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Koreans in Japan

Japanese South and North Koreans (在日韓国人・在日本朝鮮人・朝鮮人, Zainichi Kankokujin/Zainihon Chōsenjin/Chōsenjin) comprise ethnic Koreans who have permanent residency status in Japan or who have become Japanese citizens, and whose immigration to Japan originated before 1945, or who are descendants of those immigrants. They are a group distinct from South Korean nationals who have immigrated to Japan after the end of World War II and the division of Korea.

Japanese South and North Koreans
在日韓国・朝鮮人
Total population
436,670
(in December, 2022)
 South Korea: 411,312
(in December, 2022)[1]
 North Korea: 25,358
(in December, 2022)[2]
Details:
  • Special Permanent Residents: 285,459
  • General permanent residents: 75,178
  • Japanese spouse, etc .: 11,963
  • Spouse of permanent resident: 2,074
  • Technology/humanities/international services: 23,083
  • Study abroad: 14,124 people
  • Family stay: 9,316 people
  • Business and management: 2,665
  • Working Holiday: 1,074 people
  • Transfer within the company: 1,138 people
Items with fewer than 1,000 people are omitted[3]
(Reference: Cumulative naturalization permission from South Korea / Chosen-seki 375,518 (until the end of December 2018)[4])
Regions with significant populations
Tokyo (Shin-Ōkubo· Osaka Prefecture (Ikuno-ku)
Languages
Japanese · Korean (Zainichi Korean)
Religion
Buddhism · Shinto/Korean Shamanism · Christianity · Irreligion
Related ethnic groups
Korean people · Sakhalin Koreans

They currently constitute the second largest ethnic minority group in Japan after Chinese immigrants, due to many Koreans assimilating into the general Japanese population.[5] The majority of Koreans in Japan are Zainichi Koreans (在日韓国・朝鮮人, Zainichi Kankoku/Chōsenjin), often known simply as Zainichi (在日, lit. 'in Japan'), who are ethnic Korean permanent residents of Japan. The term Zainichi Korean refers only to long-term Korean residents of Japan who trace their roots to Korea under Japanese rule, distinguishing them from the later wave of Korean migrants who came mostly in the 1980s,[6] and from pre-modern immigrants dating back to antiquity who may themselves be the ancestors of the Japanese people.[7]

The Japanese word "Zainichi" itself means a foreign citizen "staying in Japan", and implies temporary residence.[8] Nevertheless, the term "Zainichi Korean" is used to describe settled permanent residents of Japan, both those who have retained their Joseon or North Korean/South Korean nationalities, and even sometimes includes Japanese citizens of Korean descent who acquired Japanese nationality by naturalization or by birth from one or both parents who have Japanese citizenship.

Statistics Edit

 
Restrictions of passage from the Korean Peninsula (April 1919–1922), the 1923 Great Kantō earthquake, restrictions of passage from Busan (October 1925), opening of independent travel service by Koreans between Jeju and Osaka (April 1930), Park Choon-Geum was elected for the House of Representatives of Japan (February 1932), removal of restrictions of civil recruit from the Korean Peninsula (September 1939), public recruit from the Korean Peninsula (March 1942), labor conscription from the Korean Peninsula (September 1944), the end of WWII and the beginning of repatriation (1945), the Jeju uprising (April 1948), the Korean War (June 1950), the Home-coming Movement to North Korea (December 1959–1983), the Treaty on Basic Relations between Japan and the Republic of Korea (1965), (1977-1983), Japanese ratification of the Convention Relating to the Status of Refugees (1982), the 1988 Summer Olympics in Seoul, South Korea, the 1997 Asian Financial Crisis

According to the Ministry of Justice, 411,312 South Koreans and 25,358 Koreans (朝鮮人, Chōsen-jin) (those "Koreans" do not necessarily have the North Korean nationality) are registered in 2022.[1][9]

 
Foreign residents in Japan

History Edit

Overview Edit

The modern flow of Koreans to Japan started with the Japan-Korea Treaty of 1876 and increased dramatically after 1920. During World War II, a large number of Koreans were also conscripted by Japan. Another wave of migration started after South Korea was devastated by the Korean War in the 1950s. Also noteworthy was the large number of refugees from the massacres on Jeju Island by the South Korean government.[10]

Statistics regarding Zainichi immigration are scarce. However, in 1988, a Mindan youth group called Zainihon Daikan Minkoku Seinendan (Korean: 재일본대한민국청년회, Japanese: 在日本大韓民国青年会) published a report titled, "Father, tell us about that day. Report to reclaim our history" (Japanese: アボジ聞かせて あの日のことを—我々の歴史を取り戻す運動報告書). The report included a survey of first generation Koreans' reasons for immigration. The result was 13.3% for conscription, 39.6% for economics, 17.3% for marriage and family, 9.5% for study/academic, 20.2% for other reasons and 0.2% unknown.[11] The survey excluded those who were under 12 when they arrived in Japan.

Pre-modern era Edit

While some families can currently trace their ancestry back to pre-modern Korean immigrants, many families were absorbed into Japanese society and as a result, they are not considered a distinct group. The same is applicable to those families which are descended from Koreans who entered Japan in subsequent periods of pre-modern Japanese history. Trade with Korea continued to modern times, with Japan also periodically receiving missions from Korea, though this activity was often limited to specific ports.

Yayoi period Edit

In late prehistory, in the Iron Age Yayoi period (300 BCE to 300 CE), Japanese culture showed[clarify] some Korean influence, though whether this was accompanied by immigration from Korea is debated (see Origin of the Yayoi people).

Kofun period (250 to 538) Edit

In the later Kofun (250–538 CE) and Asuka (538–710 CE) periods, there was some flow of people from the Korean Peninsula, both as immigrants and long-term visitors, notably a number of clans in the Kofun period (see Kofun period Korean migration). While some families today can ultimately trace their ancestry to the immigrants, they were generally absorbed into Japanese society and are not considered a distinct modern group.[by whom?][citation needed]

Heian period (794 to 1185) Edit

According to the Nihon Kōki historical text, in 814, six people, including a Silla man called Karanunofurui (Korean: 가라포고이, Japanese: 加羅布古伊; presumed to be of gaya descent) became naturalized in Japan's Minokuni (美濃國) region.[12]

Sengoku period (1467 to 1615) Edit

Some Koreans entered Japan in captivity as a result of pirate raids or during the 1592–1598 Japanese invasions of Korea.

Edo period (1603 to 1867) Edit

In the Edo period, trade with Korea occurred through the Tsushima-Fuchū Domain in Kyūshū, near Nagasaki.

Before World War II Edit

After the conclusion of the Japan-Korea Treaty of 1876, Korean students and asylum seekers started to come to Japan, including Korean politicians and activists Bak Yeonghyo, Kim Ok-gyun, and Song Byeong-jun. There were about 800 Koreans living in Japan before Japan annexed Korea.[13] In 1910, as the result of the Japan–Korea Annexation Treaty, Japan annexed Korea, and all Korean people became part of the nation of the Empire of Japan by law and received Japanese citizenship.

In the 1920s, the demand for labor in Japan was high while Koreans had difficulty finding jobs in the Korean peninsula. As a result, thousands of Koreans migrated or were recruited to work in industries like coal mining.[14] A majority of the immigrants consisted of farmers from the southern part of Korea.[15] The number of Koreans in Japan in 1930 was more than ten times greater than that of 1920, reaching 419,000.[16] However, the jobs they could get on the mainland of Japan were curtailed by open discrimination and largely limited to physical labor due to their poor education; they usually worked alongside other groups of ethnic minorities subject to discrimination, such as burakumin.[15]

Before World War II, the Japanese government tried to reduce the number of Koreans immigrating to Japan. To accomplish this, the Japanese government devoted resources to the Korean peninsula.[17][verification needed]

During World War II Edit

In 1939, the Japanese government introduced the National Mobilization Law and conscripted Koreans to deal with labor shortages due to World War II. In 1944, the Japanese authorities extended the mobilization of Japanese civilians for labor on the Korean peninsula.[18] Of the 5,400,000 Koreans conscripted, about 670,000 were taken to mainland Japan (including Karafuto Prefecture, present-day Sakhalin, now part of Russia) for civilian labor. Those who were brought to Japan were forced to work in factories, in mines, and as laborers, often under appalling conditions. About 60,000 are estimated to have died between 1939 and 1945.[19] Most of the wartime laborers returned home after the war, but some elected to remain in Japan. 43,000 of those in Karafuto, which had been occupied by the Soviet Union just before Japan's surrender, were refused repatriation to either mainland Japan or the Korean Peninsula, and were thus trapped in Sakhalin, stateless; they became the ancestors of the Sakhalin Koreans.[20]

After World War II Edit

Koreans entered Japan illegally post-World War II due to an unstable political and economic situation in Korea, with 20,000 to 40,000 Koreans fleeing Syngman Rhee's forces during the Jeju uprising in 1948.[21] The Yeosu-Suncheon rebellion also increased the illegal immigration to Japan.[22] It is estimated that between 1946 and 1949, 90% of illegal immigrants to Japan were Koreans.[23][verification needed] During the Korean War, Korean immigrants came to Japan to avoid torture or murder at the hands of dictator Syngman Rhee's forces (e.g., in the Bodo League massacre).[24]

Fishers and brokers helped immigrants enter Japan through Tsushima Island.[25][26] In the 1950s, Japan Coast Guard secured the border with Korea, but apprehending illegal immigrants was difficult because they were armed, while Japan Coast Guard was not due to the terms of the surrender of Japan after World War II. During this period, one-fifth of the immigrants were arrested.[27]

In Official Correspondence of 1949, Shigeru Yoshida, the prime minister of Japan, proposed the deportation of all Zainichi Koreans to Douglas MacArthur, the American Supreme Commander of the Allied Powers, and said the Japanese government would pay all of the cost. Yoshida stated that it was unfair for Japan to purchase food for illegal Zainichi Koreans, claiming that they did not contribute to the Japanese economy and that they supposedly committed political crimes by cooperating with communists.[28]

Loss of Japanese nationality Edit

 
Dates of entrance or birth of Korean residents in Japan as of the end of 1958

Immediately following the end of World War II, there were roughly 2.4 million Koreans in Japan; the majority repatriated to their ancestral homes in the southern half of the Korean Peninsula, leaving only 650,000 in Japan by 1946.[29]

Japan's defeat in the war and the end of its colonization of the Korean Peninsula and Taiwan left the nationality status of Koreans and Taiwanese in an ambiguous position in terms of law. The Alien Registration Ordinance [ja] (外国人登録令, Gaikokujin-tōroku-rei) of 2 May 1947 ruled that Koreans and some Taiwanese were to be provisionally treated as foreign nationals. Given the lack of a single, unified government on the Korean Peninsula, Koreans were provisionally registered under the name of Joseon (Korean: 조선, Japanese: Chōsen, 朝鮮), the old name of undivided Korea.

In 1948, the northern and southern parts of Korea declared independence individually, making Joseon, or the old undivided Korea, a defunct nation. The new government of the Republic of Korea (South Korea) made a request to the Supreme Commander of the Allied Powers, then the occupying power of Japan, to change the nationality registration of Zainichi Koreans to Daehan Minguk (Korean: 대한민국; Japanese: Daikan Minkoku, 大韓民国), the official name of the new nation. Following this, from 1950 onwards, Zainichi Koreans were allowed to voluntarily re-register their nationality as such.

