What's it like being Japanese-Brazilian in Japan? 【Part2】🇯🇵🇧🇷
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- Опубликовано: 12 сен 2024
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Os brasileiros são os únicos que fazem perguntas pra ele também! Como se fosse uma conversa,não entrevista! Amei.
A personalidade do brasileiro é bem especial.
Acho , ÓTIMO , que faça e catuque , sacuda , sem mi mi.
Incrível , para quem estudou só um pouco e por acaso , leu em algum momento que existiu um ser humano observador , curioso , pensador , que se permitiu expandir seu raciocínio e não aprender de forma passiva , ou seja , marcou a história , sacudiu e revolcunou a humanidade para sempre , com uma simples afirmação : " Penso logo existo "
No caso desse canal , um abraço abraço ao RUclipsr Japonês .
E sinto muito ler certos comentários de total ignorância e intolerância , porém graças à Deus que a maioria, pensam , querem expandir seu raciocínio e seu ❤️ .
Alguns comentários , não tem haver com a nacionalidade , não, tem haver com espíritos que optam por sua latência , ignorância e cegueira , ou seja ferramentas que nada colaboram para a evolução da humanidade .
Porém , ao contrário , feliz as pessoas que se permitem voar como águias livres e independentes., se enriquecem , somam e constroem um Mundo 🌎 melhor com mais empatia e amor fraternal no coração .
✨️🙏🏻 Gratidão ✨️
Brasil e Japão tem lindos laços .
Vou enaltecer o que deu certo nessa interação .
Uma abençoada semana ✨️🙌🏻🕊✨️
sempre falo Brasileiro é o povo mais fofoqueiro. A gente pergunta logo
@@ananina9554 A gente tem um jeito meio doido e peculiar, tem um lado bom e outro ruim ne, mas o labo bom é maior (eu acredito kkkk).
I found your channel very interesting, Takashii! But do you know what is happening in your own country? Brazil is under a Nazi-fascist government! Millions are experiencing great hardship! What about yours? ruclips.net/video/-AD9CX9qsXA/видео.html
But: ruclips.net/video/1A0gkrybpE0/видео.html
ok mas eu ri muito quando o segundo brasileiro começou a falar em português e começou com um “salve rapaziada” kkkkskkkkkkkkkk adoro
O cara é BR through and through
kkkkkkk siim
Eu amei também kkkkk
To aprendo português mas não entendo isso. O que significa "salve rapaziada"? 😅
@@tielessin é uma saudação informal. Rapaziada = grupo de rapazes (homens jovens), e Salve = saudação. É como se fosse "what's up guys!", "Hello there guys". Geralmente homens falam mais isso do que mulheres.
Ana Paula has been living in Japan since she was 2. Nevertheless, it is incredible how natural and perfect she sounds speaking Portuguese.
Ela é BR mano, os poderes e habilidades verde e amarelo já são desbloqueadas nela..... Sem contar que exitem muitos BR lá, quem sabe ela tem amigos que falam nossa língua.
@@tributarioalunos182 kkkkkk os poderes
Ela nunca pisou aqui mas fala nativo, impressionante
Yes, she has a perfect accent.
A MÃE OU PAI DEVE SER BRASILEIROS..AHH LOGICO Q DENTRO DE CASA FALAM O PORTUGUÊS .DAI COMO NAO SABER? DIFÍCIL E NAO TER COMO PRATICAR A LINGUÁ..DEPOIS DE VARIOS ANOS...ISTO SIM QUE E MAIS DIFÍCIL QUE TER UMA PESSOA QUE FALA A LINGUÁ PARA NOS PRATICAR
TAKASHI, MUITO OBRIGADO! 🇯🇵🇧🇷
Veio que massa te ver aqui! Já sou seu inscrito faz tempo.
Thanks man!
@@LucasdeFarias valeu irmão! Você não esperava por essa participação né? 😂
👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻
oia o nicolinoooo
My economics teacher in college taught me that the largest group of Japanese people outside of Japan are in Brazil. He says that when family from each country meet for the first time it is usually a bit strange since the Brazil culture and attitude is fairly laid back - where as the Japan culture is very rigid and strict in nature. He said it lead to many humorous interactions. Cheers.
It must be really fun indeed
Indeed. Brazilian culture and Japanese culture are like opposites lol
@@deekay13
Kinda, we think we both should learn something from each other.
