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KOSHER DELIGHT - YOUR JEWISH ONLINE MAGAZINE!
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JAPAN |
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JEWISH AND KOSHER JAPAN:
- CHABAD
CENTERS
- JEWISH
ORGANIZATIONS
- KOSHER
ESTABLISHMENTS
- KASHRUT
AUTHORITIES
- MIKVAOT
Also see:
-
CHIUNE SUGIHARA
the Japanese Oscar Schindler
-
DR. ABRAHAM KAUFMAN
-
HISTORY OF JEWS IN JAPAN
-
HISTORY OF THE JEWS IN KOBE
-
JEWISH SETTLEMENT IN THE JAPANESE EMPIRE
-
SHANGHAI GHETTO
--

Japan
i/dʒəˈpćn/
(Japanese:
日本 Nihon
or Nippon; formally
日本国
Nippon-koku
or Nihon-koku, literally the State of Japan)
is an
island nation in
East Asia. Located in the
Pacific Ocean, it lies to
the east of the
Sea of Japan,
China,
North Korea,
South Korea and
Russia, stretching from the
Sea of Okhotsk in the north
to the
East China Sea and
Taiwan in the south. The
characters that make up
Japan's name mean "sun-origin", which is why Japan is
sometimes referred to as the "Land
of the Rising Sun".
Japan is an
archipelago of
6,852 islands. The four
largest islands are
Honshu,
Hokkaido,
Kyushu and
Shikoku, together
comprising about ninety-seven percent of Japan's land area.
Japan has the world's
tenth-largest population,
with over 127 million people. Honshū's
Greater Tokyo Area, which
includes the
de facto
capital city of
Tokyo and several
surrounding
prefectures, is the
largest metropolitan area
in the world, with over 30 million residents.
Archaeological research
indicates that people lived in Japan as early as the
Upper Paleolithic period.
The first written mention of Japan is in
Chinese history texts from
the 1st century AD. Influence from other nations followed by
long periods of isolation has characterized
Japan's history. In the
late 19th and early 20th centuries, victory in the
First Sino-Japanese War,
the
Russo-Japanese War and
World War I allowed Japan
to expand its empire during a period of increasing
militarism. The
Second Sino-Japanese War of
1937 expanded into part of
World War II in 1941, which
came to an end in 1945 following the
atomic bombings of Hiroshima and
Nagasaki. Since adopting its revised
constitution in 1947, Japan
has maintained a unitary constitutional monarchy with an
emperor and an elected
legislature called the
Diet.
A
major economic power, Japan
has the world's
third-largest economy by
nominal GDP and fourth-largest economy by
purchasing power parity. It
is also the world's
fourth-largest exporter and
fourth-largest importer.
Although Japan has officially
renounced its right to declare war,
it maintains a modern military with the
sixth largest military budget,
used for self-defense and
peacekeeping roles. After
Singapore, Japan has the
lowest
homicide rate (including
attempted homicide) in the world. According to Japan's
health ministry, Japanese women have the second highest
life expectancy of any
country in the world. According to the
United Nations, Japan also
has the third lowest
infant mortality rate.
Etymology
Main article:
Names of Japan
The English word Japan
is an
exonym. The Japanese names
for Japan are Nippon
(にっぽん?)
listen
(help·info)
and Nihon
(にほん?)
listen
(help·info);
both names are written using the
kanji
日本. The Japanese name Nippon is used
for most official purposes, including on
Japanese yen,
postage stamps, and for
many international sporting events.
From the
Meiji Restoration until the
end of
World War II, the full
title of Japan was Dai Nippon Teikoku
(大日本帝國?),
meaning "the
Empire of Great Japan".
Today the name Nippon-koku or Nihon-koku
(日本国?)
is used as a formal modern-day equivalent; countries like
Japan whose long form does not contain a descriptive
designation are generally given a name appended by the
character koku
(国?),
meaning "country", "nation" or "state".
Japanese people
refer to themselves as Nihonjin
(日本人?)
and to their language as Nihongo
(日本語?).
Both Nippon and Nihon mean "sun-origin" and
are often translated as Land of the Rising Sun. This
nomenclature comes from
Japanese missions to Imperial China
and refers to Japan's eastward position relative to China.
Before Nihon came into official use, Japan was known
as
Wa
The English word for Japan
came to the West via
early trade routes. The
early
Mandarin or possibly
Wu Chinese (吳語) word for
Japan was recorded by
Marco Polo as Cipangu.
In modern
Shanghainese, a Wu dialect,
the pronunciation of characters
日本 'Japan' is Zeppen
[zəʔpən]. The old
Malay word for Japan,
Jepang, was borrowed from Chinese Jih'pen'kuo
(日本国) in one or other of its coastal dialect forms, probably
Fukienese or
Ningpo, and this Malay word
was encountered by
Portuguese traders in
Malacca in the 16th
century. Portuguese traders were the first to bring the word
to Europe. It was first recorded in English in a 1565
letter, spelled Giapan.
History
Prehistory and ancient history
A
Paleolithic culture around
30,000 BC constitutes the first known habitation of the
Japanese archipelago. This was followed from around 14,000
BC (the start of the
Jōmon period) by a
Mesolithic to
Neolithic semi-sedentary
hunter-gatherer culture,
who include ancestors of both the contemporary
Ainu people and
Yamato people,
characterized by pit dwelling and rudimentary agriculture.