The Allied occupation of Japan ended on 28 April 1952 with the San Francisco Peace Treaty, in which Japan formally abandoned its territorial claim to the Korean Peninsula, and as a result, Zainichi Koreans formally lost their Japanese nationality.[30]

The division on the Korean Peninsula led to division among Koreans in Japan. Mindan, the Korean Residents Union in Japan, was set up in 1946 as a pro-South offshoot of Chōren (League of Koreans in Japan), the main Korean residents' organisation, which had a socialist ideology. Following the May Day riots of 1952, the pro-North organisation[which?] was made illegal, but it re-formed under various guises and went on to form the "General Association of Korean Residents in Japan", or Chongryon, in 1955. This organisation kept to its socialist, and by extension pro-North stance, and enjoyed the active financial support of the North Korean government.[29]

 
The second Kobe riots in 1950

In 1965, Japan concluded a Treaty on Basic Relations with the Republic of Korea and recognized the South Korean government as the only legitimate government of the peninsula.[29] Those Koreans in Japan who did not apply for South Korean citizenship kept Chōsen-seki which did not give them citizenship of any nation.

Newcomers Edit

Starting in 1980, South Korea allowed its students to study abroad freely; starting in 1987, people older than forty-four were allowed to travel abroad.[31][32] One year after the 1988 Seoul Olympics, traveling abroad was further liberalized.[32] When Expo 2005 was held, the Japanese government had a visa waiver program with South Korea for a limited period under the condition that the visitor's purpose was sightseeing or business, and later extended it permanently.[33] Korean enclaves tend to exclude newcomers from existing Korean organizations, especially Mindan, so newcomers have created a new one called the Federation of Korean Associations in Japan [ja; ko].[34][35]

Repatriation to Korea Edit

 
Repatriation of Koreans from Japan, January 1960

Repatriation of Zainichi Koreans from Japan conducted under the auspices of the Japanese Red Cross began to receive official support from the Japanese government as early as 1956. A North Korean-sponsored repatriation programme with support of the Chōsen Sōren (The General Association of Korean Residents in Japan) officially began in 1959. In April 1959, Gorō Terao  (寺尾 五郎 Terao Gorō), a political activist and historian of the Japanese Communist Party, published the book, North of the 38th Parallel (Japanese: 38度線の北), in which he praised North Korea for its rapid development and humanitarianism.[36] Following its publication, numbers of returnees skyrocketed. The Japanese government was in favour of repatriation as a way to rid the country of ethnic minority residents that were discriminated against and regarded as incompatible with Japanese culture.[37] Though the United States government was initially unaware of Tokyo's cooperation with the repatriation programme, they offered no objection after they were informed of it; the US ambassador to Japan was quoted by his Australian counterpart as describing the Koreans in Japan as, "a poor lot including many Communists and many criminals".[38]

Despite the fact that 97% of the Zainichi Koreans originated from the southern half of the Korean Peninsula, the North was initially a far more popular destination for repatriation than the South. Approximately 70,000 Zainichi repatriated to North Korea during a two-year period from 1960 through 1961.[39] However, as word came back of difficult conditions in the North and with the 1965 normalization of Japan-South Korea relations, the popularity of repatriation to the North dropped sharply, though the trickle of returnees to the North continued as late as 1984.[40] In total, 93,340 people migrated from Japan to North Korea under the repatriation programme; an estimated 6,000 were Japanese migrating with Korean spouses. Around one hundred such repatriates are believed to have later escaped from North Korea; the most famous is Kang Chol-Hwan[disputed ], who published a book about his experience, The Aquariums of Pyongyang. One returnee who later defected back to Japan, known only by his Japanese pseudonym Kenki Aoyama, worked for North Korean intelligence as a spy in Beijing.[41]

The repatriations have been the subject of numerous creative works in Japan, due to the influence they had on the Zainichi Korean community. One documentary film about a family whose sons repatriated while the parents and daughter remained in Japan, Dear Pyongyang, won a special jury prize at the 2006 Sundance Film Festival.[42][43]

Some Zainichi Koreans have gone to South Korea to study or to settle. For example, author Lee Yangji studied at Seoul National University in the early 1980s.[44]

Organizations – Chongryon and Mindan Edit

Division between Chongryon and Mindan Edit

Well into at least the 1970s, Chongryon was the dominant Zainichi group, and in some ways remains more politically significant today in Japan. However, the widening disparity between the political and economic conditions of the two Koreas has since made Mindan, the pro-South Korean group, the larger and less politically controversial faction. 65% of Zainichi are now said to be affiliated to Mindan. The number of pupils receiving ethnic education from Chongryon-affiliated schools has declined sharply, with many, if not most, Zainichi now opting to send their children to mainstream Japanese schools.[citation needed] Some Chongryon schools have been closed for lack of funding, and there is serious doubt as to the continuing viability of the system as a whole. Mindan has also traditionally operated a school system for the children of its members, although it has always been less widespread and organized compared to its Chongryon counterpart, and is said to be nearly defunct at the present time.[citation needed]

Chongryon Edit

Out of the two Korean organizations in Japan, the pro-North Chongryon has been the more militant in terms of retaining Koreans' ethnic identity. Its policies have included:

  • operation of about 60 ethnic Korean schools across Japan, initially partly funded by the North Korean government, in which lessons are conducted in Korean. They maintain a strong pro-North Korean ideology, which has sometimes come under criticism from pupils, parents, and the public alike;
  • discouraging its members from taking up Japanese citizenship;
  • discouraging its members from marrying Japanese;
  • operation of businesses and banks to provide the necessary jobs, services, and social networks for Zainichi Koreans outside mainstream society;
  • opposition to Zainichi Koreans' right to vote or participate in Japanese elections, which is seen as an unacceptable attempt at assimilation into Japanese society;[45]
  • and a home-coming movement to North Korea in the late 1950s,[46] which it hailed as a socialist "Paradise on Earth", with some 90,000 Zainichi Koreans and their Japanese spouses moving to the North before the migration eventually died down.

Controversies over Chongryon Edit

For a long time, Chongryon enjoyed unofficial immunity from searches and investigations, partly because authorities were reluctant to carry out any actions which could provoke not only accusations of xenophobia but lead to an international incident. Chongryon has long been suspected of a variety of criminal acts on behalf of North Korea, such as illegal transfer of funds to North Korea and espionage, but no action has been taken.[citation needed] However, recently escalating tensions between Japan and North Korea over a number of issues, namely North Korea's abduction of Japanese nationals which came to light in 2002 as well as its nuclear weapons program, has led to a resurgence of public animosity against Chongryon. Chongryon schools have alleged numerous cases of verbal abuse and physical violence directed against their students and buildings, and Chongryon facilities have been targets of protests and occasional incidents. The Japanese authorities have recently started to crack down on Chongryon, with investigations and arrests for charges ranging from tax evasion to espionage. These moves are usually criticized by Chongryon as acts of political suppression.[47]

In December 2001, police raided Chongryon's Tokyo headquarters and related facilities to investigate Chongryon officials' suspected role in embezzlement of funds from the failed Tokyo Chogin credit union [ja].[48]

In 2002, Shotaro Tochigi, deputy head of the Public Security Investigation Agency, told a session of the House of Representatives Financial Affairs Committee that the agency was investigating Chongryon for suspected illicit transfers of funds to the North.[49] The image of Chongryon was further tarnished by North Korea's surprise 2002 admission that it had indeed abducted Japanese nationals in the 1970s, even after it had categorically and fiercely denied for many years that the abductions had ever taken place and dismissed rumors of North Korean involvement as an allegedly "racist fantasy". Some of the recent drop in membership of Chongryon is attributed to ordinary members of Chongryon who may have believed in the party line feeling deeply humiliated and disillusioned upon discovering that they had been used as mouthpieces to deny the crimes of the North Korean government.[citation needed]

In March 2006, police raided six Chongryon-related facilities in an investigation into the circumstances surrounding the June 1980 disappearance of one of the alleged abductees, Tadaaki Hara. Police spokesmen said that the head of Chongryon at the time was suspected of co-operating in his kidnapping.[50]

The operation of the Mangyongbong-92 (currently suspended), a North Korean ferry that is the only regular direct link between North Korea and Japan, is a subject of significant tension, as the ferry is primarily used by Chongryon to send its members to North Korea and to supply North Korea with money and goods donated by the organization and its members. In 2003, a North Korean defector made a statement to the US Senate committee[which?] stating that more than 90% of the parts used by North Korea to construct its missiles were brought from Japan aboard the ship.[51]

In May 2006, Chongryon and the pro-South Mindan agreed to reconcile, only for the agreement to break down the following month. North Korea's missile tests in July 2006 deepened the divide, with Chongryon refusing to condemn the missile tests, expressing only its regret that the Japanese government has suspended the operation of the Mangyongbong-92. Outraged senior Mindan officials joined mainstream Japanese politicians and media in sharply criticizing Chongryon's silence over the matter.

Integration into Japanese society Edit

 
Numbers of birth, death, and naturalization of Koreans in Japan
 
Marriage of Koreans in Japan

During the post-World War II period, Zainichi Koreans faced various kinds of discrimination from Japanese society. Due to the San Francisco Peace Treaty, the Japanese government created laws to support Japanese citizens by giving financial support, providing shelters, etc. However, after the treaty was signed, Zainichi Koreans were no longer counted as Japanese citizens, so they were unable to get any support from the government. They were unable to get an insurance certificate from the government, so it was difficult for them to get any medical care. Without medical insurance, Zainichi Koreans were unable to go to the hospital since the cost of medication was too high.[citation needed]

Another problem caused by this treaty was that the Japanese government created a law which stated that Korean residents in Japan had to be fingerprinted since Zainichi Koreans had two names (their original name and a name given by the Japanese government). Under this law, Zainichi Koreans had to reveal their identity to the public because when they visited the city hall to provide their fingerprints, their neighbors found out that they were Zainichi Koreans. Therefore, Zainichi Koreans were forced to reveal their identity to Japanese and faced discrimination from them. This made their lives even more difficult. In order to protect themselves, many Zainichi Koreans protested against this law. Mindan and many Zainichi Koreans opposed this law, but the law wasn't repealed until 1993. Until then, Zainichi Koreans could not escape from the social discrimination which they had faced in Japanese society.[52]

Furthermore, it was hard for the Zainichi Koreans to get a job due to discrimination. Especially, it was very hard for Zainichi Koreans to become public employees since Japan only let Japanese nationals become public employees at that time. Since many Zainichi Koreans couldn't get a proper job, they began to get involved in illegal jobs such as "illegal alcohol production, scrap recycling, and racketeering".[53] As a result, many Zainichi Koreans ended up living in slums or hamlets, a situation aided by Japanese real estate agents' refusal to let Zainichi Koreans rent houses.[53]

Zainichi today have established a stable presence in Japan after years of activism. Through Mintohren, community support by Zainichi organizations (Mindan and Chongryon, among others), other minority groups (Ainu, burakumin, Ryūkyūans, Nivkhs, and others), and sympathetic Japanese, the social atmosphere for Zainichi in Japan has improved. There are also Koreans living in Japan who try to present themselves as Japanese to avoid discrimination.[54] Most younger Zainichi now speak only Japanese, go to Japanese schools, work for Japanese firms, and increasingly marry Japanese people. Most naturalization occurs among the young during the period when they seek formal employment or marriage. Those who have already established their lives increasingly do not choose to retain their South Korean or Joseon nationality or heritage and lead average lives alongside other Japanese. This, as well as marriage to Japanese nationals, is leading to a sharp decrease in the original "Zainichi" population in Japan.

Assimilation Edit

One of the most pressing issues of the Zainichi community is the rate of assimilation of Zainichi into Japan. About 4,000 to 5,000 Koreans naturalize in Japan every year out of slightly less than 480,000.[55] Naturalization carries a crucial cultural aspect in Japan, as both Mindan and Chongryon link Korean ethnic identity to Korean nationality, and Japanese and South Korean nationality laws do not allow multiple citizenship for adults. By their definition, opting for a Japanese passport means becoming Japanese, rather than Korean-Japanese.