Japanese brazilian here. Your teacher is 100% right.
That happens everywhere when your ancestors are immigrants.
Weird interactions are definitely the most interesting part.
My family is brazilian with portuguese origins and when my grandma found some family members in Portugal they thought she wanted money.
Am i the only one that thinks the Brazilian Portuguese sounds fantastic?
yes, and you must be brazilian yourself to think that probably
@@xXxBladeStormxXx No I'm Italian 🇮🇹
@@knownnuisance7512 Italian actually sounds nice.
As a Brazilian, it sounds... normal to me lol
I have met people from all over the world, and yes, they do compliment my accent. They say it sounds like Italian. (Biggest italian community outside Italy is in Brazil, São Paulo, my hometown). 🙂
It is interesting to notice that Nicolas, when he was speaking in Portuguese, just laughed normally, like a Brazilian typically laughs; but when he laughed while speaking in Japanese at the very end of the interview, he covered his mouth with his hand, in the Japanese manner.
Just a note: when I mentioned that he laughed "like a Brazilian typically laughs", I meant how a Western person laughs. Laughing without covering one's mouth is not unique to Brazilians.
I noticed that too haha
I believe there was a study somewhere about how bilingual/multilingual people often switch cultural behaviors and sometimes even "personalities" depending on what language they're speaking
@@hihi615 Even without a study, I totally believe that. Even I myself feel a bit different (psychologically, so to speak) when I speak English.
Pô esse sou eu a vida toda no Kaikan (clube da comunida japonesa no Brasil) do portão pra dentro a mão na boca e na calçada todo espalhafatoso. Amo demais kkkk
I love how they seem to become a little more extroverted when speaking Portuguese
In Brazil, even an introvert might be considered an extrovert in Japan lol
@@GKPB they say a Brazilian 5 is a Japanese 10
And she's right...You absolutely change personality when you switch between language. I realized it myself after sometime while speaking 3 languages.
I’m a second generation Japanese Canadian (my parents are from Japan) and I am extroverted even for Canadian standards but even I find myself being a bit more tame when I speak Japanese (not always though ;).
@@gabrielemariotti5780
I sound like a nerd when speaking Portuguese and like a lout when speaking in English. It's really funny.
"Salve rapaziada" is soooooo brazilian 🤣😍
Another great video Takashii!
Funny note: this is the second time that the sound of a bird echoes when you're doing the intro of the video and I couldn't contain myself and had to laugh XD
The last Brazilian girl made Takashi's heart miss some beats! 😆 I love watching your content! Cheers from Brazil.
AsSalam Alaikum, peace and blessings of God be upon you and all our brothers and sisters, children of our father Adam (as) and our mother Eve (as).
Satan sees God with one eye and man cannot see God at all. But we can see God with our Heart by seeing His signs.
So don't fall into materialism and deny existence of God and deny that you are just body and don't have soul.
Since, Satan is blind of one eye and so it says to man be ungrateful to God and deny His existence so that man become totally blind and Satan could rule over man.
Andhoon mein kaanaa Raja.
In the land of the blind, the one-eyed man is king." This phrase means that among people with significant disadvantages or deficiencies, someone with even a slight advantage is considered superior.
This is why God says, believe in Unseen.
These are Unseen creatures of God.
Angels
Devils (including Satan)
Paradise
Hell
We will never be able to Angels and Devils with our eyes or devices, but they exist because God says, they exist and most of devils (not all of them) are ungrateful and rebellious to God and don't like mankind and rule over them by making them totally blind of God and making them rebellious to God.
This is why God says in Quran
Will you make Satan and his children your friends instead of Me? What an evil choice of yours.
Dear brothers and sisters, don't fall trap to Satan and fall in Hell because Hell is a very bad place. Fight with your inner selves and believe in God and Unseen and enter in Paradise by seeking God's pleasure. Ameen.
Dear God, whatever good we got, it is from You and whatever evil we got, it is from our own negligence, ignorance and disobedience of You. We seek Your pardon. Ameen.
I’m a mixed race person (Polynesian/European) born in New Zealand, went to a very multicultural school, and then moved to Australia when I was 12. I have felt like an alien at times and struggled with identity. It’s so nice to hear stories like these! Many seem much more extreme than mine. I find the interplay of cultures so fascinating and beautiful. It helps me see the beauty of my own experience too. I’m reminded of how I have been able to experience the richness of multiple cultures at developmentally significant times in a way many others haven’t. I think it can really enrich and broaden our perspectives on the world and ourselves.