Decorated clay vessels from this period are some of the
oldest surviving examples of pottery in the world. Around
300 BC, the
Yayoi people began to enter
the Japanese islands, intermingling with the Jōmon. The
Yayoi period, starting
around 500 BC, saw the introduction of practices like wet-rice
farming, a new style of pottery, and
metallurgy, introduced from
China and Korea.Japan
first appears in written history in the Chinese
Book of Han. According
to the
Records of the Three Kingdoms,
the most powerful kingdom on the archipelago during the 3rd
century was called
Yamataikoku. Buddhism was
first introduced to Japan from
Baekje of
Korea, but the subsequent
development of
Japanese Buddhism was
primarily influenced by China. Despite early resistance,
Buddhism was promoted by the ruling class and gained
widespread acceptance beginning in the
Asuka period (592–710).
The
Nara period (710–784) of
the 8th century marked the emergence of a strong Japanese
state, centered on an imperial court in
Heijō-kyō (modern
Nara). The Nara period is
characterized by the appearance of a nascent
literature as well as the
development of Buddhist-inspired art and
architecture. The
smallpox epidemic of
735–737 is believed to have killed as much as one-third of
Japan's population. In 784,
Emperor Kammu moved the
capital from Nara to
Nagaoka-kyō before
relocating it to
Heian-kyō (modern
Kyoto) in 794.
This marked the beginning of
the
Heian period (794–1185),
during which a distinctly indigenous Japanese culture
emerged, noted for its
art,
poetry and prose.
Lady Murasaki's
The Tale of Genji and
the lyrics of Japan's national anthem
Kimigayo were written
during this time.
Buddhism began to spread
during the Heian era chiefly through two major sects,
Tendai by
Saichō, and
Shingon by
Kūkai.
Pure Land Buddhism (Jōdo-shū,
Jōdo Shinshū) greatly
becomes popular in the latter half of the 11th century
Feudal era
Japan's feudal era was
characterized by the emergence and dominance of a ruling
class of warriors, the
samurai. In 1185, following
the defeat of the
Taira clan, sung in the
epic
Tale of Heike, samurai
Minamoto no Yoritomo was
appointed
shogun and established a
base of power in
Kamakura. After his death,
the
Hōjō clan came to power as
regents for the shoguns. The
Zen school of Buddhism was
introduced from China in the
Kamakura period (1185–1333)
and became popular among the samurai class. The
Kamakura shogunate repelled
Mongol invasions in 1274
and 1281, but was eventually
overthrown by Emperor Go-Daigo.
Go-Daigo was himself defeated by
Ashikaga Takauji in 1336.
Ashikaga Takauji establishes
the shogunate in Muromachi,
Kyoto. It is a start of
Muromachi Period
(1336–1573). The
Ashikaga shogunate receives
glory in the age of
Ashikaga Yoshimitsu, and
the culture based on Zen Buddhism (art of
Miyabi) has prospered.
It evolves to
Higashiyama Culture, and
has prospered until the 16th century. On the other hand, the
succeeding Ashikaga shogunate failed to control the feudal
warlords (daimyo),
and a civil war (the
Ōnin War) began in 1467,
opening the century-long
Sengoku period ("Warring
States").
During the 16th century,
traders and
Jesuit
missionaries from Portugal
reached Japan for the first time, initiating direct
commercial and
cultural exchange between
Japan and the West.
Oda Nobunaga conquered many
other daimyo using European technology and firearms; after
he was assassinated in 1582, his successor
Toyotomi Hideyoshi unified
the nation in 1590. Hideyoshi
invaded Korea twice, but
following defeats by Korean and
Ming Chinese forces and
Hideyoshi's death, Japanese troops were withdrawn in 1598.
This age is called
Azuchi-Momoyama Period
(1573–1603).
Tokugawa Ieyasu
served as regent for Hideyoshi's
son and used his position
to gain political and military support. When open war broke
out, he defeated rival clans in the
Battle of Sekigahara in
1600. Ieyasu was appointed shogun in 1603 and established
the
Tokugawa shogunate at
Edo (modern Tokyo). The
Tokugawa shogunate enacted measures including
buke shohatto, as a
code of conduct to control the autonomous daimyo; and in
1639, the isolationist
sakoku ("closed
country") policy that spanned the two and a half centuries
of tenuous political unity known as the
Edo period (1603–1868).The
study of Western sciences, known as
rangaku, continued
through contact with the Dutch enclave at
Dejima in
Nagasaki. The Edo period
also gave rise to
kokugaku ("national
studies"), the study of Japan by the Japanese.
Modern era
On 31 March 1854,
Commodore Matthew Perry and
the "Black
Ships" of the
United States Navy forced
the opening of Japan to the outside world with the
Convention of Kanagawa.
Subsequent similar treaties with Western countries in the
Bakumatsu period brought
economic and political crises. The resignation of the shogun
led to the
Boshin War and the
establishment of a
centralized state nominally
unified under the Emperor (the
Meiji Restoration).
Adopting Western political,
judicial and military institutions, the
Cabinet organized the
Privy Council, introduced
the
Meiji Constitution, and
assembled the
Imperial Diet. The Meiji
Restoration transformed the
Empire of Japan into an
industrialized world power that pursued military conflict to
expand its sphere of influence. After victories in the
First Sino-Japanese War
(1894–1895) and the
Russo-Japanese War
(1904–1905), Japan gained control of Taiwan, Korea, and the
southern half of
Sakhalin.
Japan's population grew from 35
million in 1873 to 70 million in 1935.
The early 20th century saw a
brief period of "Taishō
democracy" overshadowed by increasing
expansionism and
militarization.
World War I enabled Japan,
on the side of the victorious
Allies, to
widen its influence and territorial
holdings. It continued its expansionist policy by
occupying
Manchuria in 1931; as a
result of
international condemnation of this
occupation, Japan resigned from the
League of Nations two years
later. In 1936, Japan signed the
Anti-Comintern Pact with
Nazi Germany, and the 1940
Tripartite Pact made it one
of the Axis Powers. In 1941, Japan negotiated the
Soviet–Japanese Neutrality Pact.