In order to be naturalized as Japanese citizens, Zainichi Koreans previously had to go through multiple, complex steps, requiring collection of information about their family and ancestors stretching back ten generations. This information could be collected through a Korean organization such as Mindan, but with their prohibitively expensive cost, many were unable to afford it. However, these processes have become much easier, and today, it is easier for Zainichi Koreans to naturalize into Japanese citizens.[citation needed]

Though there are a few cases of celebrities who naturalize with their Korean name, the majority of naturalized Zainichi Koreans formally choose a name that is both read and appears ethnically Japanese. This supports the aforementioned cultural implication of naturalisation, leading some to take the rate of naturalisation as a rough measure of assimilation.[citation needed]

During the post-World War II period, many Zainichi Koreans married with other Zainichi Koreans, and it was a rare case for them to intermarry with Japanese citizens. This was because of Japanese xenophobic prejudice against Zainichi Koreans due to stigma stemming from decades of discrimination. Therefore, Japanese citizens, especially their parents, largely refused marriage with Zainichi Koreans. However, there were problems with marriage between Zainichi Koreans, too. As stated in the previous section, Zainichi Koreans were mostly hiding their identity and living as Japanese-presenting people at the time. Because of this, it was very hard for Zainichi Koreans to connect with other people who had the same nationality as them. They were married mostly through arranged marriages supported by Mindan.[53]

Tong-il Ilbo (통일일보), or Tōitsu Nippō (統一日報), a Korean-Japanese newspaper, reported that according to statistics from the Japanese Health and Labour ministry, there were 8,376 marriages between Japanese and Koreans.[when?] Compared to 1,971 marriages in 1965, when the statistics began, the number has roughly quadrupled, and it now constitutes about 1% of the 730,971 total marriages in Japan. The highest annual number of marriages between Japanese men and Korean women was 8,940, in 1990. Since 1991, it has fluctuated around 6,000 per year. On the other hand, there were 2,335 marriages between Korean men and Japanese women in 2006. It has been stable since the number reached 2,000 per year in 1984.[56]

In 1975, Hidenori Sakanaka (坂中 英徳 Sakanaka Hidenori), a bureaucrat in the Ministry of Justice, published a highly controversial document known as the "Sakanaka Paper". He stated that the assertion by both Mindan and Chongryon that Zainichi are destined to eventually return to Korea is no longer realistic. He further predicted that Zainichi would naturally disappear in the 21st century unless they abandon their link between Korean identity and Korean nationality. He argued that the Japanese government should stop treating Zainichi as temporary residents (with a special status) and start providing a proper legal framework for their permanent settlement as "Korean Japanese".

In December 1995, Gendai Korea ("Modern Korea") published the article, "20 years after the Sakanaka Paper" to assess further development.[citation needed] The article pointed out that in the 1980s, 50% of Zainichi Koreans married Japanese, and in the 1990s, the rate was 80%. (In fact, they quoted only 15%–18% Korean marriage during 1990 to 1994.) They also pointed out the change in the law in 1985, which granted Japanese citizenship to a child with either parent being Japanese—previous laws granted citizenship only to a child with a Japanese father. In practice, this would mean that less than 20% of Zainichi marriages would result in Zainichi status. According to the article, since naturalisation is concentrated among the younger generation, the Zainichi population should be expected to collapse once the older generation starts to die out in two decades.

The latest figures from Mindan showed that the total population of Zainichi was 598,219 in 2006 and 593,489 in 2007, and that only 8.9% married another Zainichi in 2006. There were 1,792 births and 4,588 deaths, resulting in a 2,796 natural decrease. On top of that, there were 8,531 naturalisations, which resulted in a total decrease of 11,327 in 2006 (1.89%).[57]

Registration of residents Edit

After Zainichi Koreans lost Japanese nationality, the Immigration Control Act of 1951 and the Alien Registration Law of 1952 required them to be fingerprinted and to carry a certificate of registration as other foreigners did. The Permanent Residents by Accord of 1965 allowed Zainichi Koreans who had lived in Japan since the colonial period to apply for permanent residency, but their descendants could not. Twenty-six years later, the Japanese Diet passed the Special Law on Immigration Control and categorized Zainichi Koreans who have lived without any gap since the end of World War II or before and their lineal descendants as Special Permanent Residents.[58] The fingerprint requirement for Zainichi Koreans was terminated by 1993.[15]

Right to vote and government employment Edit

Long-term ethnic Korean residents of Japan who have not taken up Japanese nationality currently have the legal status of Tokubetsu Eijusha ("Special Permanent Residents") and are granted special rights and privileges compared to other foreigners, especially in matters such as re-entry and deportation statutes. These privileges were originally given to residents with South Korean nationality in 1965, and were extended in 1991 to cover those who have retained their Joseon nationality.

Over the decades, Zainichi Koreans have been campaigning to regain their Japanese citizenship rights without having to adopt Japanese nationality. The right to claim social welfare benefits was granted in 1954, followed by access to the national health insurance structures (1960s) and state pensions (1980s). There is some doubt over the legality of some of these policies, as the Public Assistance Law, which governs social welfare payments, is seen to apply only to "Japanese nationals".

There has been discussion about Zainichi South Koreans' right to vote in South Korea. Since Special Permanent Residents are exempted from military service and taxes, the South Korean government was reluctant to give them the right to vote, arguing they did not register as residents, though it thought most people agree on granting the right to vote to short-stay South Korean travelers. On the other hand, Zainichi South Koreans claimed that they should be granted it because the Constitution of South Korea guarantees anyone having South Korean nationality the right to vote.[59] In 2007, the Constitutional Court of Korea concluded all South Korean nationals don't have the right to vote in South Korea if they are permanent residents of other countries.[60][61]

Zainichi North Koreans are allowed to vote and theoretically eligible to stand in North Korea's show elections if they are 17 years old or older.[62]

There have also been campaigns to allow Zainichi Koreans to take up government employment and participate in elections, which are open to Japanese nationals only. Since 1992, Mindan has been campaigning for the right to vote in elections for prefectural and municipal assemblies, mayors, and prefecture governors, backed by the South Korean government. In 1997, Kawasaki became the first municipality to hire a Korean national. So far, three prefectures—Osaka, Nara, and Kanagawa—have supported voting rights for permanent foreign residents.

However, the Japanese Diet has not yet passed a resolution regarding this matter, despite several attempts by a section within the Liberal Democratic Party of Japan to do so, and there is considerable public and political opposition against granting voting rights to those who have not yet adopted Japanese nationality. Instead, the requirements for naturalization have been steadily lowered for Zainichi to the point that only criminal records or affiliation to North Korea would be a hindrance for naturalization. Both Zainichi organisations oppose this, as both see naturalization as de facto assimilation. In November 2011, the South Korean government moved to register Zainichi Koreans as voters in South Korean elections, a move which attracted few registrants. While Mindan-affiliated Zainichi Koreans have pressed for voting rights in Japan, they have very little interest in becoming a voting bloc in South Korean politics. Chongryon for its part opposes moves to allow Zainichi Koreans to participate in Japanese politics, on the grounds that they assimilate Koreans into Japanese society and thus weaken Korean ethnic identity.[63]

Korean schools Edit

 
Classroom at Tokyo Korean High School with photographs of Kim Il Sung and Kim Jong Il

The pro-North Korea association Chongryon operates 218 Chōsen gakkō across Japan, including kindergartens and one university, Korea University. All lessons and all conversations within the school are conducted in Korean. They teach a strong pro-North Korean ideology and allegiance to Kim Il Sung, Kim Jong Il, and Kim Jong Un. The textbooks include an idealized depiction of the economic development of North Korea and Songun policy of Kim Jong Il.[64]

One of the issues the schools now face is a lack of funding. The schools were originally set up and run with support from the North Korean government, but this money has now dried up, and with dropping pupil numbers, many schools are facing financial difficulties.[citation needed] The Japanese government has refused Chongryon's requests that it fund ethnic schools in line with regular Japanese schools, citing Article 89 of the Japanese Constitution, where use of public funds for education by non-public bodies is prohibited. In reality, the schools are in fact partly funded by local authorities, but subsidies are given in the form of special benefits paid to the families of pupils, as opposed to paying the schools directly, in order to avoid a blatant breach of Article 89. It is still much less than the amount received by state schools.

Another issue is an examination called the High School Equivalency Test, or daiken, which qualifies those who have not graduated from a regular high school to apply for a place in a state university and take an entrance exam. Until recently, only those who had completed compulsory education (i.e., up to junior high school) were entitled to take the daiken. This meant pupils of ethnic schools had to complete extra courswork before being allowed to take the exam. In 1999, the requirement was amended so that anyone over a certain age is qualified. Campaigners were not satisfied because this still meant graduates of non-Japanese high schools had to take the daiken. In 2003, the Education Ministry removed the requirement to take the Equivalency Test from graduates of Chinese schools, Mindan-run Korean schools, and international schools affiliated with Western nations and accredited by U.S. and British organizations. However, this did not apply to graduates of Chongryon-run Korean schools, as the minisitry said it could not approve their curricula. The decision was left up to individual universities, 70% of which allowed all Korean school graduates to apply directly.[65]

Due to the issues described above, the number of students at Korean schools run by Chongryon has declined by 67%, and many of the children of Zainichi Koreans now choose to go to orthodox Japanese schools.[66]

There are a few Kankoku Gakkō (Korean: 한국학교/韓國學校, Japanese: 韓国学校) located in Tokyo, Osaka, Ibaraki, Kyoto, and Ishioka, which receive sponsorship from South Korea and are operated by Mindan. Koreans who live in Japan and support South Korea are likely to attend a Kankoku gakkō. Alternatively, they may go to a normal school in Japan taught in Japanese. Most Koreans who have lived in Japan since they were born, however, go to normal schools even if there is a Kankoku gakkō near them.[67]

Legal alias Edit

Legal alias
Japanese name
Kanji通名
Transcriptions
RomanizationTsūmei
North Korean name
Chosŏn'gŭl통명
Hancha通名
Transcriptions
Revised RomanizationTongmyeong
McCune–ReischauerT'ongmyŏng

Registered aliens in Japan are allowed to adopt a registered alias (通称名, tsūshōmei), often abbreviated to tsūmei (通名, "common name"), as their legal name.[68] Traditionally, Zainichi Koreans have used Japanese-style names in public, but some Zainichi Koreans, including celebrities and professional athletes, use their original Korean names. Well-known ethnic Koreans who use Japanese names include Hanshin Tigers star Tomoaki Kanemoto, pro wrestlers Riki Choshu and Akira Maeda, and controversial judoka and mixed martial artist Yoshihiro Akiyama.

During the Korea-Japan 2002 FIFA World Cup, a Mindan newspaper conducted a survey regarding the use of aliases. 50% of those polled said that they always use an alias, while 13% stated they always use their original name. 33% stated that they use either depending on the situation.[69][70] In a 1986 survey, over 90% of ethnic Koreans in Japan reported having a Japanese-sounding name in addition to a Korean one.[71] In a 1998 study, 80% stated that they used their Japanese names when in Japanese company, and 30.3% stated that they used their Japanese names "almost exclusively".[72]

Zainichi in the Japanese labor market Edit

Zainichi Koreans are said to mainly be employed in pachinko parlors, restaurants/bars, and construction.[73] Discrimination against Zainichi Koreans in hiring has pushed many into so-called 3D (dirty, dangerous, and demeaning) industries.[74] Annual sales of pachinko have totaled about 30 trillion yen since 1993, and Zainichi Koreans have accounted for 90% of such sales.[75] However, the pachinko industry is shrinking, because the Japanese government has imposed stricter regulations. The number of pachinko parlors decreased by 9.5% between 2012 and 2016, while the number of people playing pachinko dropped to less than 9.4 million.[76]

Some Zainichi Koreans have developed yakiniku restaurants.[15] The honorary president of the All Japan "Yakiniku" Association is Tae Do Park (alias Taido Arai).[77][78]

In the 1970s, Korean newcomers started to enter the precious metals industry. Currently, 70% of precious metals products in Japan are made by certified Zainichi Koreans.[79]

Some Zainichi Koreans participate in organized crime, as do people in other segments of the population. A former member of the yakuza group Sumiyoshi-kai estimated there are a few hundred Korean yakuza, and that some of them are bosses of branches. However, the member went on to say that Korean gang members tend to go to China and Southeast Asia, as these countries are more lucrative for them than Japan.[80]

There has been improvement in the working rights of Zainichi Koreans since the 1970s.[81] For example, foreigners including Zainichi Koreans were previously not allowed to become lawyers in Japan, but Kim Kyung Deok became the first Zainichi Korean lawyer in 1979. As of 2018, there are more than 100 Zainichi Korean lawyers in Japan, and some of them have worked as members of LAZAK (Lawyers Association of Zainichi Koreans).[82]

In popular culture Edit

The earliest Japanese films featuring Koreans in Japan often depicted Koreans as members of the peripheral society, rather than as main characters. It wasn't until after the Second World War that films visualized the struggles and oppression experienced by Zainichi Koreans, with films such as Three Resurrected Drunkards (1968) by Nagisa Ōshima, which addressed the bigotry and xenophobia experienced by Zainichi in Japan. The first film to present the Zainichi experience from a Zainichi director was the 1975 film River of the Stranger by Lee Hak-in.

