Is There Immigration after Death?
Published May 10, 2005
In Japan, it seems, once a foreigner, eternally a foreigner. There are cultural pioneers from abroad who have been permanent residents of Tokyo for well over a hundred years now, but their visas are no good. Many were here soon after Japan peeked out the gates after 300 years of isolation from foreign influence.
The foreigners in question reside in graves in the Gaijin bochi (foreign section) of Aoyama Cemetery (and others) in Tokyo. The Tokyo Metropolitan Government wants them out of there, to make a park amidst the Japanese graves. They say its simply because the foreigners' grave fees haven't been paid, as required by law; after a certain date, control of the plots reverts to the TMG.
But a curious codicil to the law says that only relatives can pay the fees! As long-ago foreign residents, it's unlikely that they'd have living relatives in the vicinity. Very convenient for mass deportation.
My own Permanent Residency was hard enough to get; may not be worth it, in the really long run...
- Is There Immigration after Death?
- Published: May 10, 2005
- Type: Opinion
- Section: Culture
- Writer: Robert Brady
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- Robert Brady's personal site
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Comments
fascinating as always Robert - someday I shall return!
pretty rarefied company Aaman! I will try to avoid the hubris part.








Good to see insights from Japan - your own blog is great, Robert
Japan's exclusionary approach is found in the current national security bill, too, I believe. Apparently, only people of the Japanese race, if there is such an animal can be national security commissioners, would appreciate your thoughts on this and anything else