10 to migrate to Brazil However once in Brazil the immigrants received very low salaries and worked in poor conditions including long working hours and frequent ill treatment by their bosses Because of this in 1902 Italy enacted the Prinetti Decree prohibiting subsidized emigration to Brazil 11 Japan had been isolated from the rest of the world during the 265 years of the Edo period Tokugawa Shogunate without wars epidemics brought in from abroad or emigration With the agricultural techniques of the time Japan produced only the food it consumed with practically no formation of stocks for difficult periods Any agricultural crop failure caused widespread famine 12 The end of the Tokugawa Shogunate gave way to an intense project of modernization and opening to the outside world during the Meiji era Despite the agrarian reform mechanization of agriculture made thousands of peasants unemployed Thousands of other small peasants became indebted or lost their land because they could not pay the high taxes The end of feudalism in Japan generated great poverty in the rural population so many Japanese began to emigrate in search of better living conditions By the 1930s Japanese industrialisation had significantly boosted the population However prospects for Japanese people to migrate to other countries were limited The United States had banned non white immigration from some parts of the world 13 on the basis that they would not integrate into society this Exclusion Clause of the 1924 Immigration Act specifically targeted the Japanese At the same time in Australia the White Australia Policy prevented the immigration of non whites to Australia First immigrants edit nbsp The Kasato Maru docked in Port of Santos 1908In 1907 the Brazilian and the Japanese governments signed a treaty permitting Japanese migration to Brazil This was due in part to the decrease in the Italian immigration to Brazil and a new labour shortage on the coffee plantations 14 Also Japanese immigration to the United States had been barred by the Gentlemen s Agreement of 1907 15 The first Japanese immigrants 781 people mostly farmers came to Brazil in 1908 on the Kasato Maru About half of these immigrants were Okinawans from southern Okinawa who had faced 29 years of oppression by the Japanese government following the Ryukyu Islands s annexation becoming the first Ryukyuan Brazilians 16 They travelled from the Japanese port of Kobe via the Cape of Good Hope in South Africa 17 Many of them worked on coffee plantations 18 In the first seven years 3 434 more Japanese families 14 983 people arrived The beginning of World War I in 1914 started a boom in Japanese migration to Brazil such that between 1917 and 1940 over 164 000 Japanese came to Brazil 75 of them going to Sao Paulo where most of the coffee plantations were located 19 Japanese immigration to Brazil by period 1906 1993 20 21 Years Immigrants1906 1910 1 7141911 1915 13 3711916 1920 13 5761921 1925 11 3501926 1930 59 5641931 1935 72 6611936 1941 16 7501952 1955 7 7151956 1960 29 7271961 1965 9 4881966 1970 2 7531971 1975 1 9921976 1980 1 3521981 1985 4111986 1990 1711991 1993 48Total 242 643New life in Brazil edit The vast majority of Japanese immigrants intended to work a few years in Brazil make some money and go home However getting rich quick was a dream that was almost impossible to achieve This was exacerbated by the fact that it was obligatory for Japanese immigrants to Brazil prior to the Second World War to emigrate in familial units 22 Because multiple persons necessitated monetary support in these familial units Japanese immigrants found it nearly impossible to return home to Japan even years after emigrating to Brazil 22 The immigrants were paid a very low salary and worked long hours of exhausting work Also everything that the immigrants consumed had to be purchased from the landowner see truck system Soon their debts became very significant 19 Contrary to the plan only 10 of the nearly 190 000 Japanese who immigrated to Brazil before the Second World War returned to Japan 23 nbsp A Japanese Brazilian miko during a festival in Curitiba On 1 August 1908 The New York Times remarked that relations between Brazil and Japan at the time were not extremely cordial because of the attitude of Brazil toward the immigration of Japanese labourers 24 The landowners in Brazil still had a slavery mentality Immigrants although employees had to confront the rigidity and lack of labour laws Indebted and subjected to hours of exhaustive work often suffering physical violence suicide yonige to escape at night and strikes were some of the attitudes taken by many Japanese because of the exploitation on coffee farms 25 Even when they were free of their contractual obligations on Brazil s coffee plantations it was often impossible for immigrants to return home due to their meager earnings 22 However through a system called partnership farming in a contract with a landowner in which the immigrants committed themselves to deforesting the land sowing coffee taking care of the plantation and returning the area in seven years time when the second harvest would be ready the immigrants could keep the profits from the first harvest taking into account that the coffee cultivation is biannual They also kept everything they planted in addition to coffee In this way many Japanese managed to save some money and buy their first pieces of land in Brazil 23 The first land purchase by the Japanese in Brazil took place in Sao Paulo in 1911 26 Many Japanese immigrants purchased land in rural Brazil having been forced to invest what little capital they had into land in order to someday make enough to return to Japan As independent farmers Japanese immigrants formed communities that were ethnically isolated from the rest of Brazilian society The immigrants who settled and formed these communities referred to themselves as shokumin and their settlements as shokuminchi 22 In 1940 the Superintendence of Coffee Business issued that even though the Japanese living in Sao Paulo made up only 3 5 of the state s population they were responsible for 100 of the production of ramie silk peaches and strawberries 99 of mint and tea 80 of potatoes and vegetables 70 of eggs 50 of bananas 40 of the cotton and 20 of the coffee produced by the state of Sao Paulo 27 Japanese children born in Brazil were educated in schools founded by the Japanese community Most only learned to speak the Japanese language and lived within the Japanese community in rural areas Over the years many Japanese managed to buy their own land and became small farmers They started to plant strawberries tea and rice Only 6 of children were the result of interracial relationships Immigrants rarely accepted marriage with a non Japanese person 28 By the 1930s Brazilians complained that the independent Japanese communities had formed quistos raciais or racial cysts and were unwilling to further integrate the Japanese Brazilians into Brazilian society 22 The Japanese government via the Japanese consulate in Sao Paulo was directly involved with the education of Japanese children in Brazil Japanese education in Brazil was modeled after education systems in Japan and schools in Japanese