The Empire of Japan
invaded other parts of China in 1937, precipitating the
Second Sino-Japanese War
(1937–1945). In 1940, the Empire then
invaded French Indochina,
after which the United States placed an oil embargo on
Japan.
On 7 December 1941, Japan
attacked the US naval base
at
Pearl Harbor and declared
war, bringing the US into World War II. After the
Soviet invasion of Manchuria
and the
atomic bombings of Hiroshima and
Nagasaki in 1945, Japan agreed to an
unconditional surrender on
15 August. The war cost Japan and the rest of the
Greater East Asia Co-Prosperity Sphere
millions of lives and left much of the nation's industry and
infrastructure destroyed. The
Allies (led by the US)
repatriated millions of
ethnic Japanese from
colonies and military camps throughout Asia, largely
eliminating the Japanese empire and restoring the
independence of its conquered territories.
The Allies also convened the
International Military Tribunal for
the Far East on 3 May 1946 to prosecute some
Japanese leaders for
war crimes. However, the
bacteriological research units
and members of the imperial family involved in the war were
exonerated from criminal prosecutions by the
Supreme Allied Commander
despite calls for trials for both groups.
In 1947, Japan adopted
a new
constitution emphasizing
liberal democratic practices. The
Allied occupation ended
with the
Treaty of San Francisco in
1952
and Japan was granted membership in
the United Nations in 1956. Japan later achieved
rapid growth to become the
second-largest economy in the world, until surpassed by
China in 2010. This ended in the mid-1990s when Japan
suffered a
major recession. In the
beginning of the 21st century, positive growth has signaled
a gradual economic recovery.
On 11 March 2011, Japan suffered the
strongest earthquake in its recorded
history; this triggered the
Fukushima Daiichi nuclear disaster,
one of the worst disasters in the history of
nuclear power.
Government and politics
Japan is a
constitutional monarchy
where the power of the
Emperor is very limited. As
a ceremonial figurehead, he is defined by the
constitution as "the symbol
of the state and of the unity of the people". Power is held
chiefly by the
Prime Minister of Japan and
other elected members of the Diet, while sovereignty is
vested in the Japanese people.
Akihito is the current
Emperor of Japan;
Naruhito, Crown Prince of Japan,
stands as next in line to the throne.
Japan's legislative organ is
the
National Diet, a bicameral
parliament. The Diet consists of a
House of Representatives
with 480 seats, elected by popular vote every four years or
when dissolved, and a
House of Councillors of 242
seats, whose popularly elected members serve six-year terms.
There is
universal suffrage for
adults over 20 years of age, with a
secret ballot for all
elected offices. In 2009, the social liberal
Democratic Party of Japan
took power after 54 years of the liberal conservative
Liberal Democratic Party's
rule.
The Prime Minister of Japan
is the head of government and is appointed by the Emperor
after being designated by the Diet from among its members.
The Prime Minister is the head of the Cabinet and appoints
and dismisses the
Ministers of State.
Naoto Kan was designated by
the Diet to replace
Yukio Hatoyama as the Prime
Minister of Japan on 2 June 2010. Although the Prime
Minister is formally appointed by the Emperor, the
Constitution of Japan explicitly requires the Emperor to
appoint whoever is designated by the Diet. Emperor Akihito
formally appointed Kan as the country's 94th Prime Minister
on 8 June.
Historically influenced by
Chinese law, the
Japanese legal system
developed independently during the Edo period through texts
such as
Kujikata Osadamegaki.
However, since the late 19th century
the
judicial system has been
largely based on the
civil law of Europe,
notably Germany. For example, in 1896, the Japanese
government established a civil code based on a draft of the
German
Bürgerliches Gesetzbuch;
with post–World War II modifications, the code remains in
effect.
Statutory law originates in Japan's
legislature and has the
rubber stamp of the
Emperor. The Constitution requires that the Emperor
promulgate legislation passed by the Diet, without
specifically giving him the power to oppose legislation.
Japan's court system is divided into
four basic tiers: the
Supreme Court and three
levels of lower courts. The main body of Japanese statutory
law is called the
Six Codes.
Foreign relations and military
Japan is a member of
the
G8,
APEC, and "ASEAN
Plus Three", and is a participant in the
East Asia Summit. Japan
signed a security pact with Australia in March 2007 and with
India in October 2008.
It is the world's third largest donor
of
official development assistance
after the United States and France, donating US$9.48 billion
in 2009.
Japan has close
economic and military relations with the United States; the
US-Japan security alliance
acts as the cornerstone of the nation's foreign policy. A
member state of the United Nations since 1956, Japan has
served as a non-permanent
Security Council member for
a
total of 19 years, most
recently for 2009 and 2010. It is one of the
G4 nations seeking
permanent membership in the Security Council.
Japan is engaged in several
territorial disputes with its neighbors: with Russia over
the
South Kuril Islands, with
South Korea over the
Liancourt Rocks, with China
and Taiwan over the
Senkaku Islands, and with
China over the
EEZ around
Okinotorishima.
Japan also faces an ongoing dispute
with
North Korea over the
latter's
abduction of Japanese citizens
and its
nuclear weapons and missile program
(see also
Six-party talks).
Japan maintains one of the
largest military budgets of any country in the world. Japan
contributed non-combatant troops to the
Iraq War but subsequently
withdrew its forces. The
Japan Maritime Self-Defense Force
is a regular participant in
RIMPAC maritime exercises.
