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Other centers of Japanese population include: Mexico City, while there is no specific area with a Japanese diaspora, there are many Japanese and Japanese descent people that live in the city. The city has schools mainly for Japanese Mexicans with the part-time school Chuo Gakuen, and the adult school Instituto Cultural Mexicano-Japonés.
In the 1940s the CJAM established a school for Japanese children in Mexico City. [36] Prior to the formation of the LMJ there was a preparatory school for Japanese and five schools operated by Mexican Nikkei. As part of the merger, the preparatory school, [35] and three of Mexico City's four part-time Japanese schools were combined. [37]
Japanese tea ceremony in Mexico City. Most Japanese immigrants came from Okinawa, Fukuoka, Hiroshima, Aichi, and Miyagi prefectures. The Liceo Mexicano Japonés in Mexico City was founded, in part, to preserve Japanese culture. There has been a notable influx of young Japanese artists into Mexico since 1978, who have settled mostly in Mexico City.
Mexican people of Asian ... Chinese diaspora in Mexico (4 C, 4 P) J. Japanese diaspora in Mexico (1 C, 9 P) K. Korean diaspora in Mexico (1 C, 9 P) Pages in category ...
Mexican people of Japanese descent (2 C, 38 P) Pages in category "Japanese diaspora in Mexico" ... Japanese community of Mexico City; J. Japanese-style peanuts; L.
Alberto T. Arai- architect, theorist and writer; Eduardo Auyón- artist and cultural promoter; Helen Bickham- artist; Alejandro Honda- painter, puppeteer (); Leonel Maciel- artist; member of the Salón de la Plástica Mexicana
As a result of World War II tensions, Nonaka and other Japanese Mexicans living in northwest Mexico were forced to move to Mexico City on orders from President Lázaro Cárdenas. [1] He was a founding member of the Instituto Nacional de Cardiología. [3] He died in 1977 and is interred in the Panteón Jardín, Mexico City.
Japanese gardens are also found in several cities in Mexico, including the Parque Masayoshi Ohira in Mexico City. There is also a Little Tokyo in Mexico City. [15] [16] The same can be true for Mexican cultural imports in Japan. In Nagoya, there is a Mexico Square within Hisaya Ōdori Park.