communities in Brazil received funding directly from the Japanese government 22 By 1933 there were 140 000 150 000 Japanese Brazilians which was by far the largest Japanese population in any Latin American country 29 With Brazil under the leadership of Getulio Vargas and the Empire of Japan involved on the Axis side in World War II Japanese Brazilians became more isolated from their mother country Japanese leaders and diplomats in Brazil left for Japan after Brazil severed all relations with Japan on 29 January 1942 leading Japanese Brazilians to fend for themselves in an increasingly hostile country Vargas s regime instituted several measures that targeted the Japanese population in Brazil including the loss of freedom to travel within Brazil censorship of Japanese newspapers even those printed in Portuguese and imprisonment if Japanese Brazilians were caught speaking Japanese in public 22 Japanese Brazilians became divided amongst themselves and some even turned to performing terrorist acts on Japanese farmers who were employed by Brazilian farmers 22 By 1947 however following the end of World War II tensions between Brazilians and their Japanese population had cooled considerably Japanese language newspapers returned to publication and Japanese language education was reinstituted among the Japanese Brazilian population World War II had left Japanese Brazilians isolated from their mother country censored by the Brazilian government and facing internal conflicts within their own populations but for the most part life returned to normal following the end of the war Prejudice and forced assimilation edit On 28 July 1921 representatives Andrade Bezerra and Cincinato Braga proposed a law whose Article 1 provided The immigration of individuals from the black race to Brazil is prohibited On 22 October 1923 representative Fidelis Reis produced another bill on the entry of immigrants whose fifth article was as follows The entry of settlers from the black race into Brazil is prohibited For Asian immigrants there will be allowed each year a number equal to 5 of those residing in the country 30 Some years before World War II the government of President Getulio Vargas initiated a process of forced assimilation of people of immigrant origin in Brazil The Constitution of 1934 had a legal provision about the subject The concentration of immigrants anywhere in the country is prohibited the law should govern the selection location and assimilation of the alien The assimilationist project affected mainly Japanese Italian Jewish and German immigrants and their descendants 31 The formation of ethnic cysts among immigrants of non Portuguese origin prevented the realization of the whitening project of the Brazilian population The government then started to act on these communities of foreign origin to force them to integrate into a Brazilian culture with Portuguese roots It was the dominant idea of a unification of all the inhabitants of Brazil under a single national spirit During World War II Brazil severed relations with Japan Japanese newspapers and teaching the Japanese language in schools were banned leaving Portuguese as the only option for Japanese descendants Newspapers in Italian or German were also advised to cease production as Italy and Germany were Japan s allies in the war 18 In 1939 research of Estrada de Ferro Noroeste do Brasil from Sao Paulo showed that 87 7 of Japanese Brazilians read newspapers in the Japanese language a high figure for a country with many illiterate people like Brazil at the time 32 The Japanese appeared as undesirable immigrants within the whitening and assimilationist policy of the Brazilian government 32 Oliveira Viana a Brazilian jurist historian and sociologist described the Japanese immigrants as follows They Japanese are like sulfur insoluble The Brazilian magazine O Malho in its edition of 5 December 1908 issued a charge of Japanese immigrants with the following legend The government of Sao Paulo is stubborn After the failure of the first Japanese immigration it contracted 3 000 yellow people It insists on giving Brazil a race diametrically opposite to ours 32 In 1941 the Brazilian Minister of Justice Francisco Campos defended the ban on admission of 400 Japanese immigrants in Sao Paulo and wrote their despicable standard of living is a brutal competition with the country s worker their selfishness their bad faith their refractory character make them a huge ethnic and cultural cyst located in the richest regions of Brazil 32 The Japanese Brazilian community was strongly marked by restrictive measures when Brazil declared war against Japan in August 1942 Japanese Brazilians could not travel the country without safe conduct issued by the police over 200 Japanese schools were closed and radio equipment was seized to prevent transmissions on short wave from Japan The goods of Japanese companies were confiscated and several companies of Japanese origin had interventions including the newly founded Banco America do Sul Japanese Brazilians were prohibited from driving motor vehicles even if they were taxi drivers buses or trucks on their property The drivers employed by Japanese had to have permission from the police Thousands of Japanese immigrants were arrested or expelled from Brazil on suspicion of espionage There were many anonymous denunciations of activities against national security arising from disagreements between neighbors recovery of debts and even fights between children 32 Japanese Brazilians were arrested for suspicious activity when they were in artistic meetings or picnics On 10 July 1943 approximately 10 000 Japanese and German and Italian immigrants who lived in Santos had 24 hours to close their homes and businesses and move away from the Brazilian coast The police acted without any notice About 90 of people displaced were Japanese To reside in Baixada Santista the Japanese had to have a safe conduct 32 In 1942 the Japanese community who introduced the cultivation of pepper in Tome Acu in Para was virtually turned into a concentration camp This time the Brazilian ambassador in Washington D C Carlos Martins Pereira e Sousa encouraged the government of Brazil to transfer all the Japanese Brazilians to internment camps without the need for legal support in the same manner as was done with the Japanese residents in the United States No single suspicion of activities of Japanese against national security was confirmed 32 During the National Constituent Assembly of 1946 the representative of Rio de Janeiro Miguel Couto Filho proposed Amendments to the Constitution as follows It is prohibited the entry of Japanese immigrants of any age and any origin in the country In the final vote a tie with 99 votes in favour and 99 against Senator Fernando de Melo Viana who chaired the session of the Constituent Assembly had the casting vote and rejected the constitutional amendment By only one vote the immigration of Japanese people to Brazil was not prohibited by the Brazilian Constitution of 1946 32 The Japanese immigrants appeared to the Brazilian government as undesirable and non assimilable immigrants As Asian they did not contribute to the whitening process of the Brazilian people as desired