Japan's military is
restricted by Article 9 of the Japanese Constitution, which
renounces Japan's right to declare war or use military force
in international disputes. Japan's military is governed by
the Ministry of Defense, and primarily consists of the
Japan Ground Self-Defense Force
(JGSDF), the Japan Maritime Self-Defense Force (JMSDF) and
the
Japan Air Self-Defense Force
(JASDF). The forces have been recently used in peacekeeping
operations; the
deployment of troops to Iraq
marked the first overseas use of Japan's military since
World War II.
Nippon
Keidanren has called on the government to lift
the ban on arms exports so that Japan can join multinational
projects such as the
Joint Strike Fighter.
Administrative divisions
Japan consists of forty-seven
prefectures, each overseen by an elected governor,
legislature and administrative bureaucracy. Each prefecture
is further divided into cities, towns and villages.
The nation is currently undergoing
administrative
reorganization by merging
many of the cities, towns and villages with each other. This
process will reduce the number of sub-prefecture
administrative regions and is expected to cut administrative
costs.

Map of the regions and prefectures of
Japan with Titles. July 3, 2011. Author:
Tokyoship
Geography
Japan has a total of 6,852
islands extending along the
Pacific coast of East Asia.
The country, including all of the islands it controls, lies
between latitudes 24° and 46°N, and longitudes 122° and
146°E. The main islands, from north to south, are
Hokkaidō,
Honshū,
Shikoku and
Kyūshū. The
Ryūkyū Islands, including
Okinawa, are a chain to the
south of Kyūshū. Together they are often known as the
Japanese Archipelago.
About 73 percent of Japan is
forested, mountainous, and unsuitable for
agricultural,
industrial, or
residential use. As a
result, the habitable zones, mainly located in coastal
areas, have extremely high population densities. Japan is
one of the
most densely populated countries
in the world.
The islands of Japan are
located in a
volcanic zone on the
Pacific Ring of Fire. They
are primarily the result of large oceanic movements
occurring over hundreds of millions of years from the
mid-Silurian to the Pleistocene as a result of the
subduction of the
Philippine Sea Plate
beneath the continental
Amurian Plate and
Okinawa Plate to the south,
and subduction of the
Pacific Plate under the
Okhotsk Plate to the north.
Japan was originally attached to the eastern coast of the
Eurasian continent. The subducting plates pulled Japan
eastward, opening the
Sea of Japan around 15
million years ago.
Japan has 108 active
volcanoes. Destructive earthquakes, often resulting in
tsunami, occur several
times each century. The
1923 Tokyo earthquake
killed over 140,000 people.
More recent major quakes are the
1995 Great Hanshin earthquake
and the
2011 Tōhoku earthquake, a
9.0-magnitude quake which hit Japan on 11 March 2011, and
triggered a large tsunami. On 24 May 2012, 6.1 magnitude
earthquake struck off the coast of northeastern Japan.
However, no tsunami was generated.
Climate
The climate of Japan is
predominantly
temperate, but varies
greatly from north to south. Japan's geographical features
divide it into six principal climatic zones: Hokkaidō, Sea
of Japan,
Central Highland,
Seto Inland Sea, Pacific
Ocean, and Ryūkyū Islands. The northernmost zone, Hokkaido,
has a
humid continental climate
with long, cold winters and very warm to cool summers.
Precipitation is not heavy,
but the islands usually develop deep snowbanks in the
winter.
In the Sea of Japan
zone on Honshū's west coast, northwest winter winds bring
heavy snowfall. In the summer, the region is cooler than the
Pacific area, though it sometimes experiences extremely hot
temperatures because of the
foehn wind. The Central
Highland has a typical inland humid continental climate,
with large temperature differences between summer and
winter, and between day and night; precipitation is light,
though winters are usually snowy. The mountains of the
Chūgoku and Shikoku regions
shelter the Seto Inland Sea from seasonal winds, bringing
mild weather year-round.
The Pacific coast
features a
humid subtropical climate
that experiences milder winters with occasional snowfall and
hot, humid summers because of the southeast seasonal wind.
The Ryukyu Islands have a
subtropical climate, with
warm winters and hot summers. Precipitation is very heavy,
especially during the rainy season. The generally humid,
temperate climate exhibits marked seasonal variation such as
the blooming of the spring cherry blossoms, the calls of the
summer cicada and fall foliage colors that are celebrated in
art and
literature.
The average winter
temperature in Japan is
5.1 °C (41.2 °F)
and the average summer temperature is
25.2 °C
(77.4 °F).
The highest temperature ever measured
in Japan—40.9 °C
(105.6 °F)—was
recorded on 16 August 2007. The main
rainy season begins in
early May in Okinawa, and the rain front gradually moves
north until reaching Hokkaidō in late July. In most of
Honshū, the rainy season begins before the middle of June
and lasts about six weeks. In late summer and early autumn,
typhoons often bring heavy
rain.
Biodiversity
Japan has nine forest
ecoregions which reflect
the climate and geography of the islands. They range from
subtropical moist broadleaf forests
in the Ryūkyū and
Bonin Islands, to
temperate broadleaf and mixed forests
in the mild climate regions of the main islands, to
temperate coniferous forests
in the cold, winter portions of the northern islands.[88]
Japan has over 90,000 species of
wildlife, including the
brown bear, the
Japanese macaque, the
Japanese raccoon dog, and
the
Japanese giant salamander.
A large network of
national parks has been
established to protect important areas of flora and fauna as
well as thirty-seven
Ramsar wetland sites.
Four
sites have been inscribed on the UNESCO World
Heritage List for their outstanding natural value.
Environment
In the period of rapid
economic growth after World War II, environmental policies
were downplayed by the government and industrial
corporations; as a result,
environmental pollution was
widespread in the 1950s and 1960s. Responding to rising
concern about the problem, the government introduced several
environmental protection laws in 1970.