Zainichi director Sai Yoichi's All Under the Moon was the first to receive critical acclaim, earning several best film awards in 1993. In 2001, Zainichi director Lee Sang-il released his first film, Chong, and in 2001, Zainichi author Kazuki Kaneshiro's Naoki Prize-winning book GO (2000), about a North Korean Zainichi, was made into a popular film of the same name. Yang Yong-hi would be the first to address the Chongryon experience in a documentary, with Dear Pyongyang in 2005.

Korean American creatives have used the Zainichi experience to parse their own experience as part of the greater Korean diaspora, with films such as Benson Lee's 2016 film Seoul Searching, and author Min Jin Lee's 2017 novel Pachinko. Pachinko tells the story of several generations of Zainichi Koreans and the prevailing stereotype within Japan about Koreans and pachinko parlors; the book explores themes of belonging, nationality, and longstanding political debates about discrimination and xenophobia against Koreans in Japan. The novel has been made into a limited TV series of the same name by Apple TV+.[83][84]

Notable people Edit

See also Edit

Other ethnic groups in Japan Edit

References Edit

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Further reading Edit

  • Kim-Wachutka, Jackie (2005). Hidden Treasures: Lives of First-Generation Korean Women in Japan. Lanham: Rowman & Littlefield. ISBN 0-7425-3595-9.
  • Kim-Wachutka, Jackie (2019). Zainichi Korean Women in Japan: Voices. London: Routledge. ISBN 978-1-138-58485-3.
  • Morris-Suzuki, Tessa (2007). Exodus to North Korea: Shadows from Japan's Cold War. Lanham: Rowman & Littlefield Publishers. ISBN 978-0-7425-7938-5.

External links Edit

  • FCCJ (The Foreign Correspondents' Club of Japan) Mr. Suganuma of former Public Security Investigation Agency tells it about Zainichi Korean (Japanese, English)
  • South Korean Residents Union in Japan (Mindan) (Korean, Japanese, English)
  • (English)
  • (English)
  • The Federation of Korean Associations, Japan (Korean, Japanese)
  • (Korean, Japanese)
    • The Han World 2004-11-15 at the Wayback Machine – a site for Korean residents in Japan.
    • – a paper on Zainichi.
    • Nichi Bei Times Article
    • Testing Tolerance: Fallout from North Korea's Nuclear Program Hits Minorities in Japan article from The Common Language Project
    • Japan Times: "Young 'Zainichi' Koreans look beyond Chongryon ideology"
    • "From Korea to Kyoto; Chapter One of Community, Democracy, and Performance: the Urban Practice of Kyoto's Higashi-Kujo Madang
    • Migration patterns of Korean residents in Ikuno ward, Osaka ― Japanese Journal of Human Geography (人文地理)