by the ruling Brazilian elite In this process of forced assimilation the Japanese more than any other immigrant group suffered the ethno cultural persecution imposed during this period 32 Prestige edit For decades Japanese Brazilians were seen as a non assimilable people The immigrants were treated only as a reserve of cheap labour that should be used on coffee plantations and that Brazil should avoid absorbing their cultural influences This widespread conception that the Japanese were negative for Brazil was changed in the following decades The Japanese were able to overcome the difficulties along the years and drastically improve their lives through hard work and education this was also facilitated by the involvement of the Japanese government in the process of migration The image of hard working agriculturists that came to help develop the country and agriculture helped erase the lack of trust of the local population and create a positive image of the Japanese In the 1970s Japan became one of the richest countries of the world synonymous with modernity and progress In the same period Japanese Brazilians achieved a great cultural and economic success probably the immigrant group that most rapidly achieved progress in Brazil Due to the powerful Japanese economy and due to the rapid enrichment of the Nisei in the last decades Brazilians of Japanese descent achieved a social prestige in Brazil that largely contrasts with the aggression with which the early immigrants were treated in the country 32 33 In the early 1960s the Japanese Brazilian population in the cities already surpassed that of the countryside As the vast majority of families that moved to Sao Paulo and cities in Parana had few resources and were headed by first and second generation Japanese it was imperative that their business did not require a large initial investment or advanced knowledge of the Portuguese language Thus a good part of the immigrants began to dedicate themselves to small trade or to the provision of basic services where dyeing stood out In the 1970s 80 of the 3 500 establishments that washed and ironed the clothes of Sao Paulo citizens were Japanese According to anthropologist Celia Sakurai The business was convenient for the families because they could live at the back of the dye shop and do all the work without having to hire employees In addition the communication required by the activity was brief and simple 23 In the Brazilian urban environment the Japanese began to work mainly in sectors related to agriculture such as traders or owners of small stores selling fruit vegetables or fish Working with greengrocers and market stalls was facilitated by the contact that urban Japanese had with those who had stayed in the countryside as suppliers were usually friends or relatives Whatever the activity chosen by the family it was up to the eldest children to work together with their parents The custom was a Japanese tradition of delegating to the eldest son the continuation of the family activity and also the need to help pay for the studies of the younger siblings While the older ones worked the younger siblings enrolled in technical courses such as Accountancy mainly because it was easier to deal with numbers than with the Portuguese language As for college the Japanese favored engineering medicine and law which guaranteed money and social prestige In 1958 Japanese descendants already represented 21 of Brazilians with education above secondary In 1977 Japanese Brazilians who made up 2 5 of the population of Sao Paulo added up to 13 of those approved at the University of Sao Paulo 16 of those who were admitted to the Technological Institute of Aeronautics ITA and 12 of those selected at the Getulio Vargas Foundation FGV 34 According to a 1995 research conducted by Datafolha 53 of adult Japanese Brazilians had a college degree compared to only 9 of Brazilians in general 35 According to the newspaper Gazeta do Povo in Brazil common sense is that Japanese descendants are studious disciplined do well at school pass the admission exams more easily and in most cases have great affinity for the exact science careers According to a 2009 survey carried out with data from the University of Sao Paulo and Unesp even though Japanese descendants were 1 2 of the population of the city of Sao Paulo and made up less than 4 of those enrolled in the entrance exams they were about 15 of those approved 36 A 2017 survey revealed that Brazilians of Japanese descent are the wealthiest group in Brazil The survey concluded that Brazilians with a Japanese surname are the ones who earn the most 73 40 reais per hour 37 Salary of Brazilians according to their last name and color 37 Ethnic origin based on last name and color race Salary in Brazilian real per hour Japanese 73 40Italian 51 80German 48 10Eastern European 47 60Iberian whites 33 90Pardo brown 27 80Black 26 50Indigenous 26 10 nbsp Japanese family in Bastos SP nbsp Japanese immigrants working on coffee plantation nbsp Japanese immigrants working on coffee plantation nbsp Japanese immigrants arriving to the Port of Santos nbsp Japanese Immigrants on tea plantation in Registro SP nbsp Japanese immigrants with silkworm breeding nbsp Japanese store in Sao Paulo nbsp Fabio Riodi Yassuda pt a Nisei who became the first Brazilian minister of Japanese descent Integration and intermarriage editIntermarriage in the Japanese Brazilian community 28 Generation Denomination in Proportion of each generation in all community Proportion of mixed race in each generation Japanese English1st Issei Immigrants 12 51 0 2nd Nisei Children 30 85 6 3rd Sansei Grandchildren 41 33 42 4th Yonsei Great grandchildren 12 95 61 As of 2008 many Japanese Brazilians belong to the third generation sansei who make up 41 33 of the community First generation issei are 12 51 second generation nisei are 30 85 and fourth generation yonsei 12 95 28 A more recent phenomenon in Brazil is intermarriages between Japanese Brazilians and non ethnic Japanese Though people of Japanese descent make up only 0 8 of the country s population they are the largest Japanese community outside Japan with over 1 4 million people In areas with large numbers of Japanese such as Sao Paulo and Parana since the 1970s large numbers of Japanese descendants started to marry into other ethnic groups Jeffrey Lesser s work has shown the complexities of integration both during the Vargas era and more recently during the dictatorship 1964 1984 Nowadays among the 1 4 million Brazilians of Japanese descent 28 have some non Japanese ancestry 38 This number reaches only 6 among children of Japanese immigrants but 61 among great grandchildren of Japanese immigrants Religion edit Immigrants as well as most Japanese were mostly followers of Shinto and Buddhism In the Japanese communities in Brazil there was a strong effort by Brazilian priests to proselytize the Japanese More recently intermarriage with Catholics also contributed to the growth of Catholicism in the community 39 Currently 60 of Japanese Brazilians are Roman Catholics and 25 are adherents of a Japanese religion 39 Martial arts edit The Japanese immigration to Brazil in particular the immigration of the judoka Mitsuyo