The
oil crisis in 1973 also
encouraged the efficient use of energy due to Japan's lack
of natural resources. Current environmental issues include
urban air pollution (NOx,
suspended particulate matter, and toxics),
waste management, water
eutrophication,
nature conservation,
climate change, chemical management and international
co-operation for conservation.
Japan is one of the world's
leaders in the development of new environment-friendly
technologies, and is ranked 20th best in the world in the
2010
Environmental Performance Index.
As a signatory of the
Kyoto Protocol, and host of
the 1997 conference which created it, Japan is under treaty
obligation to reduce its carbon dioxide emissions and to
take other steps to curb climate change.
Economy
Some of the structural
features for Japan's economic growth developed in the Edo
period, such as the network of transport routes, by
road and water, and the
futures contracts, banking
and insurance of the
Osaka rice brokers. During
the Meiji period from 1868, Japan expanded economically with
the embrace of the
market economy. Many of
today's enterprises were founded at the time, and Japan
emerged as the most developed nation in Asia. The period of
overall real economic growth from the 1960s to the 1980s has
been called the
Japanese post-war economic miracle:
it averaged 7.5 percent in the 1960s and 1970s, and 3.2
percent in the 1980s and early 1990s.
Growth slowed markedly in the
1990s during what the Japanese call
the Lost Decade, largely
because of the after-effects of the
Japanese asset price bubble
and domestic policies intended to wring speculative excesses
from the stock and real estate markets. Government efforts
to revive economic growth met with little success and were
further hampered by the
global slowdown in 2000.
The economy showed strong signs of recovery after 2005; GDP
growth for that year was 2.8 percent, surpassing the growth
rates of the US and
European Union during the
same period.
As of 2011, Japan is the
third largest national economy in the world, after the
United States and China, in terms of
nominal GDP, and the fourth
largest national economy in the world, after the United
States, China and India in terms of
purchasing power parity. As
of January 2011, Japan's
public debt was more than
200 percent of its annual gross domestic product, the
largest of any nation in the world. In August 2011,
Moody's rating has cut
Japan's long-term sovereign debt rating one notch from Aa3
to Aa2 inline with the size of the country's deficit and
borrowing level. The large budget deficits and government
debt since the 2009 global recession and followed by
earthquake and tsunami in March 2011 made the rating
downgrade. The
service sector accounts for
three quarters of the gross domestic product.
Japan has a large
industrial capacity, and is home to some of the largest and
most technologically advanced producers of motor vehicles,
electronics,
machine tools, steel and
nonferrous metals, ships,
chemical substances,
textiles, and
processed foods.
Agricultural businesses in Japan
cultivate 13 percent of Japan's land, and Japan accounts for
nearly 15 percent of the global fish catch, second only to
China.
As of 2010, Japan's labor force
consisted of some 65.9 million workers.
Japan has a
low unemployment rate of
around four percent. Almost one in six Japanese, or 20
million people, lived in poverty in 2007.
Housing in Japan is characterized by limited land
supply in urban areas.
Japan's exports
amounted to US$4,210 per capita in 2005. Japan's main export
markets are China (18.88 percent), the United States (16.42
percent), South Korea (8.13 percent), Taiwan (6.27 percent)
and Hong Kong (5.49 percent) as of 2009. Its main exports
are transportation equipment, motor vehicles, electronics,
electrical machinery and chemicals.
Japan's main import markets as of
2009 are China (22.2 percent), the US (10.96 percent),
Australia (6.29 percent),
Saudi Arabia (5.29
percent),
United Arab Emirates (4.12
percent), South Korea (3.98 percent) and
Indonesia (3.95 percent).
Japan's main imports
are machinery and equipment,
fossil fuels, foodstuffs
(in particular beef), chemicals, textiles and raw materials
for its industries. By market share measures, domestic
markets are the least open of any
OECD country.
Junichiro Koizumi's
administration began some pro-competition reforms, and
foreign investment in Japan has soared.
Japan ranks 12th of 178
countries in the 2008
Ease of Doing Business Index
and has
one of the smallest tax revenues
of the developed world. The Japanese variant of capitalism
has many distinct features:
keiretsu enterprises are
influential, and
lifetime employment and
seniority-based career advancement are relatively common in
the
Japanese work environment.
Japanese companies are known for management
methods like "The
Toyota Way", and
shareholder activism is
rare.
Some of the largest
enterprises in Japan include
Toyota,
Nintendo,
NTT DoCoMo,
Canon,
Honda,
Takeda Pharmaceutical,
Sony,
Panasonic,
Toshiba,
Sharp,
Nippon Steel,
Nippon Oil, and
Seven & I Holdings Co.
It has some of the world's largest
banks, and the
Tokyo Stock Exchange (known
for its
Nikkei 225 and
Topix indices) stands as
the second largest in the world by
market capitalization.
Japan is home to 326 companies from
the
Forbes Global 2000 or 16.3
percent (as of 2006).
Science and technology
Japan is a leading
nation in scientific research, particularly technology,
machinery and
biomedical research. Nearly
700,000 researchers share a US$130 billion
research and development
budget, the third largest in the world.
Japan is a world leader in
fundamental scientific research,
having produced fifteen
Nobel laureates in either
physics, chemistry or medicine, three
Fields medalists,
and one
Gauss Prize laureate.
Some of Japan's more prominent
technological contributions are in the fields of
electronics, automobiles, machinery,
earthquake engineering,
industrial robotics,
optics, chemicals,
semiconductors and metals.
Japan leads the world in
robotics production and
use, possessing more than half (402,200 of 742,500) of the
world's industrial robots.