Então, qual é a língua que tu falas?
@@maryocecilyo3372 English lol, living in Australia and NZ, and my parents only speaking English. Not as extreme as the people in this video. Multiple languages definitely adds another layer. I was taught Maori, Japanese and Italian in school though, and have been continuing to learn these as an adult along with Portuguese, Hawaiian and French.
@@evedotcom eu acho que é muito importante se tu falas Maori e Inglês, seria uma pessoa bilíngue.
That's a beautiful mixed
I absolutely love this mans content. From South Africa and have always wanted to go to Japan, and his videos just keep bringing that love for Japan back. Keep it up👌
Ayyy a fellow South African. We love to see it
@@Wonder7771 ayyy
Awe guys
I know im 8 months late, but im from Japan i think the south african culture is amazing
As a Brazilian that wants to visit Japan, i really liked those videos about japanese-brazilian. Thanks Takashi! I'm learning a lot about the japanese culture
I liked this one. As a Brazilian that has lived in the US for over twenty years I can understand that feeling of living between two cultures. I have to say it’s interesting that I know a few Brazilians (myself included) that are studying Japanese. The relationship between our two countries is an interesting one.
Thanks for the great content as always. It’s always a pleasure to see.
As a japanese-brazilian, I'm glad in see this video!
Jetstream sam
@@lenboi7402 ellemao
Eu tbm
Hi, Takashi-san! There's a "brazilian town" in Gunma Prefecture, you should go there. It's really interesting.
Thank you so much for watching!One of the interview in this video was filmed in Kyoto!
I just talked to her on the street and she was kind so we did an interview!
Interesting interview, keep it up👍👍👍
Hey Takashi-san, when you interview mixed-race people, would you please ask them if they have any unique behaviors or practice traditions related to their mixed race/cultural background?
(悪い翻訳:ハーフの人とインタビューを行うときは、その人に「ハーフとして、両国からの文化背景だから活動や習慣はありますか?」と聞いていてもらえませんか?下手な日本語がすみませんです!)
try swiss japanese if yo u can find any brav
I have an Idea for you to interview: LGBT people in Japan and LGBT foreigners in Japan. I am a LGBT and being living in Japan since 2020 and trust me, there are lots os differences between being a foreingner and being a LGBT foreingner in Japan. :)
You talk to many people in all these videos, which I find very interesting, do you keep some of them in touch?
Por a Ana Paula ter ido para o Japão aos 2 anos de idade e nunca ter vivido no Brasil eu jurava que ela teria um sotaque muito forte falando português kkkkkkkkkkkkkk
Sim, também fiquei impressionado com a falta de sotaque, acho que essa é a mágica de se aprender um idioma quando se é criança.
Ainda bem que a mãe a ensinou. Mas ela de brasileira só tem o local d nascimento e aparência. É 99% japonesa.
E o japonês dela é perfeito, é meio estranho ver um rosto ocidental falar igual a minha mãe que é nativa rs
@@sadaofutakijaponês deve ter sido a primeira língua dela, é como se fosse nativa mesmo
We have the biggest Japanese community outside Japan.
Obviously, as the time goes, the miscigenation will keep hapenning and new different people with japanese blood will be borning.
I am a Gossei, my great great grandfather came around 1910 looking for a better opportunity and he married a brazilian white girl and they had a daughter, my great grandmother. She married a Portuguese guy, then the miscigenation continued. We preserved the slightelly slanted eyes and the body structure through the generations of mixigenation.
The Japanese immigrants contributed a LOT for our country till today, specially in São Paulo. All brazillians are proud of having such different population, mixed w Japaneses, Europeans, Indigenous and Africans. It not only made us a different people, but our culture that became diverse and rich.
Gossei é a quarta geração?
@@tributarioalunos182 quinta geração
Philippines has a larger Japanese Diaspora than Brazil.
@@wilkesmcdermid7906
No, Brazil in concrete numbers, is the country who has more japaneses outside of Japan
@@wilkesmcdermid7906 no
Brasil is the second country with the largest japenese population, just behind Japan. We like to know a lot about there, so im loving this videos
Iane gata passa o insta. Qkowkwoskod
There also some other connections
1) Gaijin, feature film of Japanese
immigration.to
2) Lisa Ono, bossa, nova,.etc. singer, from Brazil.