Maeda resulted in the development of one of the most effective modern martial arts Brazilian Jiu Jitsu Japanese immigrants also brought sumo wrestling to Brazil with the first tournament in the country organized in 1914 40 The country has a growing number of amateur sumo wrestlers with the only purpose built sumo arena outside Japan located in Sao Paulo 41 Brazil also produced as of January 2022 sixteen professional wrestlers with the most successful being Kaisei Ichirō 42 Language edit nbsp Cherry blossom in Japan s Square in Curitiba Parana The knowledge of the Japanese and Portuguese languages reflects the integration of the Japanese in Brazil over several generations Although first generation immigrants will often not learn Portuguese well or not use it frequently most second generation are bilingual The third generation however are most likely monolingual in Portuguese or speak along with Portuguese non fluent Japanese 43 A study conducted in the Japanese Brazilian communities of Alianca and Fukuhaku both in the state of Sao Paulo released information on the language spoken by these people Before coming to Brazil 12 2 of the first generation interviewed from Alianca reported they had studied the Portuguese language in Japan and 26 8 said to have used it once on arrival in Brazil Many of the Japanese immigrants took classes of Portuguese and learned about the history of Brazil before migrating to the country In Fukuhaku only 7 7 of the people reported they had studied Portuguese in Japan but 38 5 said they had contact with Portuguese once on arrival in Brazil All the immigrants reported they spoke exclusively Japanese at home in the first years in Brazil However in 2003 the figure dropped to 58 5 in Alianca and 33 3 in Fukuhaku This probably reflects that through contact with the younger generations of the family who speak mostly Portuguese many immigrants also began to speak Portuguese at home The first Brazilian born generation the Nisei alternate between the use of Portuguese and Japanese Regarding the use of Japanese at home 64 3 of Nisei informants from Alianca and 41 5 from Fukuhaku used Japanese when they were children In comparison only 14 3 of the third generation Sansei reported to speak Japanese at home when they were children It reflects that the second generation was mostly educated by their Japanese parents using the Japanese language On the other hand the third generation did not have much contact with their grandparent s language and most of them speak the national language of Brazil Portuguese as their mother tongue 44 Japanese Brazilians usually speak Japanese more often when they live along with a first generation relative Those who do not live with a Japanese born relative usually speak Portuguese more often 45 Japanese spoken in Brazil is usually a mix of different Japanese dialects since the Japanese community in Brazil came from all regions of Japan influenced by the Portuguese language The high numbers of Brazilian immigrants returning from Japan will probably produce more Japanese speakers in Brazil 28 Distribution and population edit 2000 IBGE estimates for Japanese Brazilians 46 State Population ofJapanese BraziliansSao Paulo 693 495Parana 143 588Bahia 78 449Minas Gerais 75 449Others 414 704Total 1 435 490In 2008 IBGE published a book about the Japanese diaspora and it estimated that as of 2000 there were 70 932 Japanese born immigrants living in Brazil compared to the 158 087 found in 1970 Of the Japanese 51 445 lived in Sao Paulo 46 37 Most of the immigrants were over 60 years old because the Japanese immigration to Brazil has ended since the mid 20th century 47 According to the IBGE as of 2000 there were 1 435 490 people of Japanese descent in Brazil The Japanese immigration was concentrated to Sao Paulo and still in 2000 48 of Japanese Brazilians lived in this state There were 693 495 people of Japanese origin in Sao Paulo followed by Parana with 143 588 More recently Brazilians of Japanese descent are making presence in places that used to have a small population of this group For example in 1960 there were 532 Japanese Brazilians in Bahia while in 2000 they were 78 449 or 0 6 of the state s population 46 Northern Brazil excluding Para saw its Japanese population increase from 2 341 in 1960 0 2 of the total population to 54 161 0 8 in 2000 During the same period in Central Western Brazil they increased from 3 583 to 66 119 0 7 of the population 46 48 However the overall Japanese population in Brazil is shrinking secondary to a decreased birth rate and an aging population return immigration to Japan 49 50 51 as well as intermarriage with other races and dilution of ethnic identity For the whole Brazil with over 1 4 million people of Japanese descent the largest percentages were found in the states of Sao Paulo 1 9 of Japanese descent Parana 1 5 and Mato Grosso do Sul 1 4 The smallest percentages were found in Roraima and Alagoas with only 8 Japanese The percentage of Brazilians with Japanese roots largely increased among children and teenagers In 1991 0 6 of Brazilians between 0 and 14 years old were of Japanese descent In 2000 they were 4 as a result of the returning of Dekasegis Brazilians of Japanese descent who work in Japan to Brazil 52 Image gallery editThis section contains an unencyclopedic or excessive gallery of images Please help improve the section by removing excessive or indiscriminate images or by moving relevant images beside adjacent text in accordance with the Manual of Style on use of images October 2011 Learn how and when to remove this template message nbsp Japanese in a Brazilian forest nbsp Japanese immigrants with their planting of potatoes nbsp Japanese family in Brazil nbsp Japanese family on a banana plantation in Brazil c1930 nbsp A train taking Japanese immigrants from Santos to Sao Paulo 1935 nbsp Japanese on coffee plantation 1930 nbsp The first immigrants on the Kasato Maru ship 1908 nbsp Japanese immigrants in Brazil nbsp Marriage of Japanese immigrants at Sao Paulo state Brazil nbsp Brazilian couple Inter racial couple in Brazil unusual during the 60s in rural areas nbsp Japanese in Sao Paulo Brazil Liberdade neighborhood in a Shinto chapel nbsp Brazilian issei first generation of Japanese immigrant reading newspaper in Portuguese while the shown title is about Kardec spiritism a French Brazilian sect which is quite similar to Shinto and Buddhist principles nbsp Group of Japanese descendants with Brazilians working resting after tree cutting to clear areas for coffee plantations in Brazil 50s and 60s nbsp Brazilians second generation after Japanese immigration sanseis in rural areas coffee plantations Sao Paulo state Brazil Japanese from Maringa edit A 2008 census revealed details about the population of Japanese origin from the city of Maringa in Parana making it possible to have a profile of the Japanese Brazilian population 53 NumbersThere were 4 034 families of Japanese descent from Maringa comprising 14 324 people Dekasegi1 846 or 15 of Japanese Brazilians from Maringa were working in Japan GenerationsOf the 12 478 people of Japanese origin living in Maringa 6 61 were Issei born in Japan 35 45 were Nisei children of Japanese 37 72 were