The
Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency
(JAXA) is Japan's
space agency; it conducts
space, planetary, and aviation research, and leads
development of rockets and satellites. It is a participant
in the
International Space Station:
the
Japanese Experiment Module
(Kibo) was added to the station during
Space Shuttle assembly
flights in 2008.
Japan's plans in
space exploration include:
launching a
space probe to
Venus,
Akatsuki; developing
the
Mercury Magnetospheric Orbiter
to be launched in 2013; and building a
moon base by 2030.
On 14 September 2007,
it launched lunar explorer "SELENE"
(Selenological and Engineering Explorer)
on an
H-IIA (Model H2A2022)
carrier rocket from
Tanegashima Space Center.
SELENE is also known as Kaguya, after the
lunar princess of
The Tale of the Bamboo Cutter.
Kaguya is the largest lunar
mission since the
Apollo program. Its purpose
is to gather data on the
moon's origin and evolution.
It entered a lunar orbit on 4 October, flying at an altitude
of about 100 km (62 mi).
The probe's mission was ended when it
was deliberately crashed by JAXA into the Moon on 11 June
2009.
Infrastructure
As of 2008, 46.4 percent of
energy in Japan is produced from petroleum, 21.4 percent
from coal, 16.7 percent from natural gas, 9.7 percent from
nuclear power, and 2.9
percent from
hydro power. Nuclear power
produced 25.1 percent of Japan's electricity, as of 2009.
However, as of 5 May 2012, all of the
country's nuclear power plants had been taken offline due to
ongoing public opposition following the
Fukushima Daiichi nuclear disaster,
though government officials have been continuing to try to
sway public opinion in favor of returning at least some of
Japan's 50 nuclear reactors to service. Given its heavy
dependence on
imported energy,
Japan has aimed to diversify its
sources and maintain high levels of energy efficiency.
Japan's road spending has
been extensive. Its 1.2 million kilometers of paved road are
the main means of transportation. A single network of
high-speed, divided, limited-access
toll roads connects major
cities and is operated by toll-collecting enterprises. New
and used cars are inexpensive; car ownership fees and fuel
levies are used to promote energy efficiency. However, at
just 50 percent of all distance traveled, car usage is the
lowest of all G8 countries.
Dozens of Japanese railway
companies compete in regional and
local passenger transportation markets; major companies
include seven
JR enterprises,
Kintetsu Corporation,
Seibu Railway and
Keio Corporation. Some 250
high-speed
Shinkansen trains connect
major cities and Japanese trains are known for their safety
and punctuality. Proposals for a new
Maglev route between Tokyo
and Osaka are at an advanced stage. There are 173 airports
in Japan; the largest domestic airport,
Haneda Airport, is
Asia's second-busiest airport.
The largest international gateways are
Narita International Airport,
Kansai International Airport
and
Chūbu Centrair International Airport.
Nagoya
Port is the country's largest and busiest port,
accounting for 10 percent of Japan's trade value.
Demographics
Japan's population is
estimated at around 127.3 million,
with 80% of the population living on
Honshū. Japanese society is
linguistically and
culturally homogeneous,
composed of 98.5% ethnic Japanese,
with small populations of foreign workers.
Zainichi
Koreans,
Zainichi
Chinese,
Filipinos,
Brazilians mostly
of Japanese descent,
and
Peruvians mostly
of Japanese descent are
among the small minority groups in Japan. In 2003, there
were about 134,700 non-Latin American Western and 345,500
Latin American expatriates,
274,700 of whom were
Brazilians (said to be
primarily Japanese descendants, or
nikkeijin, along with
their spouses),
the largest community of Westerners.
The most dominant native
ethnic group is the
Yamato people; primary
minority groups include the indigenous
Ainuand
Ryukyuan peoples, as well
as social minority groups like the
burakumin. There are
persons of mixed ancestry incorporated among the 'ethnic
Japanese' or Yamato, such as those from
Ogasawara Archipelago where
roughly one-tenth of the Japanese population can have
European, American, Micronesian and/or Polynesian
backgrounds, with some families going back up to seven
generations. In spite of the widespread belief that Japan is
ethnically homogeneous (in 2009, foreign-born
non-naturalized workers made up only 1.7% of the total
population), also due to the absence of ethnicity and/or
race statistics for Japanese nationals, at least one
analysis describes Japan as a
multiethnic society, for
example,
John Lie. However, this
statement is refused by many sectors of Japanese society,
who still tend to preserve the idea of Japan being a
monocultural society and
with this ideology of homogeneity, has traditionally
rejected any need to recognize ethnic differences in Japan,
even as such claims have been rejected by such ethnic
minorities as the
Ainu and
Ryukyuan people. Former
Japanese Prime Minister
Taro Aso has once described
Japan as being a nation of “one race, one civilization, one
language and one culture”.
Japan has the longest overall
life expectancy at birth of
any country in the world: 83.5 years for persons born in the
period 2010–2015. The
Japanese population is rapidly aging
as a result of a
post–World War II baby boom
followed by a decrease in birth rates. In 2009, about 22.7
percent of the population was over 65, by 2050 almost 40
percent of the population will be aged 65 and over, as
projected in December 2006.
The changes in
demographic structure have created a number of social
issues, particularly a potential decline in workforce
population and increase in the cost of social security
benefits like the public pension plan. A growing number of
younger Japanese are preferring not to marry or have
families. In 2011, Japan's population dropped for a fifth
year, falling by 204,000 people to 126.24 million people.
This is the greatest decline since at least 1947, the first
year for which government data are available. The 204,000
deaths included 15,844 people killed and 3,451 left missing
by the tsunami.