3) Japanese and Brazilian, + many
others, went, to Spanish Civil War,
to.help Spanish. Republic.
@@felipedasilva9172 simpa não
@@tymanung768 Sem falar que os Portugueses foram os primeiros a traduzir o japonês. E muitas palavras do português, foram abraçadas pelos Japoneses
Ana Carolina So you mean the second largest overseas Japanese population outside Asia when it is behind USA, since the largest first Japanese overseas is in the USA after outside Japan?
The fact the Japanese came to USA before brazil, it made USA the first largest Japanese overseas Japanese overseas in the world outside Japan, eh?
These videos never fail to be so cool. Simple, but they connect with people of such differing backgrounds and opinions in such a simplified format. Some of these people in all your video's are so interesting you could talk for a whole half hour it seems.
These videos are very interesting, and it's good to see how Brazilians seem more relaxed when they speak their language ☺️
Something kinda funny that I noticed that whenever they said “São Paulo” in the subtitles Sam Pablo appeared lol
Mais conhecido como Sao Paolo
I went on a date with a Japanese/Brazilian woman years ago. She was visiting Canada from Brazil. Most beautiful woman I've ever seen
I agree with the last lady alot, English feels very normal to me but i'm also from portugal, portuguese from portugal is a bit more formal than portuguese brazillian, in brazil they have an accent which is a more enthusiastic and happier sounding accent, where here we're more formal but also we get confused alot as "slavic spanish" ( that's how outsiders sometimes view portuguese as)
Japanese to me always felt extremely formal and strict, i find the language fascinating but i do not know anything about it lol
Contrasts of cultures and languages is soo interesting specially in Japan since Japan for soo many years was closed off and then reopened, I feel as though it's a unique experience to both live and visit there as opposed to another place much more culturally diversed such as usa.
It is so nice to know a perspective of someone from Portugal about our portuguese here in Brazil, I was always curious about what they think of it, I wanna go someday to Portugal and see the culture as well, thats one of the foundations of our own culture here... sometimes the accent is so diferent between both portugueses it is hard to understand, but then again with time our ears get used to it, also a fan of japanese culture here
@@andersonnotthespidersilva8263 Yea that's how we view it xD i am also aware of the jokes both portuguese and brasillians make about eachothers but it's all in good faith :)
@@emperorpaws8447 Eu sou cómo vocês, só que é com a língua portuguesa, a sua cultura e Portugal/Brasil. É realmente interessante para mim. Sinto-me cómo um dos únicos estrangeiros a estudar PT-PT. Mas a estudar PT-PT é tipo estudar dois língua à mesma vez por conta de precisar saber PT-BR porque é o mais falado português, portanto a tornar o processo de aprendizagem do português de Portugal um pouco mais fácil (pelo menos na minha opinião).
(Perdoem-me pelos erros, eu ainda estudo português) 🇺🇲🤝🇵🇹🇧🇷
@@um05 Fico muito feliz de saber que tem quem goste da nossa língua
Continue assim, amigo. Você está indo muito bem!
“Slavic Spanish” makes sense because the Portuguese language has less vowel sounds like an slavic language. At least in Portugal. Not in Brazil, though
Once in Brazil I went to buy a phone in Sao Paulo, so people pointed me a mall near paulista av. Wow I bought a cheap smartphone to this japanese Brazilian girl and without question one of the most beautiful girl I've ever seen in my life. Really interesting people and one of the most contradictory mixed races that I met before
Yes Brazilians are beautiful
I love this channel, very educational. You will learn that most Latin-American cultures are very charismatic and fluent at making human interactions (conversations) into a fun and smiling experience, which is something very refreshing for the human spirit. We carry our emotions outwardly, while Japanese protect theirs inwardly. There is SO much we could learn from each other.
This was a fun video to watch. I have also noticed that my Japanese friend's personalities change when they switch between speaking English and Japanese. Keep up the great content Takashii. Much love from California.
"Salve rapaziada" hahahahah he is totally brazilian
Very good video, Takashii-san! But please write "São Paulo" or even "Sao Paulo" and not "San Pablo", that's Spanish. Anyway, thanks for the video.
being japanese brazilian is such a flex man...two great countries with extremely attractive features. that first girl was soooo beautiful omg it boggles she has faced descrimination.
