Material contribuído por masayukifukasawa

From Japan Overseas Cooperation Volunteer to Ceramic Sculptor, Moji Ochayashiki - Part 1

Masayuki Fukasawa

After finishing the visit to the company, I casually looked at the used book section at the entrance to the editorial department, and saw the back of a man with a familiar, distinctive beard. "We have a rare visitor," I said, and it turned out to be a ceramic artist, …

The gap between a famous Japanese businessman and a beggar who asks for forgiveness in Japanese

Masayuki Fukasawa

"Due to security issues, please don't use my name or photograph," I was told during a conversation I had just had with the Japanese-Brazilian founder of FAST SHOP, the exclusive distributor of Toto toilet seats and Washlet products, at the launch ceremony for the company's toilet seats and Washlet products, …

Japanese manga guerrillas who fought against the military government for freedom of expression

Masayuki Fukasawa

Against the Brazilian military regime (1964-1985), which controlled freedom of speech with tanks and machine guns, young Japanese people took up the weapon of manga and fought for freedom of expression. The three people who were honored on March 17th at the 35th anniversary of the Brazilian Cartoonists Association (Abrademi) …

If you make Brazil your "hometown," plant cherry trees - Nostalgia and Japanese immigrants to Brazil - Part 2

Masayuki Fukasawa

Read Part 1 >> If you want to call Brazil your "home," plant a cherry tree. For prewar immigrants, seeing cherry blossoms was a dream, as they were something only found in Japan. Seedlings and seeds of commercial crops such as pepper, jute, tea, and many vegetables had been brought …

If you make Brazil your "hometown," plant cherry trees - Nostalgia and Japanese immigrants to Brazil - Part 1

Masayuki Fukasawa

"It looks just like the tea fields in Shizuoka." When I went to cover the tea fields in Registro, a coastal area about 190 kilometers southwest of São Paulo, I was reminded of the scenes back home. However, it is black tea, not green tea. I heard that the raw …

Special roundtable discussion: What should the fourth generation visa be like? - As a framework for developing human resources who will lead the future of Japan-Brazil exchange -

Final Part: Possibilities for a Working Holiday Visa

Masayuki Fukasawa

Read Part 10 >> [Nagai] Oh, we haven't talked about working holidays yet... [Fukasawa] Ah, that's right, WH! [Nagai] Isn't this important? (laughs) [Fukazawa] After all, it would be a mistake to have a visa system that is only for Japanese descendants. I would like to see an agreement between …

Special roundtable discussion: What should the fourth generation visa be like? - As a framework for developing human resources who will lead the future of Japan-Brazil exchange -

Part 10: Japanese communities as a buffer zone between Brazil and Japan

Masayuki Fukasawa

Read Part 9 >> [Nagai] But I wonder why Japanese people preserve their traditions. Is it a characteristic of Asian people? [Fukazawa] It's because they are different from the European culture that is the basis of Brazilian society, and I personally think that the more discrimination there is, the more …

Special roundtable discussion: What should the fourth generation visa be like? - As a framework for developing human resources who will lead the future of Japan-Brazil exchange -

Part 9: The ever-increasing number of foreign workers

Masayuki Fukasawa

Read Part 8 >> Are there no Japanese people working in Japanese convenience stores? [Nagai] If you look at the statistics on foreigners in Japan, you can see that when I came to Brazil from Japan, there were about 100,000 Vietnamese people. But in the last three years, that number …

Special roundtable discussion: What should the fourth generation visa be like? - As a framework for developing human resources who will lead the future of Japan-Brazil exchange -

Part 8: The advantages and disadvantages of naturalizing in Japan

Masayuki Fukasawa

Read Part 7 >> [Nagai] That's right. So, the case of Brazil is interesting. If you're born in Brazil, you're Brazilian, right? And if you're born in Japan, you're Brazilian, right? Well, there was a time when the constitution changed and people born abroad became stateless, but now all children …

Special roundtable discussion: What should the fourth generation visa be like? - As a framework for developing human resources who will lead the future of Japan-Brazil exchange -

Part 7: The "call" system as a framework

Masayuki Fukasawa

Read Part 6 >> Wouldn't it be good if Japan had a "visit visa"? [Fukazawa] That got me thinking, it seems like the majority of Japanese people already have relatives who are living permanently and settled in Japan. So I think it's possible for those people to "invite" them. And …

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1965年11月、静岡県沼津市生まれ。92年にブラジル初渡航し、邦字紙パウリスタ新聞で研修記者。95年にいったん帰国し、群馬県大泉町でブラジル人と共に工場労働をした体験をまとめたものが99年の潮ノンフィクション賞を受賞、『パラレル・ワールド』(潮出版)として出版。99年から再渡伯。01年からニッケイ新聞に勤務、04年から編集長。著書は『一粒の米もし死なずば』(無明舎、2014年)、『勝ち組異聞』(無明舎、2017年)など。

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