Japan's population is
expected to drop to 95 million by 2050, demographers and
government planners are currently in a heated debate over
how to cope with this problem.Immigration and birth
incentives are sometimes suggested as a solution to provide
younger workers to support the nation's aging population.
Japan accepts a steady flow of 15,000 new Japanese
citizens by naturalization (帰化) per year.
According to the
UNHCR, in 2007 Japan
accepted just 41 refugees for resettlement, while the US
took in 50,000.
Japan
suffers from a high suicide rate.
In 2009, the number of suicides exceeded 30,000 for the
twelfth straight year. Suicide is the leading cause of death
for people under 30.
Largest cities or towns
of Japan
2010 Census |
| |
Rank |
City
name |
Prefecture |
Pop. |
Rank |
City
name |
Prefecture |
Pop. |
|
| |
1 |
Tokyo |
Tokyo |
8,949,447 |
11 |
Hiroshima |
Hiroshima |
1,174,209 |
|
|
2 |
Yokohama |
Kanagawa |
3,689,603 |
12 |
Sendai |
Miyagi |
1,045,903 |
|
3 |
Osaka |
Osaka |
2,666,371 |
13 |
Kitakyūshū |
Fukuoka |
977,288 |
|
4 |
Nagoya |
Aichi |
2,263,907 |
14 |
Chiba |
Chiba |
962,130 |
|
5 |
Sapporo |
Hokkaidō |
1,914,434 |
15 |
Sakai |
Osaka |
842,134 |
|
6 |
Kōbe |
Hyōgo |
1,544,873 |
16 |
Niigata |
Niigata |
812,192 |
|
7 |
Kyōto |
Kyōto |
1,474,473 |
17 |
Hamamatsu |
Shizuoka |
800,912 |
|
8 |
Fukuoka |
Fukuoka |
1,463,826 |
18 |
Kumamoto |
Kumamoto |
734,294 |
|
9 |
Kawasaki |
Kanagawa |
1,425,678 |
19 |
Sagamihara |
Kanagawa |
717,561 |
|
10 |
Saitama |
Saitama |
1,222,910 |
20 |
Shizuoka |
Shizuoka |
716,328 |
Religion
Japan enjoys full religious
freedom based on Article 20 of
its Constitution. Upper
estimates suggest that 84–96 percent of the Japanese
population subscribe to
Buddhism or
Shinto, including a large
number of followers of a
syncretism of
both religions. However,
these estimates are based on people
affiliated with a temple,
rather than the number of true believers. Other studies have
suggested that only 30 percent of the population identify
themselves as belonging to a religion.
According to
Edwin Reischauer and
Marius Jansen, some 70–80%
of the Japanese regularly tell pollsters they do not
consider themselves believers in any religion.
Nevertheless, the level of
participation remains high, especially during
festivals and occasions
such as the
first shrine visit of the
New Year.
Taoism and
Confucianism from China
have also influenced Japanese beliefs and customs. Japanese
streets are decorated on
Tanabata,
Obon and
Christmas. Fewer than one
percent of Japanese are
Christian. Other minority
religions include
Islam,
Hinduism,
Sikhism, and
Judaism, and since the
mid-19th century numerous
new religious movements
have emerged in Japan.
Languages
More than 99 percent of the
population speaks Japanese as their first language. Japanese
is an
agglutinative language
distinguished by a system of
honorifics reflecting the
hierarchical nature of Japanese society, with verb forms and
particular vocabulary indicating the relative status of
speaker and listener.
Japanese writing uses
kanji (Chinese
characters) and two sets of
kana (syllabaries
based on
simplified Chinese characters),
as well as the
Latin alphabet and
Arabic numerals.
Besides Japanese, the
Ryukyuan languages, also
part of the
Japonic language family,
are spoken in Okinawa; however, few children learn these
languages. The
Ainu language, which has no
proven relationship to Japanese or any other language, is
moribund, with only a few
elderly native speakers remaining in Hokkaido. Most public
and private schools require students to take courses in both
Japanese and
English.
Education
Primary schools, secondary
schools and universities were
introduced in 1872 as a
result of the Meiji Restoration. Since 1947, compulsory
education in Japan comprises
elementary and
middle school, which
together last for nine years (from age 6 to age 15). Almost
all children continue their education at a three-year senior
high school, and, according
to the
MEXT, as of 2005 about 75.9
percent of high school graduates attend a university, junior
college, trade school, or other
higher education
institution.
The two top-ranking
universities in Japan are the
University of Tokyo and
Kyoto University. The
Programme for International Student
Assessment coordinated by the OECD currently
ranks the overall knowledge and skills of Japanese
15-year-olds as sixth best in the world.
Health
In Japan, health care is
provided by national and local governments. Payment for
personal medical services is offered through a universal
health insurance system that provides relative equality of
access, with fees set by a government committee. People
without insurance through employers can participate in a
national health insurance program administered by local
governments. Since 1973, all elderly persons have been
covered by government-sponsored insurance. Patients are free
to select the physicians or facilities of their choice.
Culture
Japanese culture has evolved
greatly from its origins. Contemporary culture combines
influences from Asia, Europe and North America. Traditional
Japanese arts include
crafts such as
ceramics,
textiles,
lacquerware,
swords and
dolls; performances of
bunraku,
kabuki,
noh,
dance, and
rakugo; and other
practices, the
tea ceremony,
ikebana,
martial arts,
calligraphy,
origami,
onsen,
Geisha and
games. Japan has a
developed system for the protection and promotion of both
tangible and intangible
Cultural Properties and
National Treasures.
Sixteen sites have been
inscribed on the UNESCO World Heritage List, twelve of which
are of cultural significance.