Sansei grandchildren and 13 79 were Yonsei great grandchildren Average ageThe average age was of 40 12 years old Gender52 of Japanese Brazilians from the city were women Average number of children per woman2 4 children similar to the average Southern Brazilian woman ReligionMost were Roman Catholics 32 of Sansei 27 of Nisei 10 of Yonsei and 2 of Issei Protestant religions were the second most followed 6 of Nisei 6 of Sansei 2 of Yonsei and 1 of Issei and next was Buddhism 5 of Nisei 3 of Issei 2 of Sansei and 1 of Yonsei Family49 66 were married Knowledge of the Japanese language47 can understand read and write in Japanese 31 of the second generation and 16 of the third generation can speak Japanese Schooling31 elementary education 30 secondary school and 30 higher education Mixed raceA total of 20 were mixed race have some non Japanese origin The Dekasegi editSee also Brazilians in Japan During the 1980s the Japanese economic situation improved and achieved stability Many Japanese Brazilians went to Japan as contract workers due to economic and political problems in Brazil and they were termed Dekasegi Working visas were offered to Brazilian Dekasegis in 1990 encouraging more immigration from Brazil In 1990 the Japanese government authorized the legal entry of Japanese and their descendants until the third generation in Japan At that time Japan was receiving a large number of illegal immigrants from Pakistan Bangladesh China and Thailand The legislation of 1990 was intended to select immigrants who entered Japan giving a clear preference for Japanese descendants from South America especially Brazil These people were lured to Japan to work in areas that the Japanese refused the so called three K Kitsui Kitanai and Kiken hard dirty and dangerous Many Japanese Brazilians began to immigrate The influx of Japanese descendants from Brazil to Japan was and continues to be large there are over 300 000 Brazilians living in Japan today mainly as workers in factories 54 Because of their Japanese ancestry the Japanese government believed that Brazilians would be more easily integrated into Japanese society In fact this easy integration did not happen since Japanese Brazilians and their children born in Japan are treated as foreigners by native Japanese 55 56 This apparent contradiction between being and seeming causes conflicts of adaptation for the migrants and their acceptance by the natives 57 They also constitute the largest number of Portuguese speakers in Asia greater than those of formerly Portuguese East Timor Macau and Goa combined Likewise Brazil alongside the Japanese American population of the United States maintains its status as home to the largest Japanese community outside Japan Cities and prefectures with the most Brazilians in Japan are Hamamatsu Aichi Shizuoka Kanagawa Saitama and Gunma Brazilians in Japan are usually educated However they are employed in the Japanese automotive and electronics factories 58 Most Brazilians go to Japan attracted by the recruiting agencies legal or illegal in conjunction with the factories Many Brazilians are subjected to hours of exhausting work earning a small salary by Japanese standards 59 Nevertheless in 2002 Brazilians living in Japan sent US 2 5 billion to Brazil 60 Due to the financial crisis of 2007 2010 many Brazilians returned from Japan to Brazil From January 2011 to March it is estimated that 20 000 Brazilian immigrants left Japan 61 Brazilian identity in Japan edit In Japan many Japanese Brazilians suffer prejudice because they do not know how to speak Japanese fluently Despite their Japanese appearance Brazilians in Japan are culturally Brazilians usually only speaking Portuguese and are treated as foreigners 62 The children of Dekasegi Brazilians encounter difficulties in Japanese schools 63 Thousands of Brazilian children are out of school in Japan 62 The Brazilian influence in Japan is growing Tokyo has the largest carnival parade outside of Brazil itself Portuguese is the third most spoken foreign language in Japan after Chinese and Korean and is among the most studied languages by students in the country In Oizumi it is estimated that 15 of the population speak Portuguese as their native language Japan has two newspapers in the Portuguese language besides radio and television stations spoken in that language The Brazilian fashion and Bossa Nova music are also popular among Japanese 64 In 2005 there were an estimated 302 000 Brazilian nationals in Japan of whom 25 000 also hold Japanese citizenship 100th anniversary editIn 2008 many celebrations took place in Japan and Brazil to remember the centenary of Japanese immigration 65 Then Prince Naruhito of Japan arrived in Brazil on 17 June to participate in the celebrations He visited Brasilia Sao Paulo Parana Minas Gerais and Rio de Janeiro Throughout his stay in Brazil the Prince was received by a crowd of Japanese immigrants and their descendants He broke the protocol of the Japanese Monarchy which prohibits physical contact with people and greeted the Brazilian people In the Sao Paulo sambodromo the Prince spoke to 50 000 people and in Parana to 75 000 He also visited the University of Sao Paulo where people of Japanese descent make up 14 of the 80 000 students 66 Naruhito then the crown prince of Japan gave a speech that he concluded with a thank you in Portuguese 67 68 Media editIn Sao Paulo there are two Japanese publications the Sao Paulo Shimbun and the Nikkey Shimbun The former was established in 1946 and the latter was established in 1998 The latter has a Portuguese edition the Jornal Nippak and both publications have Portuguese websites The Jornal Paulista established in 1947 and the Diario Nippak established in 1949 are the predecessors of the Nikkey Shimbun 69 The Nambei published in 1916 was Brazil s first Japanese newspaper In 1933 90 of East Asian origin Brazilians read Japanese publications including 20 periodicals 15 magazines and five newspapers The increase of the number of publications was due to Japanese immigration to Brazil The government banned publication of Japanese newspapers during World War II 69 Tatiane Matheus of Estadao stated that in the pre World War II period the Nippak Shimbun established in 1916 the Burajiru Jiho established in 1917 and two newspapers established in 1932 the Nippon Shimbun and the Seishu Shino were the most influential Japanese newspapers All were published in Sao Paulo 69 Education edit nbsp nbsp Sao Paulo nbsp Rio de Janeiro nbsp Manaus nbsp Curitiba nbsp Belo Horizonte nbsp Belem nbsp Vitoria nbsp Porto Alegre nbsp Salvadorclass notpageimage Locations of Japanese international schools day and supplementary in Brazil recognized by MEXT grey dots are for closed facilities nbsp Beneficencia Nipo Brasileira de Sao Paulo Building The Association owns hospitals and social institutions across Brazil 70 Japanese international day schools in Brazil include the Escola Japonesa de Sao Paulo Sao Paulo Japanese School 71 the Associacao Civil de Divulgacao Cultural e Educacional Japonesa do Rio de Janeiro in the Cosme Velho neighborhood of Rio de Janeiro 72 and the Escola Japonesa de Manaus 73 The Escola Japonesa de Belo Horizonte ベロ オリゾンテ日本人学校 74 and Japanese schools