You basically automatically win the Gene lottery then
@@Truck-kun_01 nah , brazillian its a nationality not a race , and brazil is famous for plastic surgeries
wtf?
Asian countries are famous for plastic surgeries, not Brazil.
Just rich people get to do some kind of plastic surgery
@@KilluaPvP01k Plastic surgeries is popular way more in america continent than asia but people dont talk bc its a taboo.
Have a news talking about this but get less views but talking about in SK get alot of views.
@@KilluaPvP01k Dont compare plastic brazil with japan.
And u know this is the truth , "just rich people can do" , u think its just brazil that have poor people. 🤣
Asia is a continent not a country, korea its a country so stop saying asia as korea , its annoying.
TAKASHI você é genial 👍,ganhou mais um inscrito.
That was very interesting! I live here in São Paulo - Brazil and I grew up in the middle of the japanese town and the culture, worked in a Japanese Cultural Center and I study the culture including the language, all this not being a Nikkei haha. So I love to watch this content! It'd be very interesting to watch you interviewing foreigners ( not Nikkei) living in Japan for a while, to ask their motivations, the language and culture skills. Here in Brazil many Kenjinkai were not closed because not Nikkei started helping, many people of new generations of Nikkei here are losing interest in the community (and that's sad). We try to preserve and spread the japanese culture to keep it alive here. Well it's a good topic maybe hehe. Thanks for this work. :)
3:05 - Ana Paula, você sempre será bem recebida no Brasil porque é a tua pátria. Um forte abraço!
Ser brasileiro não é sobre nacionalidade e sim sobre estilo de vida. Ela tem isso no sangue :)
I've found your channel with the first brazilian Japanese interview video and since then I have subscribed and I'm learning a lot about Japan, thank you very much for your content, it's really interesting and helpful since I'm not able to visit your country.
@ 9:47, that is so significant what you said. I realized this very early in my childhood, certain languages just changes peoples behavior and attitudes, it's a fact.
I don't think it's just a Japanese problem that it's hard to get a job because you're a foreigner. A friend of mine studied in the US for 7 years and got a master's degree from an Ivy League school, but he couldn't get a job anywhere and went back to his home country. For example, if there were a foreigner and a Japanese with the same abilities, most companies would give priority to hiring the Japanese. Well, it's not so much about discrimination as it is about the company's own benefit.
Yes, I met a english teacher from Canada, she's married to a brazilian and he has a degree from freaking Oxford, they moved to australia and even having a degree from a big university he couldn't find any jobs there.
crazy, where was he from?
That's because most companies don't even know how to deal with employing foreigners, legally speaking. It's so time demanding that it's way easier to not employ a foreigner. Usually, when the government realizes an internal problem and employing foreigners is a good option, that's when opportunies come.
That's true, but it's more a visa system problem than companies. If a company chooses you, it has to motivate why they chose you instead of a local (lot of paperwork) to make you get a working visa. Unfortunately the visa system is still too strict 😕
Ok, but let's be honest: Japanese are quite intolerant towards foreigners and have many prejudice....sometimes rightfully so because based on stupid tourists but in general are (sadly) not very open minded socially which eventually it creates distance and discrimination.
Já ouvi dizer que, se você é brasileiro, no exterior dá pra reconhecer brasileiro pela cara, e vendo todas suas entrevistas, realmente kkk brasileiro tem a "cara diferente" kkk
Grande vídeo, o interessante é que conheci seu canal hoje, e coincidentemente saiu vídeo sobre Brasil.
//
I've heard that, if you're a Brazilian, you can recognize others Brazilians by their face, and seeing yours interviews, really, Brazilians have a "different face" 😂
Great video, the interesting thing is that I met your channel today and by coincidence this video about Brazilians came out today!
Bc brazillian is not a race, its nationality
@@Ok-oo2kh I think what he said is that you can recognize a pattern for facial gesture with Brazilians? not the physicality, but more of the facial expressions. I know I can distinguish some regions (not japanese per se) with their laugh so it could be possible if you're familiar with the pattern
Da nada!! eu moro no Reino Unido tenho super cara de Brasileira,e varias vezes ja peguei Brasileiro falando mal de mim ou de quem tava do meu lado em portugues sem saber que eu era Brasileir, o bom e voce fazer eles passarem vergonha quando revela que e Brasileira.