    koreans, japan, zainichi, redirects, here, word, zainichi, refers, general, foreign, citizens, residing, japan, book, critical, voices, from, margin, japanese, south, north, koreans, 在日韓国人, 在日本朝鮮人, 朝鮮人, zainichi, kankokujin, zainihon, chōsenjin, chōsenjin, com. Zainichi redirects here The word Zainichi refers in general to foreign citizens residing in Japan For the book see Koreans in Japan Critical Voices from the Margin Japanese South and North Koreans 在日韓国人 在日本朝鮮人 朝鮮人 Zainichi Kankokujin Zainihon Chōsenjin Chōsenjin comprise ethnic Koreans who have permanent residency status in Japan or who have become Japanese citizens and whose immigration to Japan originated before 1945 or who are descendants of those immigrants They are a group distinct from South Korean nationals who have immigrated to Japan after the end of World War II and the division of Korea Japanese South and North Koreans在日韓国 朝鮮人Total population436 670 in December 2022 South Korea 411 312 in December 2022 1 North Korea 25 358 in December 2022 2 Details Special Permanent Residents 285 459 General permanent residents 75 178 Japanese spouse etc 11 963 Spouse of permanent resident 2 074 Technology humanities international services 23 083 Study abroad 14 124 people Family stay 9 316 people Business and management 2 665 Working Holiday 1 074 people Transfer within the company 1 138 people Items with fewer than 1 000 people are omitted 3 Reference Cumulative naturalization permission from South Korea Chosen seki 375 518 until the end of December 2018 4 Regions with significant populationsTokyo Shin Ōkubo Osaka Prefecture Ikuno ku LanguagesJapanese Korean Zainichi Korean ReligionBuddhism Shinto Korean Shamanism Christianity IrreligionRelated ethnic groupsKorean people Sakhalin KoreansThey currently constitute the second largest ethnic minority group in Japan after Chinese immigrants due to many Koreans assimilating into the general Japanese population 5 The majority of Koreans in Japan are Zainichi Koreans 在日韓国 朝鮮人 Zainichi Kankoku Chōsenjin often known simply as Zainichi 在日 lit in Japan who are ethnic Korean permanent residents of Japan The term Zainichi Korean refers only to long term Korean residents of Japan who trace their roots to Korea under Japanese rule distinguishing them from the later wave of Korean migrants who came mostly in the 1980s 6 and from pre modern immigrants dating back to antiquity who may themselves be the ancestors of the Japanese people 7 The Japanese word Zainichi itself means a foreign citizen staying in Japan and implies temporary residence 8 Nevertheless the term Zainichi Korean is used to describe settled permanent residents of Japan both those who have retained their Joseon or North Korean South Korean nationalities and even sometimes includes Japanese citizens of Korean descent who acquired Japanese nationality by naturalization or by birth from one or both parents who have Japanese citizenship Contents 1 Statistics 2 History 2 1 Overview 2 2 Pre modern era 2 2 1 Yayoi period 2 2 2 Kofun period 250 to 538 2 2 3 Heian period 794 to 1185 2 2 4 Sengoku period 1467 to 1615 2 2 5 Edo period 1603 to 1867 2 3 Before World War II 2 4 During World War II 2 5 After World War II 2 6 Loss of Japanese nationality 2 7 Newcomers 3 Repatriation to Korea 4 Organizations Chongryon and Mindan 4 1 Division between Chongryon and Mindan 4 2 Chongryon 4 2 1 Controversies over Chongryon 5 Integration into Japanese society 5 1 Assimilation 5 2 Registration of residents 5 3 Right to vote and government employment 5 4 Korean schools 5 5 Legal alias 6 Zainichi in the Japanese labor market 7 In popular culture 8 Notable people 9 See also 9 1 Other ethnic groups in Japan 10 References 11 Further reading 12 External linksStatistics Edit nbsp Restrictions of passage from the Korean Peninsula April 1919 1922 the 1923 Great Kantō earthquake restrictions of passage from Busan October 1925 opening of independent travel service by Koreans between Jeju and Osaka April 1930 Park Choon Geum was elected for the House of Representatives of Japan February 1932 removal of restrictions of civil recruit from the Korean Peninsula September 1939 public recruit from the Korean Peninsula March 1942 labor conscription from the Korean Peninsula September 1944 the end of WWII and the beginning of repatriation 1945 the Jeju uprising April 1948 the Korean War June 1950 the Home coming Movement to North Korea December 1959 1983 the Treaty on Basic Relations between Japan and the Republic of Korea 1965 1977 1983 Japanese ratification of the Convention Relating to the Status of Refugees 1982 the 1988 Summer Olympics in Seoul South Korea the 1997 Asian Financial CrisisAccording to the Ministry of Justice 411 312 South Koreans and 25 358 Koreans 朝鮮人 Chōsen jin those Koreans do not necessarily have the North Korean nationality are registered in 2022 1 9 nbsp Foreign residents in JapanHistory EditOverview Edit The modern flow of Koreans to Japan started with the Japan Korea Treaty of 1876 and increased dramatically after 1920 During World War II a large number of Koreans were also conscripted by Japan Another wave of migration started after South Korea was devastated by the Korean War in the 1950s Also noteworthy was the large number of refugees from the massacres on Jeju Island by the South Korean government 10 Statistics regarding Zainichi immigration are scarce However in 1988 a Mindan youth group called Zainihon Daikan Minkoku Seinendan Korean 재일본대한민국청년회 Japanese 在日本大韓民国青年会 published a report titled Father tell us about that day Report to reclaim our history Japanese アボジ聞かせて あの日のことを 我々の歴史を取り戻す運動報告書 The report included a survey of first generation Koreans reasons for immigration The result was 13 3 for conscription 39 6 for economics 17 3 for marriage and family 9 5 for study academic 20 2 for other reasons and 0 2 unknown 11 The survey excluded those who were under 12 when they arrived in Japan Pre modern era Edit While some families can currently trace their ancestry back to pre modern Korean immigrants many families were absorbed into Japanese society and as a result they are not considered a distinct group The same is applicable to those families which are descended from Koreans who entered Japan in subsequent periods of pre modern Japanese history Trade with Korea continued to modern times with Japan also periodically receiving missions from Korea though this activity was often limited to specific ports Yayoi period Edit In late prehistory in the Iron Age Yayoi period 300 BCE to 300 CE Japanese culture showed clarify some Korean influence though whether this was accompanied by immigration from Korea is debated see Origin of the Yayoi people Kofun period 250 to 538 Edit In the later Kofun 250 538 CE and Asuka 538 710 CE periods there was some flow of people from the Korean Peninsula both as immigrants and long term visitors notably a number of clans in the Kofun period see Kofun period Korean migration While some families today can ultimately trace their ancestry to the immigrants they were generally absorbed into Japanese society and are not considered a distinct modern group by whom citation needed Heian period 794 to 1185 Edit According to the Nihon Kōki historical text in 814 six people including a Silla man called Karanunofurui Korean 가라포고이 Japanese 加羅布古伊 presumed to be of gaya descent became naturalized in Japan s Minokuni 美濃國 region 12 Sengoku period 1467 to 1615 Edit Some Koreans entered Japan in captivity as a result of pirate raids or during the 1592 1598 Japanese invasions of Korea Edo period 1603 to 1867 Edit In the Edo period trade with Korea occurred through the Tsushima Fuchu Domain in Kyushu near Nagasaki Before World War II Edit After the conclusion of the Japan Korea Treaty of 1876 Korean students and asylum seekers started to come to Japan including Korean politicians and activists Bak Yeonghyo Kim Ok gyun and Song Byeong jun There were about 800 Koreans living in Japan before Japan annexed Korea 13 In 1910 as the result of the Japan Korea Annexation Treaty Japan annexed Korea and all Korean people became part of the nation of the Empire of Japan by law and received Japanese citizenship In the 1920s the demand for labor in Japan was high while Koreans had difficulty finding jobs in the Korean peninsula As a result thousands of Koreans migrated or were recruited to work in industries like coal mining 14 A majority of the immigrants consisted of farmers from the southern part of Korea 15 The number of Koreans in Japan in 1930 was more than ten times greater than that of 1920 reaching 419 000 16 However the jobs they could get on the mainland of Japan were curtailed by open discrimination and largely limited to physical labor due to their poor education they usually worked alongside other groups of ethnic minorities subject to discrimination such as burakumin 15 Before World War II the Japanese government tried to reduce the number of Koreans immigrating to Japan To accomplish this the Japanese government devoted resources to the Korean peninsula 17 verification needed During World War II Edit In 1939 the Japanese government introduced the National Mobilization Law and conscripted Koreans to deal with labor shortages due to World War II In 1944 the Japanese authorities extended the mobilization of Japanese civilians for labor on the Korean peninsula 18 Of the 5 400 000 Koreans conscripted about 670 000 were taken to mainland Japan including Karafuto Prefecture present day Sakhalin now part of Russia for civilian labor Those who were brought to Japan were forced to work in factories in mines and as laborers often under appalling conditions About 60 000 are estimated to have died between 1939 and 1945 19 Most of the wartime laborers returned home after the war but some elected to remain in Japan 43 000 of those in Karafuto which had been occupied by the Soviet Union just before Japan s surrender were refused repatriation to either mainland Japan or the Korean Peninsula and were thus trapped in Sakhalin stateless they became the ancestors of the Sakhalin Koreans 20 After World War II Edit Koreans entered Japan illegally post World War II due to an unstable political and economic situation in Korea with 20 000 to 40 000 Koreans fleeing Syngman Rhee s forces during the Jeju uprising in 1948 21 The Yeosu Suncheon rebellion also increased the illegal immigration to Japan 22 It is estimated that between 1946 and 1949 90 of illegal immigrants to Japan were Koreans 23 verification needed During the Korean War Korean immigrants came to Japan to avoid torture or murder at the hands of dictator Syngman Rhee s forces e g in the Bodo League massacre 24 Fishers and brokers helped immigrants enter Japan through Tsushima Island 25 26 In the 1950s Japan Coast Guard secured the border with Korea but apprehending illegal immigrants was difficult because they were armed while Japan Coast Guard was not due to the terms of the surrender of Japan after World War II During this period one fifth of the immigrants were arrested 27 In Official Correspondence of 1949 Shigeru Yoshida the prime minister of Japan proposed the deportation of all Zainichi Koreans to Douglas MacArthur the American Supreme Commander of the Allied Powers and said the Japanese government would pay all of the cost Yoshida stated that it was unfair for Japan to purchase food for illegal Zainichi Koreans claiming that they did not contribute to the Japanese economy and that they supposedly committed political crimes by cooperating with communists 28 Loss of Japanese nationality Edit nbsp Dates of entrance or birth of Korean residents in Japan as of the end of 1958Immediately following the end of World War II there were roughly 2 4 million Koreans in Japan the majority repatriated to their ancestral homes in the southern half of the Korean Peninsula leaving only 650 000 in Japan by 1946 29 Japan s defeat in the war and the end of its colonization of the Korean Peninsula and Taiwan left the nationality status of Koreans and Taiwanese in an ambiguous position in terms of law The Alien Registration Ordinance ja 外国人登録令 Gaikokujin tōroku rei of 2 May 1947 ruled that Koreans and some Taiwanese were to be provisionally treated as foreign nationals Given the lack of a single unified government on the Korean Peninsula Koreans were provisionally registered under the name of Joseon Korean 조선 Japanese Chōsen 朝鮮 the old name of undivided Korea In 1948 the northern and southern parts of Korea declared independence individually making Joseon or the old undivided Korea a defunct nation The new government of the Republic of Korea South Korea made a request to the Supreme Commander of the Allied Powers then the occupying power of Japan to change the nationality registration of Zainichi Koreans to Daehan Minguk Korean 대한민국 Japanese Daikan Minkoku 大韓民国 the official name of the new nation Following this from 1950 onwards Zainichi Koreans were allowed to voluntarily re register their nationality as such The Allied occupation of Japan ended on 28 April 1952 with the San Francisco Peace Treaty in which Japan formally abandoned its territorial claim to the Korean Peninsula and as a result Zainichi Koreans formally lost their Japanese nationality 30 The division on the Korean Peninsula led to division among Koreans in Japan Mindan the Korean Residents Union in Japan was set up in 1946 as a pro South offshoot of Chōren League of Koreans in Japan the main Korean residents organisation which had a socialist ideology Following the May Day riots of 1952 the pro North organisation which was made illegal but it re formed under various guises and went on to form the General Association of Korean Residents in Japan or Chongryon in 1955 This organisation kept to its socialist and by extension pro North stance and enjoyed the active financial support of the North Korean government 29 nbsp The second Kobe riots in 1950In 1965 Japan concluded a Treaty on Basic Relations with the Republic of Korea and recognized the South Korean government as the only legitimate government of the peninsula 29 Those Koreans in Japan who did not apply for South Korean citizenship kept Chōsen seki which did not give them citizenship of any nation Newcomers Edit Starting in 1980 South Korea allowed its students to study abroad freely starting in 1987 people older than forty four were allowed to travel abroad 31 32 One year after the 1988 Seoul Olympics traveling abroad was further liberalized 32 When Expo 2005 was held the Japanese government had a visa waiver program with South Korea for a limited period under the condition that the visitor s purpose was sightseeing or business and later extended it permanently 33 Korean enclaves tend to exclude newcomers from existing Korean organizations especially Mindan so newcomers have