in Belem and Vitoria previously existed all three closed and their certifications by the Japanese education ministry MEXT were revoked on March 29 2002 Heisei 14 75 There are also supplementary schools teaching the Japanese language and culture As of 2003 in southern Brazil there are hundreds of Japanese supplementary schools The Japan Foundation in Sao Paulo s coordinator of projects in 2003 stated that Sao Paulo State has about 500 supplementary schools Around 33 of the Japanese supplementary schools in southeastern Brazil are in the city of Sao Paulo As of 2003 almost all of the directors of the Sao Paulo schools were women 76 MEXT recognizes one part time Japanese school hoshu jugyo ko or hoshuko the Escola Suplementar Japonesa Curitiba in Curitiba 77 MEXT approved hoshukos in Porto Alegre and Salvador have closed 78 History of education edit The Taisho School Brazil s first Japanese language school opened in 1915 in Sao Paulo 79 In some areas full time Japanese schools opened because no local schools existed in the vicinity of the Japanese settlements 80 In 1932 over 10 000 Nikkei Brazilian children attended almost 200 Japanese supplementary schools in Sao Paulo 81 By 1938 Brazil had a total of 600 Japanese schools 80 In 1970 22 000 students taught by 400 teachers attended 350 supplementary Japanese schools In 1992 there were 319 supplementary Japanese language schools in Brazil with a total of 18 782 students 10 050 of them being female and 8 732 of them being male Of the schools 111 were in Sao Paulo State and 54 were in Parana State At the time the Sao Paulo Metropolitan Area had 95 Japanese schools and the schools in the city limits of Sao Paulo had 6 916 students 76 In the 1980s Sao Paulo Japanese supplementary schools were larger than those in other communities In general during that decade a Brazilian supplementary Japanese school had one or two teachers responsible for around 60 students 76 Hiromi Shibata a PhD student at the University of Sao Paulo wrote the dissertation As escolas japonesas paulistas 1915 1945 published in 1997 Jeff Lesser author of Negotiating National Identity Immigrants Minorities and the Struggle for Ethnicity in Brazil wrote that the author suggests that the Japanese schools in Sao Paulo were as much an affirmation of Nipo Brazilian identity as they were of Japanese nationalism 82 Notable persons editMain article List of Japanese Brazilians This section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Japanese Brazilians news newspapers books scholar JSTOR June 2009 Learn how and when to remove this template message nbsp Liberdade Sao PauloArts edit Erica Awano artist and author Roger Cruz comic book artist Fabio Yabu comic book artist Fabio Ide actor and model Yuu Kamiya manga artist and novelist Larissa Tago Takeda voice actress Daniel Matsunaga actor and model Lovefoxxx Luisa Hanae Matsushita lead singer of CSS Carol Nakamura model and actress Ruy Ohtake architect Tikashi Fukushima artist originally from Sōma Japan Tomie Ohtake artist Originally from Kyoto Japan Oscar Oiwa artist Leandro Okabe model Lisa Ono singer Akihiro Sato actor and model Sabrina Sato model and TV host Daniele Suzuki actress and TV host Fernanda Takai lead singer of Pato Fu Carlos Toshiki Carlos Toshiki Takahashi singer songwriter Luana Tanaka actress Tizuka Yamasaki film director Mateus Asato musicianBusiness edit Teruaki Yamagishi 83 businessman and management consultant Originally from Tokyo Japan Politics edit Luiz Gushiken former minister of communications Newton Ishii Federal Police agent Kim Kataguiri organizer of the Free Brazil Movement 84 Juniti Saito former commander of the Brazilian Air ForceReligious edit Julio Endi Akamine Roman Catholic archbishop Hidekazu Takayama Assemblies of God pastor and politicianSports edit Luiz Gohara baseball player Luis Oyama footballer Gabriel Kazu footballer Originally from Seki Gifu Japan Sergio Echigo former footballer Sandro Hiroshi former footballer Wagner Lopes former footballer Ruy Ramos former footballer Kazuyoshi Miura footballer who holds his Brazilian citizenship since the 1980s Originally from Shizuoka Shizuoka Japan Claudio Kano table tennis player deceased 1996 Hugo Hoyama table tennis player Chiaki Ishii judo wrestler originally from Ashikaga Tochigi Japan Vania Ishii judo wrestler Caio Japa futsal player Kaisei Ichiro sumo wrestler Stefannie Arissa Koyama judoka Originally from Gunma Japan Pedro Ken footballer Bruna Leal 2012 London Olympics gymnast Lyoto Machida mixed martial arts fighter karateka former sumo wrestler and the former Ultimate Fighting Championship light heavyweight champion Mario Yamasaki mixed martial arts referee jiu jitsu practitioner 85 Shigueto Yamasaki judoka at 1992 Olympics 85 Goiti Yamauchi mixed martial arts fighter Bellator Fighter Originally from Anjō Aichi Japan Scott MacKenzie darts player Mitsuyo Maeda judo wrestler Originally from Hirosaki Aomori Japan Arthur Mariano 2016 Rio Olympics gymnast Andrews Nakahara mixed martial arts fighter and karateka Paulo Miyao Brazilian jiu jitsu competitor Paulo Miyashiro triathlete Paulo Nagamura footballer Mariana Ohata triathlete Tetsuo Okamoto former swimmer Poliana Okimoto long distance swimmer Noguchi Pinto footballer Rogerio Romero former swimmer Lucas Salatta swimmer Sergio Sasaki Rio 2016 Olympic gymnast Manabu Suzuki former racing driver turned car magazine writer and motorsport announcer Originally from Tokyo Japan Rafael Suzuki racing driver Rodrigo Tabata footballer represents Qatar internationally Marcus Tulio Tanaka footballer represents Japan internationally Bruna Takahashi Table Tennis player Augusto Sakai mixed martial arts fighter Daniel Japones futsal player Igor Fraga racing driver and e sports player Originally from Kanazawa Ishikawa Japan See also editSouth America Hongwanji Mission List of Japanese Brazilians Asian Latin Americans Brazilians in Japan Brazil Japan relations Japanese Peruvians Japanese Argentines Shindo Renmei Japanese immigration in BrazilNotes edit Japan Brazil Relations Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Japan November 26 2019 Archived from the original on February 25 2021 Retrieved November 17 2021 Number of Japanese nationals residing in Brazil 50 205 2018 Number of Japanese descendants 2 million estimated ブラジル連邦共和国 Federative Republic of Brazil 基礎データ 外務省 外務省 in Japanese June 9 2021 Archived from the original on June 21 2021 Retrieved November 17 2021 Adital Brasileiros no Japao Archived July 13 2006 at the Wayback Machine Brazil state gov September 14 2007 Retrieved May 4 2018 Gonzalez David September 25 2013 Japanese Brazilians Straddling Two Cultures Lens Blog The New York Times Archived from the original on October 2 2013 Retrieved September 27 2013 Nakamura Akemi January 15 2008 Japan Brazil mark a century of settlement family ties The Japan Times Online Archived from the original on November 11 2021 Retrieved November 17 2021 Takeyuki Tsuda April 2003 Strangers in the Ethnic Homeland Japanese Brazilian Return Migration in Transnational Perspective Columbia University Press ISBN 9780231502344 Archived from the original on January 4 2015 Retrieved June 27 2017 Jillian Kestler D Amours June 17 2014 Japanese