Jomul7

trying to learn to say ah to things. trying to learn how to spell my name. For now, I'm just another wordsmith.
None of these images are my own.

Ask and you shall receive
Submit and surrender!

July 1st 2012

Reblogged from b-sama|55 notes

b-sama:

Ten years ago Kimihiro Tsumura, a professor at Hamamatsu Gakuin University, couldn’t help but notice all the young Brazilians in his city and that many weren’t in school. 

Tsumura found that young Brazilians didn’t interact much with Japanese people, though most could speak the language. And while almost all went through the public school system, only 30 percent continued on to high school. In fact, a good portion didn’t even finish junior high school, which means they didn’t fulfill their compulsory education requirement. The fact that so many dropped out indicated to him, as he told Tokyo Shimbun, “that the government didn’t care about them.” He became even more interested and studied their lives. Starting in 2007, filmmaker Mayu Nakamura recorded these interactions. She has edited her footage into a documentary called “Lonesome Swallows,” which was released last month.

that statement of “young brazilians in his city” throws me off because it sounds like that they just appeared out of nowhere and are having a hard time living there in Japan, but I guess I need to watch the movie in order to understand better…

Posted at 6:31pm and tagged with: Japan, Brazil, brazilians, Japanese,.

b-sama:

Ten years ago Kimihiro Tsumura, a professor at Hamamatsu Gakuin University, couldn’t help but notice all the young Brazilians in his city and that many weren’t in school. 
Tsumura found that young Brazilians didn’t interact much with Japanese people, though most could speak the language. And while almost all went through the public school system, only 30 percent continued on to high school. In fact, a good portion didn’t even finish junior high school, which means they didn’t fulfill their compulsory education requirement. The fact that so many dropped out indicated to him, as he told Tokyo Shimbun, “that the government didn’t care about them.” He became even more interested and studied their lives. Starting in 2007, filmmaker Mayu Nakamura recorded these interactions. She has edited her footage into a documentary called “Lonesome Swallows,” which was released last month.

that statement of “young brazilians in his city” throws me off because it sounds like that they just appeared out of nowhere and are having a hard time living there in Japan, but I guess I need to watch the movie in order to understand better…

ssdmmfr:

Artist:

Kyôsuke Chinai

Posted at 10:08pm and tagged with: japanese, art, painting,.

ssdmmfr:

Artist:
Kyôsuke Chinai