created a new one called the Federation of Korean Associations in Japan ja ko 34 35 Repatriation to Korea Edit nbsp Repatriation of Koreans from Japan January 1960Repatriation of Zainichi Koreans from Japan conducted under the auspices of the Japanese Red Cross began to receive official support from the Japanese government as early as 1956 A North Korean sponsored repatriation programme with support of the Chōsen Sōren The General Association of Korean Residents in Japan officially began in 1959 In April 1959 Gorō Terao Wikidata 寺尾 五郎 Terao Gorō a political activist and historian of the Japanese Communist Party published the book North of the 38th Parallel Japanese 38度線の北 in which he praised North Korea for its rapid development and humanitarianism 36 Following its publication numbers of returnees skyrocketed The Japanese government was in favour of repatriation as a way to rid the country of ethnic minority residents that were discriminated against and regarded as incompatible with Japanese culture 37 Though the United States government was initially unaware of Tokyo s cooperation with the repatriation programme they offered no objection after they were informed of it the US ambassador to Japan was quoted by his Australian counterpart as describing the Koreans in Japan as a poor lot including many Communists and many criminals 38 Despite the fact that 97 of the Zainichi Koreans originated from the southern half of the Korean Peninsula the North was initially a far more popular destination for repatriation than the South Approximately 70 000 Zainichi repatriated to North Korea during a two year period from 1960 through 1961 39 However as word came back of difficult conditions in the North and with the 1965 normalization of Japan South Korea relations the popularity of repatriation to the North dropped sharply though the trickle of returnees to the North continued as late as 1984 40 In total 93 340 people migrated from Japan to North Korea under the repatriation programme an estimated 6 000 were Japanese migrating with Korean spouses Around one hundred such repatriates are believed to have later escaped from North Korea the most famous is Kang Chol Hwan disputed discuss who published a book about his experience The Aquariums of Pyongyang One returnee who later defected back to Japan known only by his Japanese pseudonym Kenki Aoyama worked for North Korean intelligence as a spy in Beijing 41 The repatriations have been the subject of numerous creative works in Japan due to the influence they had on the Zainichi Korean community One documentary film about a family whose sons repatriated while the parents and daughter remained in Japan Dear Pyongyang won a special jury prize at the 2006 Sundance Film Festival 42 43 Some Zainichi Koreans have gone to South Korea to study or to settle For example author Lee Yangji studied at Seoul National University in the early 1980s 44 Organizations Chongryon and Mindan EditDivision between Chongryon and Mindan Edit Well into at least the 1970s Chongryon was the dominant Zainichi group and in some ways remains more politically significant today in Japan However the widening disparity between the political and economic conditions of the two Koreas has since made Mindan the pro South Korean group the larger and less politically controversial faction 65 of Zainichi are now said to be affiliated to Mindan The number of pupils receiving ethnic education from Chongryon affiliated schools has declined sharply with many if not most Zainichi now opting to send their children to mainstream Japanese schools citation needed Some Chongryon schools have been closed for lack of funding and there is serious doubt as to the continuing viability of the system as a whole Mindan has also traditionally operated a school system for the children of its members although it has always been less widespread and organized compared to its Chongryon counterpart and is said to be nearly defunct at the present time citation needed Chongryon Edit Out of the two Korean organizations in Japan the pro North Chongryon has been the more militant in terms of retaining Koreans ethnic identity Its policies have included operation of about 60 ethnic Korean schools across Japan initially partly funded by the North Korean government in which lessons are conducted in Korean They maintain a strong pro North Korean ideology which has sometimes come under criticism from pupils parents and the public alike discouraging its members from taking up Japanese citizenship discouraging its members from marrying Japanese operation of businesses and banks to provide the necessary jobs services and social networks for Zainichi Koreans outside mainstream society opposition to Zainichi Koreans right to vote or participate in Japanese elections which is seen as an unacceptable attempt at assimilation into Japanese society 45 and a home coming movement to North Korea in the late 1950s 46 which it hailed as a socialist Paradise on Earth with some 90 000 Zainichi Koreans and their Japanese spouses moving to the North before the migration eventually died down Controversies over Chongryon Edit Main article Chongryon Controversies over Chongryon For a long time Chongryon enjoyed unofficial immunity from searches and investigations partly because authorities were reluctant to carry out any actions which could provoke not only accusations of xenophobia but lead to an international incident Chongryon has long been suspected of a variety of criminal acts on behalf of North Korea such as illegal transfer of funds to North Korea and espionage but no action has been taken citation needed However recently escalating tensions between Japan and North Korea over a number of issues namely North Korea s abduction of Japanese nationals which came to light in 2002 as well as its nuclear weapons program has led to a resurgence of public animosity against Chongryon Chongryon schools have alleged numerous cases of verbal abuse and physical violence directed against their students and buildings and Chongryon facilities have been targets of protests and occasional incidents The Japanese authorities have recently started to crack down on Chongryon with investigations and arrests for charges ranging from tax evasion to espionage These moves are usually criticized by Chongryon as acts of political suppression 47 In December 2001 police raided Chongryon s Tokyo headquarters and related facilities to investigate Chongryon officials suspected role in embezzlement of funds from the failed Tokyo Chogin credit union ja 48 In 2002 Shotaro Tochigi deputy head of the Public Security Investigation Agency told a session of the House of Representatives Financial Affairs Committee that the agency was investigating Chongryon for suspected illicit transfers of funds to the North 49 The image of Chongryon was further tarnished by North Korea s surprise 2002 admission that it had indeed abducted Japanese nationals in the 1970s even after it had categorically and fiercely denied for many years that the abductions had ever taken place and dismissed rumors of North Korean involvement as an allegedly racist fantasy Some of the recent drop in membership of Chongryon is attributed to ordinary members of Chongryon who may have believed in the party line feeling deeply humiliated and disillusioned upon discovering that they had been used as mouthpieces to deny the crimes of the North Korean government citation needed In March 2006 police raided six Chongryon related facilities in an investigation into the circumstances surrounding the June 1980 disappearance of one of the alleged abductees Tadaaki Hara Police spokesmen said that the head of Chongryon at the time was suspected of co operating in his kidnapping 50 The operation of the Mangyongbong 92 currently suspended a North Korean ferry that is the only regular direct link between North Korea and Japan is a subject of significant tension as the ferry is primarily used by Chongryon to send its members to North Korea and to supply North Korea with money and goods donated by the organization and its members In 2003 a North Korean defector made a statement to the US Senate committee which stating that more than 90 of the parts used by North Korea to construct its missiles were brought from Japan aboard the ship 51 In May 2006 Chongryon and the pro South Mindan agreed to reconcile only for the agreement to break down the following month North Korea s missile tests in July 2006 deepened the divide with Chongryon refusing to condemn the missile tests expressing only its regret that the Japanese government has suspended the operation of the Mangyongbong 92 Outraged senior Mindan officials joined mainstream Japanese politicians and media in sharply criticizing Chongryon s silence over the matter Integration into Japanese society Edit nbsp Numbers of birth death and naturalization of Koreans in Japan nbsp Marriage of Koreans in JapanDuring the post World War II period Zainichi Koreans faced various kinds of discrimination from Japanese society Due to the San Francisco Peace Treaty the Japanese government created laws to support Japanese citizens by giving financial support providing shelters etc However after the treaty was signed Zainichi Koreans were no longer counted as Japanese citizens so they were unable to get any support from the government They were unable to get an insurance certificate from the government so it was difficult for them to get any medical care Without medical insurance Zainichi Koreans were unable to go to the hospital since the cost of medication was too high citation needed Another problem caused by this treaty was that the Japanese government created a law which stated that Korean residents in Japan had to be fingerprinted since Zainichi Koreans had two names their original name and a name given by the Japanese government Under this law Zainichi Koreans had to reveal their identity to the public because when they visited the city hall to provide their fingerprints their neighbors found out that they were Zainichi Koreans Therefore Zainichi Koreans were forced to reveal their identity to Japanese and faced discrimination from them This made their lives even more difficult In order to protect themselves many Zainichi Koreans protested against this law Mindan and many Zainichi Koreans opposed this law but the law wasn t repealed until 1993 Until then Zainichi Koreans could not escape from the social discrimination which they had faced in Japanese society 52 Furthermore it was hard for the Zainichi Koreans to get a job due to discrimination Especially it was very hard for Zainichi Koreans to become public employees since Japan only let Japanese nationals become public employees at that time Since many Zainichi Koreans couldn t get a proper job they began to get involved in illegal jobs such as illegal alcohol production scrap recycling and racketeering 53 As a result many Zainichi Koreans ended up living in slums or hamlets a situation aided by Japanese real estate agents refusal to let Zainichi Koreans rent houses 53 Zainichi today have established a stable presence in Japan after years of activism Through Mintohren community support by Zainichi organizations Mindan and Chongryon among others other minority groups Ainu burakumin Ryukyuans Nivkhs and others and sympathetic Japanese the social atmosphere for Zainichi in Japan has improved There are also Koreans living in Japan who try to present themselves as Japanese to avoid discrimination 54 Most younger Zainichi now speak only Japanese go to Japanese schools work for Japanese firms and increasingly marry Japanese people Most naturalization occurs among the young during the period when they seek formal employment or marriage Those who have already established their lives increasingly do not choose to retain their South Korean or Joseon nationality or heritage and lead average lives alongside other Japanese This as well as marriage to Japanese nationals is leading to a sharp decrease in the original Zainichi population in Japan Assimilation Edit One of the most pressing issues of the Zainichi community is the rate of assimilation of Zainichi into Japan About 4 000 to 5 000 Koreans naturalize in Japan every year out of slightly less than 480 000 55 Naturalization carries a crucial cultural aspect in Japan as both Mindan and Chongryon link Korean ethnic identity to Korean nationality and Japanese and South Korean nationality laws do not allow multiple citizenship for adults By their definition opting for a Japanese passport means becoming Japanese rather than Korean Japanese In order to be naturalized as Japanese citizens Zainichi Koreans previously had to go through multiple complex steps requiring collection of information about their family and ancestors stretching back ten generations This information could be collected through a Korean organization such as Mindan but with their prohibitively expensive cost many were unable to afford it However these processes have become much easier and today it is easier for Zainichi Koreans to naturalize into Japanese citizens citation needed Though there are a few cases of celebrities who naturalize with their Korean name the majority of naturalized Zainichi Koreans formally choose a name that is both read and appears ethnically Japanese This supports the aforementioned cultural implication of naturalisation leading some to take the rate of naturalisation as a rough measure of assimilation citation needed During the post World War II period many Zainichi Koreans married with other Zainichi Koreans and it was a rare case for them to intermarry with Japanese citizens This was because of Japanese xenophobic prejudice against Zainichi Koreans due to stigma stemming from decades of discrimination Therefore Japanese citizens especially their parents largely refused marriage with Zainichi Koreans However there were problems with marriage between Zainichi Koreans too As stated in the previous section Zainichi Koreans were mostly hiding their identity and living as Japanese presenting people at the time Because of this it was very hard for Zainichi Koreans to connect with other people who had the same nationality as them They were married mostly through arranged marriages supported by Mindan 53 Tong il Ilbo 통일일보 or Tōitsu Nippō 統一日報 a Korean Japanese newspaper reported that according to statistics from the Japanese Health and Labour ministry there were 8 376 marriages between Japanese and Koreans when Compared to 1 971 marriages in 1965 when the statistics began the number has roughly quadrupled and it now constitutes about 1 of the 730 971 total marriages in Japan The highest annual number of marriages between Japanese men and Korean women was 8 940 in 1990 Since 1991 it has fluctuated around 6 000 per