Brazilians celebrate mixed heritage Aljazeera Archived from the original on July 6 2017 Retrieved June 27 2017 dos Santos Sales Augusto January 2002 Historical Roots of the Whitening of Brazil Latin American Perspectives 29 1 61 82 doi 10 1177 0094582X0202900104 JSTOR 3185072 S2CID 220914100 Brasil 500 anos Archived May 30 2008 at the Wayback Machine HISToRICA Revista Eletronica do Arquivo do Estado www historica arquivoestado sp gov br Archived from the original on September 19 2017 Retrieved May 4 2018 Imigracao Japonesa no Brasil InfoEscola December 22 2008 Archived from the original on August 31 2014 Retrieved June 18 2012 Mosley Leonard 1966 Hirohito Emperor of Japan London Prentice Hall International Inc pp 97 98 Imigracao Japonesa no Brasil Archived December 18 2007 at the Wayback Machine Barone Michael 2013 Shaping Our Nation How Surges of Migration Transformed America and Its Politics Crown Forum ISBN 9780307461513 A little corner of Brazil that is forever Okinawa BBC News February 4 2018 archived from the original on February 5 2018 Osada Masako 2002 Sanctions and Honorary Whites Diplomatic Policies and Economic Realities in Relations Between Japan and South Africa p 33 a b A Imigracao Japonesa em Itu itu com br Archived from the original on January 6 2017 Retrieved May 4 2018 a b Governo do Estado de Sao Paulo Governo do Estado de Sao Paulo Archived from the original on December 31 2016 Retrieved May 4 2018 IBGE Instituto Brasileiro de Geografia e Estatistica Archived October 13 1996 at the Portuguese Web Archive visitado 4 de setembro de 2008 日系移民データ 在日ブラジル商業会議所 CCBJ Archived June 5 2012 at the Wayback Machine which cites 1941年までの数字は外務省領事移住部 我が国民の海外発展 移住百年のあゆみ 資料集 東京 1971年 p140参照 1952年から1993年の数字は国際協力事業団 海外移住統計 昭和27年度 平成5年度 東京 1994年 p28 29参照 a b c d e f g h Nishida Mieko 2018 Diaspora and Identity Japanese Brazilians in Brazil and Japan Honolulu University of Hawai i Press pp 25 28 ISBN 9780824874292 a b c Revista VEJA Edicao 2038 12 de dezembro de 2007 veja abril com br Archived from the original on March 31 2013 Retrieved April 27 2014 An extensive quotation from this article appears in Minas Geraes class battleship Minas Geraes class battleship Memoria Da Imigracao Japonesa No Brasil Scribd October 17 2008 Archived from the original on May 10 2013 Retrieved June 14 2009 Cronologia da Imigracao Japonesa in Folha de S Paulo 20 de abril de 2008 Uol Archived from the original on February 3 2014 Retrieved August 17 2008 Sao Paulo o algodao e o japones na decada de trinta usp br Archived from the original on January 24 2015 Retrieved January 24 2015 a b c d Enciclopedia das Linguas no Brasil Japones Archived May 22 2011 at the Wayback Machine Accessed September 4 2008 Normano J F March 1934 Japanese Emigration to Brazil Pacific Affairs 7 1 45 doi 10 2307 2750689 JSTOR 2750689 via JSTOR RIOS Roger Raupp Text excerpted from a judicial sentence concerning crime of racism Federal Justice of 10ª Vara da Circunscricao Judiciaria de Porto Alegre November 16 2001 permanent dead link Accessed September 10 2008 Memoria da Imigracao Japonesa Archived May 10 2013 at the Wayback Machine a b c d e f g h i j SUZUKI Jr Matinas Historia da discriminacao brasileira contra os japoneses sai do limbo in Folha de S Paulo 20 de abril de 2008 Archived October 15 2012 at the Wayback Machine visitado em 17 de agosto de 2008 Darcy Ribeiro O Povo Brasileiro Vol 07 1997 1997 pp 401 Revista VEJA Edicao 2038 12 de dezembro de 2007 Revista Made in Japan Archived from the original on April 28 2014 Retrieved May 17 2014 Lesser 2001 p 301 Valores impulsionam alunos nipo brasileiros Educacao Gazeta do Povo Gazeta do Povo Archived from the original on May 4 2014 Retrieved May 4 2014 a b O sobrenome influencia no sucesso profissional de um brasileiro Hiramatsu Daniel Afonso Franco Laercio Joel Tomita Nilce Emy November 2006 Influencia da aculturacao na autopercepcao dos idosos quanto a saude bucal em uma populacao de origem japonesa Influence of acculturation on self perceived oral health among Japanese Brazilian elderly Cadernos de Saude Publica in Portuguese 22 11 2441 2448 doi 10 1590 S0102 311X2006001100018 PMID 17091181 a b PANIB Pastoral Nipo Brasileira Archived from the original on June 29 2008 Benson Todd January 27 2005 Brazil s Japanese Preserve Sumo and Share It With Others The New York Times Retrieved November 21 2016 Kwok Matt August 2 2016 Sumo feminino How Brazil s female sumo wrestlers are knocking down gender barriers CBC News Retrieved November 21 2016 Find Rikishi Brazil Shusshin Sumo Reference Retrieved January 13 2022 Birello Veronica Braga Lessa Patricia December 31 2008 A Imigracao Japonesa do Passado e a Imigracao Inversa Questao Genero e Geracoes Na Economia The Japanese Immigration From the Past and the Inverse Immigration Gender and Generations Issues in the Economy of Brazil and Japan Divers in Portuguese 1 1 doi 10 5380 diver v1i1 34039 Ota Junko Gardenal Luiz Maximiliano Santin 2006 As linguas japonesa e portuguesa em duas comunidades nipo brasileiras a relacao entre os dominios e as geracoes The Japanese and Portuguese languages in two Japanese Brazilian communities the relationship between domains and generations Linguisticos in Portuguese 35 1062 1071 Doi Elza Taeko 2006 O ensino de japones no Brasil como lingua de imigracao Japanese teaching in Brazil as an immigration language Estudos Linguisticos in Portuguese 35 66 75 a b c d Resistencia amp integracao 100 anos de imigracao japonesa no Brasil in Portuguese Rio de Janeiro Brazilian Institute of Geography and Statistics 2008 p 71 ISBN 978 85 240 4014 6 Archived from the original on March 3 2021 p59 Tabela 1 has errors Total for year 2000 1 405 685 is wrong missing data for Mato Grosso do Sul p71 Apendice 2 Total 1 435 490 is correct Populacao nikkey for year 1991 are all wrong mistakenly duplicating numbers from Populacao total direct link to pdf 1 Japoneses IBGE Archived February 19 2009 at the Wayback Machine Centenario da Imigracao Japonesa Reportagens Nipo brasileiros estao mais presentes no Norte e no Centro Oeste do Brasil www japao100 com br Archived from the original on August 13 2017 Retrieved May 4 2018 Centro Oeste 5 1960 and Total 2000 conflict with IBGE 2008 p71 Naoto Higuchi February 27 2006 BRAZILIAN MIGRATION TO JAPAN TRENDS MODALITIES AND IMPACT PDF United Nations Archived PDF from the original on March 29 2012 Retrieved February 22 2013 Richard Gunde January 27 2004 Japanese Brazilian Return Migration and the Making of Japan s Newest Immigrant Minority 2013 The Regents of the University of California All rights reserved Archived from the original on February 4 2012 Retrieved February 22 2013 Higuchi Naoto Tanno Kiyoto November 2003 What s Driving Brazil Japan Migration The Making and Remaking of the Brazilian Niche in Japan International Journal of Japanese Sociology 12 1 33 47 doi 10 1111 j 1475 6781 2003 00041 x IBGE traca perfil dos imigrantes IBGE does a profile of immigrants in Portuguese madeinjapan uol com br June 21 2008 Archived from the original on June 24 2008 Japoneses e descendentes em Maringa passam de 14 mil Japoneses e descendentes em Maringa passam de 14 mil Noticias JusBrasil Archived from the original on July 21 2011 Retrieved