Art
The
Shrines of Ise have been
celebrated as the prototype of Japanese architecture.
Largely of wood,
traditional housing and
many
temple buildings see the
use of
tatami mats and
sliding doors that break
down the distinction between rooms and indoor and outdoor
space.
Japanese
sculpture, largely of wood, and
Japanese painting are among
the oldest of the Japanese arts, with early figurative
paintings dating back to at least 300 BC. The history of
Japanese painting exhibits synthesis and competition between
native
Japanese aesthetics and
adaptation of imported ideas.
The interaction between
Japanese and European art has been significant: for example
ukiyo-e prints, which began
to be exported in the 19th century in the movement known as
Japonism, had a significant
influence on the development of modern art in the West, most
notably on
post-Impressionism.Famous
ukiyo-e artists include
Hokusai and
Hiroshige. The fusion of
traditional
woodblock printing and
Western art led to the creation of
manga, a comic book format
that is now popular within and outside Japan.
Manga-influenced animation for
television and
film is called
anime. Japanese-made
video game consoles have
been popular since the 1980s.
Music
Main article:
Music of Japan
Japanese music is eclectic
and diverse. Many
instruments, such as the
koto, were introduced in
the 9th and 10th centuries. The accompanied
recitative of the
Noh drama dates from the
14th century and the popular
folk music, with the
guitar-like
shamisen, from the
sixteenth. Western classical music, introduced in the late
19th century, now forms an integral part of Japanese
culture. The imperial court ensemble
Gagaku has influenced the
work of some
modern Western composers.
Notable classical composers
from Japan include
Toru Takemitsu and
Rentarō Taki. Popular music
in post-war Japan has been heavily influenced by American
and European trends, which has led to the evolution of
J-pop, or Japanese popular
music.
Karaoke is the most widely
practiced cultural activity in Japan. A 1993 survey by the
Cultural Affairs Agency
found that more Japanese had sung karaoke that year than had
participated in traditional pursuits such as flower
arranging (ikebana) or tea ceremonies.
Literature
The earliest works of
Japanese literature include the
Kojiki and
Nihon Shoki chronicles
and the
Man'yōshū
poetry anthology, all from
the 8th century and written in Chinese characters. In the
early Heian period, the system of
phonograms known as kana
(Hiragana
and
Katakana) was developed.
The Tale of the Bamboo Cutter
is considered the oldest Japanese narrative.
An account of Heian court life is
given in
The Pillow Book by
Sei Shōnagon, while
The Tale of Genji by
Murasaki Shikibu is often
described as the world's first novel.
During the Edo period, the
chōnin ("townspeople")
overtook the samurai aristocracy as producers and consumers
of literature. The popularity of the works of
Saikaku, for example,
reveals this change in readership and authorship, while
Bashō revivified the poetic
tradition of the
Kokinshū with his
haikai (haiku)
and wrote the poetic travelogue
Oku no Hosomichi. The
Meiji era saw the decline of traditional literary forms as
Japanese literature integrated Western influences.
Natsume Sōseki and
Mori Ōgai were the first
"modern" novelists of Japan, followed by
Ryūnosuke Akutagawa,
Jun'ichirō Tanizaki,
Yukio Mishima and, more
recently,
Haruki Murakami. Japan has
two
Nobel Prize-winning
authors—Yasunari
Kawabata (1968) and
Kenzaburō Ōe (1994).
Cuisine
Japanese cuisine is based on
combining
staple foods, typically
Japanese rice or
noodles, with a soup and
okazu — dishes made
from
fish, vegetable,
tofu and the like – to add
flavor to the staple food. In the early modern era
ingredients such as red meats that had previously not been
widely used in Japan were introduced. Japanese cuisine is
known for its emphasis on
seasonality of food,
quality of ingredients and presentation. Japanese cuisine
offers a vast array of
regional specialties that
use traditional recipes and local ingredients. The
Michelin Guide has awarded
Japanese cities more Michelin stars than the rest of the
world combined.
Sports
Traditionally,
sumo is considered Japan's
national sport.
Japanese martial arts such
as
judo,
karate and
kendo are also widely
practiced and enjoyed by spectators in the country. After
the Meiji Restoration, many Western sports were introduced
in Japan and began to spread through the education system.
Japan hosted the Summer Olympics in
Tokyo in 1964. Japan has
hosted the Winter Olympics twice:
Sapporo in 1972 and
Nagano in 1998.
Baseball
is currently the most popular spectator sport in the
country. Japan's top professional league,
Nippon Professional Baseball,
was established in 1936.
Since the establishment of
the
Japan Professional Football League
in 1992, association football has also gained a wide
following. Japan was a venue of the
Intercontinental Cup from
1981 to 2004 and co-hosted the
2002 FIFA World Cup with
South Korea. Japan has one of the most successful football
teams in Asia, winning the
Asian Cup four times. Also,
Japan recently won the
FIFA Women's World Cup in
2011.
Golf is also popular in
Japan, as are forms of auto racing like the
Super GT series and
Formula Nippon. The country
has produced one
NBA player,
Yuta Tabus
JEWISH AND KOSHER JAPAN:
- CHABAD
CENTERS
- JEWISH
ORGANIZATIONS
- KOSHER
ESTABLISHMENTS
- KASHRUT
AUTHORITIES
- MIKVAOT
Also see:
-
CHIUNE SUGIHARA
the Japanese Oscar Schindler
-
DR. ABRAHAM KAUFMAN
-
HISTORY OF JEWS IN JAPAN
-
HISTORY OF THE JEWS IN KOBE
-
JEWISH SETTLEMENT IN THE JAPANESE EMPIRE
-
SHANGHAI GHETTO
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KOSHER DELIGHT MAGAZINE
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