year On the other hand there were 2 335 marriages between Korean men and Japanese women in 2006 It has been stable since the number reached 2 000 per year in 1984 56 In 1975 Hidenori Sakanaka 坂中 英徳 Sakanaka Hidenori a bureaucrat in the Ministry of Justice published a highly controversial document known as the Sakanaka Paper He stated that the assertion by both Mindan and Chongryon that Zainichi are destined to eventually return to Korea is no longer realistic He further predicted that Zainichi would naturally disappear in the 21st century unless they abandon their link between Korean identity and Korean nationality He argued that the Japanese government should stop treating Zainichi as temporary residents with a special status and start providing a proper legal framework for their permanent settlement as Korean Japanese In December 1995 Gendai Korea Modern Korea published the article 20 years after the Sakanaka Paper to assess further development citation needed The article pointed out that in the 1980s 50 of Zainichi Koreans married Japanese and in the 1990s the rate was 80 In fact they quoted only 15 18 Korean marriage during 1990 to 1994 They also pointed out the change in the law in 1985 which granted Japanese citizenship to a child with either parent being Japanese previous laws granted citizenship only to a child with a Japanese father In practice this would mean that less than 20 of Zainichi marriages would result in Zainichi status According to the article since naturalisation is concentrated among the younger generation the Zainichi population should be expected to collapse once the older generation starts to die out in two decades The latest figures from Mindan showed that the total population of Zainichi was 598 219 in 2006 and 593 489 in 2007 and that only 8 9 married another Zainichi in 2006 There were 1 792 births and 4 588 deaths resulting in a 2 796 natural decrease On top of that there were 8 531 naturalisations which resulted in a total decrease of 11 327 in 2006 1 89 57 Registration of residents Edit After Zainichi Koreans lost Japanese nationality the Immigration Control Act of 1951 and the Alien Registration Law of 1952 required them to be fingerprinted and to carry a certificate of registration as other foreigners did The Permanent Residents by Accord of 1965 allowed Zainichi Koreans who had lived in Japan since the colonial period to apply for permanent residency but their descendants could not Twenty six years later the Japanese Diet passed the Special Law on Immigration Control and categorized Zainichi Koreans who have lived without any gap since the end of World War II or before and their lineal descendants as Special Permanent Residents 58 The fingerprint requirement for Zainichi Koreans was terminated by 1993 15 Right to vote and government employment Edit Long term ethnic Korean residents of Japan who have not taken up Japanese nationality currently have the legal status of Tokubetsu Eijusha Special Permanent Residents and are granted special rights and privileges compared to other foreigners especially in matters such as re entry and deportation statutes These privileges were originally given to residents with South Korean nationality in 1965 and were extended in 1991 to cover those who have retained their Joseon nationality Over the decades Zainichi Koreans have been campaigning to regain their Japanese citizenship rights without having to adopt Japanese nationality The right to claim social welfare benefits was granted in 1954 followed by access to the national health insurance structures 1960s and state pensions 1980s There is some doubt over the legality of some of these policies as the Public Assistance Law which governs social welfare payments is seen to apply only to Japanese nationals There has been discussion about Zainichi South Koreans right to vote in South Korea Since Special Permanent Residents are exempted from military service and taxes the South Korean government was reluctant to give them the right to vote arguing they did not register as residents though it thought most people agree on granting the right to vote to short stay South Korean travelers On the other hand Zainichi South Koreans claimed that they should be granted it because the Constitution of South Korea guarantees anyone having South Korean nationality the right to vote 59 In 2007 the Constitutional Court of Korea concluded all South Korean nationals don t have the right to vote in South Korea if they are permanent residents of other countries 60 61 Zainichi North Koreans are allowed to vote and theoretically eligible to stand in North Korea s show elections if they are 17 years old or older 62 There have also been campaigns to allow Zainichi Koreans to take up government employment and participate in elections which are open to Japanese nationals only Since 1992 Mindan has been campaigning for the right to vote in elections for prefectural and municipal assemblies mayors and prefecture governors backed by the South Korean government In 1997 Kawasaki became the first municipality to hire a Korean national So far three prefectures Osaka Nara and Kanagawa have supported voting rights for permanent foreign residents However the Japanese Diet has not yet passed a resolution regarding this matter despite several attempts by a section within the Liberal Democratic Party of Japan to do so and there is considerable public and political opposition against granting voting rights to those who have not yet adopted Japanese nationality Instead the requirements for naturalization have been steadily lowered for Zainichi to the point that only criminal records or affiliation to North Korea would be a hindrance for naturalization Both Zainichi organisations oppose this as both see naturalization as de facto assimilation In November 2011 the South Korean government moved to register Zainichi Koreans as voters in South Korean elections a move which attracted few registrants While Mindan affiliated Zainichi Koreans have pressed for voting rights in Japan they have very little interest in becoming a voting bloc in South Korean politics Chongryon for its part opposes moves to allow Zainichi Koreans to participate in Japanese politics on the grounds that they assimilate Koreans into Japanese society and thus weaken Korean ethnic identity 63 Korean schools Edit nbsp Classroom at Tokyo Korean High School with photographs of Kim Il Sung and Kim Jong IlThe pro North Korea association Chongryon operates 218 Chōsen gakkō across Japan including kindergartens and one university Korea University All lessons and all conversations within the school are conducted in Korean They teach a strong pro North Korean ideology and allegiance to Kim Il Sung Kim Jong Il and Kim Jong Un The textbooks include an idealized depiction of the economic development of North Korea and Songun policy of Kim Jong Il 64 One of the issues the schools now face is a lack of funding The schools were originally set up and run with support from the North Korean government but this money has now dried up and with dropping pupil numbers many schools are facing financial difficulties citation needed The Japanese government has refused Chongryon s requests that it fund ethnic schools in line with regular Japanese schools citing Article 89 of the Japanese Constitution where use of public funds for education by non public bodies is prohibited In reality the schools are in fact partly funded by local authorities but subsidies are given in the form of special benefits paid to the families of pupils as opposed to paying the schools directly in order to avoid a blatant breach of Article 89 It is still much less than the amount received by state schools Another issue is an examination called the High School Equivalency Test or daiken which qualifies those who have not graduated from a regular high school to apply for a place in a state university and take an entrance exam Until recently only those who had completed compulsory education i e up to junior high school were entitled to take the daiken This meant pupils of ethnic schools had to complete extra courswork before being allowed to take the exam In 1999 the requirement was amended so that anyone over a certain age is qualified Campaigners were not satisfied because this still meant graduates of non Japanese high schools had to take the daiken In 2003 the Education Ministry removed the requirement to take the Equivalency Test from graduates of Chinese schools Mindan run Korean schools and international schools affiliated with Western nations and accredited by U S and British organizations However this did not apply to graduates of Chongryon run Korean schools as the minisitry said it could not approve their curricula The decision was left up to individual universities 70 of which allowed all Korean school graduates to apply directly 65 Due to the issues described above the number of students at Korean schools run by Chongryon has declined by 67 and many of the children of Zainichi Koreans now choose to go to orthodox Japanese schools 66 There are a few Kankoku Gakkō Korean 한국학교 韓國學校 Japanese 韓国学校 located in Tokyo Osaka Ibaraki Kyoto and Ishioka which receive sponsorship from South Korea and are operated by Mindan Koreans who live in Japan and support South Korea are likely to attend a Kankoku gakkō Alternatively they may go to a normal school in Japan taught in Japanese Most Koreans who have lived in Japan since they were born however go to normal schools even if there is a Kankoku gakkō near them 67 Legal alias Edit Legal aliasJapanese nameKanji通名TranscriptionsRomanizationTsumeiNorth Korean nameChosŏn gŭl통명Hancha通名TranscriptionsRevised RomanizationTongmyeongMcCune ReischauerT ongmyŏngRegistered aliens in Japan are allowed to adopt a registered alias 通称名 tsushōmei often abbreviated to tsumei 通名 common name as their legal name 68 Traditionally Zainichi Koreans have used Japanese style names in public but some Zainichi Koreans including celebrities and professional athletes use their original Korean names Well known ethnic Koreans who use Japanese names include Hanshin Tigers star Tomoaki Kanemoto pro wrestlers Riki Choshu and Akira Maeda and controversial judoka and mixed martial artist Yoshihiro Akiyama During the Korea Japan 2002 FIFA World Cup a Mindan newspaper conducted a survey regarding the use of aliases 50 of those polled said that they always use an alias while 13 stated they always use their original name 33 stated that they use either depending on the situation 69 70 In a 1986 survey over 90 of ethnic Koreans in Japan reported having a Japanese sounding name in addition to a Korean one 71 In a 1998 study 80 stated that they used their Japanese names when in Japanese company and 30 3 stated that they used their Japanese names almost exclusively 72 Zainichi in the Japanese labor market EditZainichi Koreans are said to mainly be employed in pachinko parlors restaurants bars and construction 73 Discrimination against Zainichi Koreans in hiring has pushed many into so called 3D dirty dangerous and demeaning industries 74 Annual sales of pachinko have totaled about 30 trillion yen since 1993 and Zainichi Koreans have accounted for 90 of such sales 75 However the pachinko industry is shrinking because the Japanese government has imposed stricter regulations The number of pachinko parlors decreased by 9 5 between 2012 and 2016 while the number of people playing pachinko dropped to less than 9 4 million 76 Some Zainichi Koreans have developed yakiniku restaurants 15 The honorary president of the All Japan Yakiniku Association is Tae Do Park alias Taido Arai 77 78 In the 1970s Korean newcomers started to enter the precious metals industry Currently 70 of precious metals products in Japan are made by certified Zainichi Koreans 79 Some Zainichi Koreans participate in organized crime as do people in other segments of the population A former member of the yakuza group Sumiyoshi kai estimated there are a few hundred Korean yakuza and that some of them are bosses of branches However the member went on to say that Korean gang members tend to go to China and Southeast Asia as these countries are more lucrative for them than Japan 80 There has been improvement in the working rights of Zainichi Koreans since the 1970s 81 For example foreigners including Zainichi Koreans were previously not allowed to become lawyers in Japan but Kim Kyung Deok became the first Zainichi Korean lawyer in 1979 As of 2018 there are more than 100 Zainichi Korean lawyers in Japan and some of them have worked as members of LAZAK Lawyers Association of Zainichi Koreans 82 In popular culture EditSee also Zainichi cinema The earliest Japanese films featuring Koreans in Japan often depicted Koreans as members of the peripheral society rather than as main characters It wasn t until after the Second World War that films visualized the struggles and oppression experienced by Zainichi Koreans with films such as Three Resurrected Drunkards 1968 by Nagisa Ōshima which addressed the bigotry and xenophobia experienced by Zainichi in Japan The first film to present the Zainichi experience from a Zainichi director was the 1975 film River of the Stranger by Lee Hak in Zainichi director Sai Yoichi s All Under the Moon was the first to receive critical acclaim earning several best film awards in 1993 In 2001 Zainichi director Lee Sang il released his first film Chong and in 2001 Zainichi author Kazuki Kaneshiro s Naoki Prize winning book GO 2000 about a North Korean Zainichi was made into a popular film of the same name Yang Yong hi would be the first to address the Chongryon experience in a documentary with Dear Pyongyang in 2005 Korean American creatives have used the Zainichi experience to parse their own experience as part of the greater Korean diaspora with films such as Benson Lee s 2016 film Seoul Searching and author Min Jin Lee s 2017 novel Pachinko Pachinko tells the story of several generations of Zainichi Koreans and the prevailing stereotype within Japan about Koreans and pachinko parlors the book explores themes of belonging nationality and longstanding political debates about discrimination and xenophobia against Koreans in Japan The novel has been made into a limited TV series of the same name by Apple TV 83 84 Notable people EditFor a more comprehensive list see List of Koreans in Japan nbsp Masayoshi Son nbsp Shin Kyuk ho nbsp Shin Dong bin nbsp Kim Chon hae nbsp Shinkun Haku nbsp Park Choon Geum nbsp Shigenori Tōgō nbsp Lee Ahyumi nbsp Kang Sang jung nbsp Zeus nbsp Masaichi Kaneda nbsp Rikidōzan nbsp Yang Bang ean nbsp Miri Yu nbsp Kiko Mizuhara nbsp Tadanari Lee nbsp Verbal nbsp Miyavi nbsp Yoshihiro Akiyama nbsp Crystal Kay nbsp Ren HayakawaSee also Edit nbsp Japan portalThe History Museum of J Koreans