August 22 2009 asahi com EDITORIAL Brazilian immigration ENGLISH May 6 2008 Archived from the original on May 6 2008 Retrieved May 4 2018 Sugimoto Luiz June 2002 Parece mas nao e It seems but it is not Jornal da Unicamp in Portuguese Carlos Vogt Monica Macedo Anna Paula Sotero Bruno Buys Rafael Evangelista Marianne Frederick Marta Kanashiro Marcelo Knobel Roberto Belisario Ulisses Capozoli Sergio Varella Conceicao Marilissa Mota Rodrigo Cunha Germana Barata Beatriz Singer Flavia Tonin Daisy Silva de Lara Brasil migracoes internacionais e identidade www comciencia br Archived from the original on August 19 2016 Retrieved May 4 2018 Beltrao Kaizo Iwakami Sugahara Sonoe June 2006 Permanentemente temporario dekasseguis brasileiros no Japao Revista Brasileira de Estudos de Populacao 23 1 doi 10 1590 S0102 30982006000100005 Estadao com br Especiais Imigracao Japonesa www estadao com br Archived from the original on September 24 2015 Retrieved May 4 2018 Folha Online BBC Lula ouve de brasileiros queixas sobre vida no Japao 28 05 2005 www1 folha uol com br Retrieved May 4 2018 Untitled Document Archived September 12 2012 at the Wayback Machine Brasileiros que trabalharam no Japao estao retornando ao Brasil Archived October 14 2010 at the Wayback Machine a b Onishi Norimitsu An Enclave of Brazilians Is Testing Insular Japan Archived February 2 2017 at the Wayback Machine New York Times November 1 2008 Tabuchi Hiroko Despite Shortage Japan Keeps a High Wall for Foreign Labor New York Times January 3 2011 excerpt the government did little to integrate its migrant populations Children of foreigners are exempt from compulsory education for example while local schools that accept non Japanese speaking children receive almost no help in caring for their needs Japao imigrantes brasileiros popularizam lingua portuguesa correiodoestado com br Archived from the original on October 11 2017 Retrieved May 4 2018 Site Oficial da ACCIJB Centenario da Imigracao Japonesa no Brasil Comemoracoes www centenario2008 org br Archived from the original on September 25 2017 Retrieved May 4 2018 Discurso da Profa Dra Suely Vilela na visita oficial de sua alteza principe Naruhito do Japao Faculdade de Direito PDF June 20 2008 Archived from the original PDF on October 30 2008 Retrieved October 23 2008 Kumasaka Alyne Site Oficial da ACCIJB Centenario da Imigracao Japonesa no Brasil Festividade no Sambodromo emociona publico www centenario2008 org br Archived from the original on March 27 2016 Retrieved May 4 2018 Apos visita principe Naruhito deixa o Brasil a b c Matheus Tatiane O outro lado da noticia Archived March 17 2014 at the Wayback Machine Estadao February 9 2008 Retrieved on March 17 2014 O primeiro jornal japones no Pais foi o Nambei DIGITAL DIN Enkyo Beneficencia Nipo Brasileira de Sao Paulo ENKYO Archived from the original on March 22 2018 Retrieved May 4 2018 Home page Archived March 17 2014 at the Wayback Machine Escola Japonesa de Sao Paulo Retrieved on March 18 2014 Estrada do Campo Limpo 1501 Sao Paulo SP 学校紹介 Archived January 12 2015 at the Wayback Machine Associacao Civil de Divulgacao Cultural e Educacional Japonesa do Rio de Janeiro Retrieved on March 18 2014 Rua Cosme Velho 1166 Cosme Velho RIO DE JANEIRO R J BRASIL CEP22241 091 Home page Archived May 6 2015 at Wikiwix Escola Japonesa de Manaus Retrieved on March 18 2014 Caixa Postal 2261 Agencia Andre Araujo Manaus AM Brasil CEP69065 970 Home page Archived May 7 2015 at the Wayback Machine Escola Japonesa de Belo Horizonte Retrieved on January 15 2015 過去に指定 認定していた在外教育施設 Archive Ministry of Education Culture Sports Science and Technology Retrieved on January 15 2015 a b c Carvalho Daniela de Migrants and Identity in Japan and Brazil The Nikkeijin Routledge August 27 2003 ISBN 1135787654 9781135787653 Page number unstated Google Books PT46 中南米の補習授業校一覧 平成25年4月15日現在 Archive Ministry of Education Culture Sports Science and Technology MEXT Retrieved on May 10 2014 中南米の補習授業校一覧 MEXT October 29 2000 Retrieved on January 11 2017 ポルト アレグレ 休 校 中 サルバドール 休 校 中 states the Porto Alegre and Salvador schools closed Goto Junichi Kyoto University Latin Americans of Japanese Origin Nikkeijin Working in Japan A Survey World Bank Publications 2007 p 7 8 a b Laughton Kuragasaki Ayami VDM Publishing 2008 p 10 The immigrants opened Japanese schools for their children as they were living in the rural areas where there were no local schools for their children and no support from the local authorities About 600 Japanese schools were open by 1938 The children were full time students Goto Junichi Kyoto University Latin Americans of Japanese Origin Nikkeijin Working in Japan A Survey World Bank Publications 2007 p 8 Lesser Jeff Negotiating National Identity Immigrants Minorities and the Struggle for Ethnicity in Brazil Duke University Press 1999 ISBN 0822322927 9780822322924 p 231 Ordem do Sol Nascente December 16 2008 Yamagishi honored by Japan yamagishi com br Archived from the original on July 26 2012 Retrieved May 4 2018 Meet the Teen Spearheading Brazil s Protests Against its President Time October 27 2015 Archived from the original on December 1 2015 a b Tatame Magazine gt gt Mario Masaki Interview Archived November 30 2010 at the Wayback Machine URL accessed on October 16 2010 References editMasterson Daniel M and Sayaka Funada Classen 2004 The Japanese in Latin America The Asian American Experience Urbana Illinois University of Illinois Press ISBN 978 0 252 07144 7 OCLC 253466232 Lesser Jeffrey 2001 Negociando a Identidade Nacional Imigrantes Minorias e a Luta pela Etnicidade no Brasil UNESP Jeffrey Lesser A Discontented Diaspora Japanese Brazilians and the Meanings of Ethnic Militancy 1960 1980 Durham Duke University Press 2007 Portuguese edition Uma Diaspora Descontente Os Nipo Brasileiros e os Significados da Militancia Etnica 1960 1980 Sao Paulo Editora Paz e Terra 2008 Jeffrey Lesser Negotiating National Identity Immigrants Minorities and the Struggle for Ethnicity in Brazil Durham Duke University Press 1999 Portuguese edition Negociando an Identidade Nacional Imigrantes Minorias e a Luta pela Etnicidade no Brasil Sao Paulo Editora UNESP 2001 Further reading editShibata Hiromi As escolas Japonesas paulistas 1915 1945 Ph D dissertation University of Sao Paulo 1997 Sasaki Elisa August 2006 A imigracao para o Japao Estudos Avancados 20 57 99 117 doi 10 1590 S0103 40142006000200009 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Japanese Brazilians Sociedade Brasileira de Cultura Japonesa Archived March 7 2011 at the Wayback Machine Fundacao Japao em Sao Paulo Centenario da Imigracao Japonesa no Brasil 1908 2008 Archived May 11 2008 at the Wayback Machine Tratado de Amizade Brasil Japao Tratado de Migracao e Colonizacao Brasil Japao Site da Imigracao Japonesa no Brasil Leia sobre os navios de imigrantes que aportaram no Porto de Santos Site comemorativo do Centenario da Imigracao Japonesa que coleta historias de vida de imigrantes e descendentes Center for Japanese Brazilian Studies Centro de Estudos Nipo Brasileiros Portals nbsp Brazil nbsp Japan Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Japanese Brazilians amp oldid 1205448283, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.