Koreatowns in Japan Sōshi kaimei Kantō Massacre Shinano River incident Demography of Japan Ethnic issues in Japan Japan Korea disputes Japan North Korea relations Japan South Korea relations Japanese people in South Korea List of Koreans in Japan History of Japan Korea relations Anti Korean sentiment in Japan Racism in Japan Hanshin Education Incident Koma Shrine Koryo SaramOther ethnic groups in Japan Edit Ainu people Chinese people in Japan Ryukyuan people Yamato peopleReferences Edit a b 令和4年末現在における在留外国人数について 出入国在留管理庁 在留外国人統計 旧登録外国人統計 在留外国人統計 月次 2022年12月 ファイル 統計データを探す 在留外国人統計テーブルデータ 令和4年末現在 Foreign residents by nationality region and status of residence purpose of residence Excel Press release Independent Administrative Institution National Institute of Statistics Center July 2022 Retrieved 20 July 2022 帰化許可申請者数 帰化許可者数及び帰化不許可者数の推移 Archived 2019 04 03 at the Wayback Machine 法務省民事局 Changes in the number of naturalization permit applicants the number of naturalization permit persons and the number of non naturalization permit persons Civil Affairs Bureau Ministry of Justice Statistics Bureau Ministry of Internal Affairs and Communications July 2021 国籍 地域別 在留資格 在留目的 別 在留外国人 Foreigners by nationality and by visas occupation Hester Jeffry T 2008 Datsu Zainichi ron An emerging discourse on belonging among Ethnic Koreans in Japan In Nelson H H Ertl John Tierney R Kenji eds Multiculturalism in the new Japan crossing the boundaries within Berghahn Books p 144 145 ISBN 978 1 84545 226 1 Diamond Jared June 1 1998 In Search of Japanese Roots Discover Magazine Fukuoka Yasunori Gill Tom 2000 Lives of young Koreans in Japan Trans Pacific Press p xxxviii ISBN 978 1 876843 00 7 在留外国人統計 旧登録外国人統計 統計表 出入国在留管理庁 Ryang Sonia Lie John 2009 04 01 Diaspora without Homeland Being Korean in Japan Escholarship org accessdate 2016 08 17 The same threat hung over thousands more who had arrived as refugees from the massacres that followed the April 3 1948 uprising on Jeju Island and from the Korean War 1988 在日本大韓民国青年会 アボジ聞かせて あの日のことを 我々の歴史を取り戻す運動報告書 徴兵 徴用13 3 その他20 2 不明0 2 経済的理由39 6 結婚 親族との同居17 3 留学9 5 가라포고이 Encyclopedia of Korean Culture Tamura Toshiyuki The Status and Role of Ethnic Koreans in the Japanese Economy PDF Institute for International Economics Retrieved November 19 2017 Arents Tom Tsuneishi Norihiko December 2015 The Uneven Recruitment of Korean Miners in Japan in the 1910s and 1920s Employment Strategies of the Miike and Chikuhō Coalmining Companies International Review of Social History 60 S1 121 143 doi 10 1017 S0020859015000437 ISSN 0020 8590 S2CID 147292906 a b c d FSI SPICE Koreans in Japan spice fsi stanford edu Retrieved 2017 11 20 Tamura Toshiyuki The Status and Role of Ethnic Koreans in the Japanese Economy PDF Institute for International Economics Retrieved November 19 2017 Kimura Kan 総力戦体制期の朝鮮半島に関する一考察 人的動員を中心にして PDF 日韓歴史共同研究報告書 第3分科篇 下巻 Archived from the original PDF on 2014 04 06 ExEAS Teaching Materials and Resources www columbia edu Retrieved 2017 11 20 Rummel R J 1999 Statistics of Democide Genocide and Mass Murder Since 1990 Lit Verlag ISBN 3 8258 4010 7 Available online Statistics of Democide Chapter 3 Statistics Of Japanese Democide Estimates Calculations And Sources Freedom Democracy Peace Power Democide and War Retrieved 2006 03 01 Lankov Andrei 2006 01 05 Stateless in Sakhalin The Korea Times Archived from the original on 2006 02 21 Retrieved 2006 11 26 光彦 木村 2016 日本帝国と東アジア PDF Institute of Statistical Research permanent dead link その時の今日 在日朝鮮人 北送事業が始まる Joongang Ilbo 中央日報 japanese joins com in Japanese Retrieved 2017 11 20 昭和27年02月27日 13 参 地方行政委 鈴木一の発言 一昨年の十月から入国管理庁が発足いたしまして約一年間の間に三千百九十名という朝鮮人を送り帰しておる 今の密入国の大半は 九 は朝鮮人でございます asahi com 拷問 戦争 独裁逃れ 在日女性60年ぶり済州島に帰郷へ 社会 2008 04 01 Archived from the original on 2008 04 01 Retrieved 2017 11 20 沙羅 朴 November 25 2013 境界を具体化する占領期日本への 密航 からみる入国 管理政策と 外国人 概念の再編 Digest 要約 PDF Kyoto University Research Information Repository Retrieved November 19 2017 昭和25年11月01日 8 衆 外務委 朝鮮人の密入国は 対馬を基点といたしまして その周辺の各県にまたがる地域が圧倒的数字を示しており 大体全国総数の七割ないし八割が同方面によつて占められているという状況であります 密航4ルートの動態 日韓結ぶ海の裏街道 潜入はお茶のこ 捕わる者僅か2割 産業経済新聞 June 28 1950 Yoshida Shigeru Makkasa ōfuku shokanshu 1945 1951 Sodei Rinjirō 1932 袖井林二郎 1932 Shohan ed Tōkyō Hōsei Daigaku Shuppankyoku 2000 ISBN 4588625098 OCLC 45861035 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint others link a b c Ryang Sonia 2000 The North Korean homeland of Koreans in Japan In Sonia Ryang ed Koreans in Japan Critical Voices from the Margin Taylor amp Francis ISBN 978 1 136 35312 3 United Nations International Convention on the Elimination of all Forms of Racial Discrimination September 26 2000 E Korean residents in Japan 32 The majority of Korean residents who constitute about one third of the foreign population in Japan are Koreans or their descendants who came to reside in Japan for various reasons during the 36 years 1910 1945 of Japan s rule over Korea and who continued to reside in Japan after having lost Japanese nationality which they held during the time of Japan s rule with the enforcement of the San Francisco Peace Treaty 28 April 1952 長島 万里子 April 2011 韓国の留学生政策とその変遷 PDF ウェブマガジン 留学交流 1 1 10 a b 成長期を迎えた巨大旅行市場 中国 へのアプローチ 2 2009 01 23 金 13 56 13 サーチナ archive fo 2012 07 13 Archived from the original on 2012 07 13 Retrieved 2017 11 20 a href Template Cite news html title Template Cite news cite news a CS1 maint bot original URL status unknown link 韓国人への短期ビザ免除を恒久化 nikkansports com www nikkansports com in Japanese Retrieved 2017 11 20 新 旧 在日韓国人 民団とどのように関わるか 民団中央大会を前にしたオールドカマー ニューカマーの声 One Korea Daily News February 18 2009 Archived from the original on January 14 2012 Alt URL zenaplus jp 재일본한국인연합회 www haninhe com Retrieved 2017 11 20 Terao Gorō April 1959 38度線の北 North of the 38th Parallel in Japanese 新日本出版社 ASIN B000JASSKK Morris Suzuki Tessa 2005 02 07 Japan s Hidden Role In The Return Of Zainichi Koreans To North Korea ZNet Archived from the original on 2007 03 17 Retrieved 2007 02 14 The motives behind the official enthusiasm for repatriation are clearly revealed by Masutaro Inoue who described Koreans in Japan as being very violent 6 in dark ignorance 7 and operating as a Fifth Column in Japanese society Inoue is reported as explaining that the Japanese government wanted to rid itself of several tens of thousands of Koreans who are indigent and vaguely communist thus at a stroke resolving security problems and budgetary problems because of the sums of money currently being dispensed to impoverished Koreans Morris Suzuki Tessa 2007 03 13 The Forgotten Victims of the North Korean Crisis Nautilus Institute Archived from the original on 2007 09 27 Retrieved 2007 03 15 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Moon Rennie FSI Koreans in Japan NOZAKI Yoshiki INOKUCHI Hiromitsu KIM Tae Young Legal Categories Demographic Change and Japan s Korean Residents in the Long Twentieth Century Japan Focus Archived from the original on 2007 01 25 Spy s escape from North Korean hell BBC News 2003 01 06 Retrieved 2007 03 16 2006 Sundance Film Festival announces awards for documentary and dramatic films in independent film and world cinema competitions PDF Press release Sundance Film Festival 2006 01 28 Retrieved 2007 03 20 1970 South Korea refused forced displacement of Korean residents in Japan who perpetrated a crime Press release Yomiuri Shimbun 2008 02 12 Archived from the original on 2009 02 21 Retrieved 2008 02 12 Shin Eunju ソウルの異邦人 その周辺一李艮枝 由煕 をめぐって Portrait of a Foreigner s World in Seoul Yuhi by Yi Yangji PDF Niigata University of International and Information Studies Archived from the original PDF on 2007 06 16 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Yonhap News Archived from the original on 2006 10 03 Retrieved 2006 10 10 in Japanese Abe Shunji The Home coming Movement Seen from North Korea An Interview with Mr Oh Gi Wan the Former Member of the Reception Committee for Japan s Korean Returnees Archived 2007 11 03 at the Wayback Machine Bulletin of Faculty of Education Nagasaki University Social science Nagasaki University Vol 61 20020630 pp 33 42 ISSN 0388 2780 FM Spokesman Urges Japan to Stop Suppression of Chongryon Korea np co jp Archived from the original on 2011 02 10 Retrieved 2016 08 17 CBSi FindArticles com Archived from the original on 2011 02 08 Retrieved 2016 08 17 CORRECTED Pro Pyongyang group rules out link to abduction Archived 2007 03 22 at the Wayback Machine Asian Political News November 18 2002 Japan Considered Podcast for April 7 2006 Volume 2 Number 14 Archived from the original on 2006 09 12 Retrieved 2006 12 12 N Korea ferry struggling against the tide BBC News Online June 9 2003 Tsutsui K amp Shin H J 2008 Global Norms Local Activism and Social Movement Outcomes Global Human Rights and Resident Koreans in Japan Social Problems 3 391 doi 10 1525 sp 2008 55 3 391 a b c Min Ganshick Zainichi Kankokujin no Genjou to Mirai Present lives and Future of Zainichi Koreans Tokyo Hirakawa Print Press 1994 Caste Ethnicity and Nationality Japan Finds Plenty of Space for Discrimination Hrdc net 2001 06 18 Retrieved 2016 08 17 過去10年間の帰化許可申請者数 帰化許可者数等の推移 in Japanese Retrieved 2021 08 15 日本の厚生労働省の調べによると 2006年だけで 韓国 朝鮮籍所有者と日本国籍者の間で結ばれた婚姻件数は8376件を数える 調査を開始した1965年の1971件に比べ およそ4倍で 日本国内全体の婚姻件数73万971件のうち 約1 を占めている 在日韓国 朝鮮人女性と日本人男性間の婚姻件数が最も多かったのは90年の8940件 91年以降は6000件前後に留まっており 06年末現在では6041件を数えた 半面 韓国 朝鮮人男性と日本人女性間の婚姻件数は06年末現在で2335件 1984年に2000件を超えて以来 ほぼ横ばい状態だ Mindan www mindan org Archived from the original on February 23 2008 Tamura Toshiyuki The Status and Role of Ethnic Koreans in the Japanese Economy PDF Institute for International Economics Retrieved November 19 2017 재외국민에 참정권 부여 않는건 위헌 www munhwa com Retrieved 2017 11 20 白井 京 September 2009 韓国の公職選挙法改正 在外国民への選挙権付与 PDF 国立国会図書館調査及び立法考査局 チャン サンジン June 29 2007 憲法裁 在外国民の参政権制限に違憲判決 Chusun Online Archived from the original on July 4 2007 最高人民会議代議員選挙 解説 朝鮮の選挙 立候補から当選まで 朝鮮新報 Moves to legislate on suffrage in Japan condemned Korean Central News Agency 2000 03 22 Archived from the original on 2014 10 12 Retrieved 2007 07 10 Review and Prospect of Internal and External Situations PDF Moj go jp Retrieved 2016 08 17 Child Research Net CRN Child Research in Japan amp Asia Recent Research on Japanese Children Ed Info Japan Archived from the original on 2011 02 10 Retrieved 2010 06 15 Shipper Apichai 2010 Nationalisms of and Against Zainichi Koreans in Japan PDF Asian Politics amp Policy 2 55 75 doi 10 1111 j 1943 0787 2009 01167 x Center of Ethnic Education Tokyo Korea School Tokyo Kankoku gakko When we need more support from South Korea THE FACT JPN 2013 12 09 Retrieved 2017 11 14 Zainichi Koreans in Japan Diasporic Nationalism and Postcolonial Identity John Lie University of California Press 15 Nov 2008 国際 日韓交流 asahi com Archived from the original on 2002 02 24 Retrieved 2016 08 17 民団 BackNumber トピック8 Mindan org Archived from the original on 2001 08 02 Retrieved 2016 08 17 Kimpara S Ishida R Ozawa Y Kajimura H Tanaka H and Mihashi O 1986 Nihon no Naka no Kankoku Chosenjin Chugokujin Kanagawa kennai Zaiju Gaikokujin Jittai Chosa yori Koreans and Chinese Inside Japan Reports from a Survey on Foreign Residents of Kanagawa Prefecture Tokyo Akashi Shoten Japanese Alias vs Real Ethnic Name On Naming Practices among Young Koreans in Japan Yasunori Fukuoka Saitama University Japan ISA XIV World Congress of Sociology July 26 August 1 1998 Montreal Canada 在日コリアンの2信用組合が3月合併 業界12位に in Japanese Retrieved 2017 11 20 Yim Young Eon December 2008 The Study on Categorization of Japanese Korean Entrepreneurs by their Motivation for Entrepreneurship PDF 立命館国際地域研究 28 111 129 Archived from the original PDF on 2016 03 04 Retrieved 2017 12 18 日本 パチンコ発金融危機 Joongang Ilbo 中央日報 japanese joins com in Japanese Retrieved 2017 11 20 パチンコ業界 本格的衰退が始まった 各社軒並み売上激減 出玉規制 が追い打ち ビジネスジャーナル Business Journal ビジネスの本音に迫る ビジネスジャーナル Business Journal ビジネスの本音に迫る in Japanese Retrieved 2017 11 20 協会概要 全国焼肉協会 ALLJAPAN YAKINIKU ASSOCIATION in Japanese Retrieved 2017 11 20 在日社会 在日新世紀 新たな座標軸を求めて 23 高級焼肉店 叙々苑 経営この道ひと筋50年 新井泰道さん 在日社会 ニュース 東洋経済日報 www toyo keizai co jp in Japanese Retrieved 2017 11 20 在日貴金属協 切磋30年の歴史光る 即売会盛況 www mindan org Archived from the original on 2016 12 28 Retrieved 2017 11 20 韓国人暴力団員 日本に数百人 要職担うことも 聯合ニュース in Japanese Retrieved 2017 11 20 Cho Young Min 2016 Koreans in Japan a Struggle for Acceptance Law School International Immersion Program Papers No 2 2016 Law School International Immersion Program Papers 2 Lawyers Association of Zainichi Koreans LAZAK March 30 2017 Discrimination Against Koreans in Japan Japan s Violation of its International Human Rights Obligation United Nations Human Rights Council Universal Periodic Review Third Cycle Japan Reference Documents Retrieved December 1 2018 Chang Justin 23 January 2015 Sundance Film Review Seoul Searching Variety Retrieved 20 September 2020 Aw Tash 2017 03 15 Pachinko by Min Jin Lee review rich story of the immigrant experience The Guardian Retrieved 2021 08 20 Further reading EditKim Wachutka Jackie 2005 Hidden Treasures Lives of First Generation Korean Women in Japan Lanham Rowman amp Littlefield ISBN 0 7425 3595 9 Kim Wachutka Jackie 2019 Zainichi Korean Women in Japan Voices London Routledge ISBN 978 1 138 58485 3 Morris Suzuki Tessa 2007 Exodus to North Korea Shadows from Japan s Cold War Lanham Rowman amp Littlefield Publishers ISBN 978 0 7425 7938 5 External links Edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Zainichi Korean people FCCJ The Foreign Correspondents Club of Japan Mr Suganuma of former Public Security Investigation Agency tells it about Zainichi Korean Japanese English South Korean Residents Union in Japan Mindan Korean Japanese English History of Mindan English Online Newspaper covering Zainichi Korean and Mindan English The Federation of Korean Associations Japan Korean Japanese North Korean Residents Union in Japan Joseon Chongryon Korean Japanese Selection of articles on Koreans in Japan from pro DPRK People s Korea The Han World Archived 2004 11 15 at the Wayback Machine a site for Korean residents in Japan The Self Identities of Zainichi Koreans a paper on Zainichi MINTOHREN Young Koreans Against Ethnic Discrimination in Japan Panel discussion in San Francisco Nichi Bei Times Article Testing Tolerance Fallout from North Korea s Nuclear Program Hits Minorities in Japan article from The Common Language Project Japan Times Young Zainichi Koreans look beyond Chongryon ideology From Korea to Kyoto Chapter One of Community Democracy and Performance the Urban Practice of Kyoto s Higashi Kujo Madang Migration patterns of Korean residents in Ikuno ward Osaka Japanese Journal of Human Geography 人文地理 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Koreans in Japan amp oldid 1179561832, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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