@@harishamdani8361 it's real impossible to recognize 100% of all Brazilians by the face, but, the majority, even though I don't know in advance that's a brazilian, I can recognize even on video (even that girl that is genetically full japanese, not much but already applys too).
I don't know what happens, the aspect of the skin is different, independent of the color. This also applies to the way the person looks, smiles, as you've said. But, the aspect of the skin... 😂 It's the central point that makes me recognize. And I just don't know why.
From the title I already knew they were Brazilians, but the aspect of the skin... the way of be... They look different, even to others sul-americans.
Then I remembered that saying, and wanted to comment that really seems true.
Of course I know that's Brazilian is not a race 😂 (if we ignore the philosofical and scientific discussion about this question, as there's no races but ethnicitys 👍), here we got since portugueses to serbians, the people here is very mixed.
These days I was thinking and it is very difficult to find a Brazilian cultural identity (some say the main feature is this diversity). The country is big, each region has its main culture and different form of brazilian portuguese.
I'm brazilian, but culturally, I'm not.
For example, the people here tend to see them self as Germans, Italians, japaneses... Even if they're the second or third mixed generation. But when they are in other countries, they see as brazilians.
Of course, anything that involves people is 100% like that, but the majority that I've seen, they tend to do this, one time or another.
My point was just to comment that for me, and people that I know, find easy to recognize the majority of the Brazilians abroad.
@@Kiki123-k5r kkkk gente, você acaba tendo vantagens até né
Sinceramente nunca fui pra fora, mas pelo menos em vídeo, só de ver, a maioria, eu costumo reconhecer, mesmo que eu não saiba que é.
Sei que não é todo mundo que tem essa facilidade, mas quis comentar com um conhecido que mora fora e ele disse que também consegue (a maioria das vezes)
Não todos, mas pelo menos a maioria de quando é, consigo. O jeito da pele, não sei, é diferente kkk tipo independente da cor
Não estou tentando defender uma teoria ou coisa do tipo, só quis comentar algo que costumo conseguir fazer e já vi conhecidos tbm conseguindo ter facilidade de reconhecer, porque é muito interessante a diferença
Esse vídeo com esses brasileiros me fez até sentir que não era o Japão, mas sim o Brasil
Simplesmente incrível esse tipo de entrevista. Muito legal como os descendentes de japoneses se integraram aqui a ponto de sentirem-se mais brasileiros. Brasil pode ter muitos problemas, mas não integrar os imigrantes (principalmente de segunda geração) não costuma ser um deles.
Nosso país é um liquidificador de etnias. Eu sempre amei esse ângulo cultural nosso de absorver coisas dos outros e botar na nossa sopa sem exatamente se apropriar delas como os americanos por exemplo fazem.
Japoneses simplesmente vieram fugidos das guerras do Japão e do preconceito q tinham em outros países. No brasil se tornaram agricultores, empresários, os filhos estudaram e tem carreiras. Eles só tem a agradecer nosso país pelo acolhimento. Maioria dos japoneses q conheço não desejam retornar. (Não vivemos em favelas e sob o comando de crime organizado ñ, tem muita região segura, organizada, educada... e eles sabem disso mto bem)
Interview video idea:
Please ask Japanese (社会人) questions on these lines -
* How many hours do you work per day?
* Is there overtime work? How often?
* Do they pay overtime allowance for the same?
* Have you tried to refuse working overtime due to personal plans?
* What do you think would happen if someone refuses to work overtime? Will he/she get fired?
* Recently the Japanese government recommended to have a 4-day work week. Do you think the private Japanese businesses will accept this formula?
よろしくお願いします🙏
For people working in IT, Consulting, Finance, Law, Medicine, or Architecture...I doubt there is such a concept as overtime. Working over 100 hours per week is not that uncommon among young professionals whether in NY, London, Singapore, or Tokyo. It's a competitive world, you do everything you can to survive. It's either UP or OUT.
Pindamonhangaba quebrando fronteiras, parabéns Nicolas! No Japão seu apelido é Braza
Braza, mano essa foi de fuder a ventoinha, manda mais!
My dad is also nikkei,,, Japanese-Brazilian. He was born and raised in Brazil but fully Japanese by blood. I think my grandma is also nikkei. Dad decided to move in Japan since 30+ years old, and until now he's in Japan like 20+ years. He's fluent in Portuguese and understand Spanish, he also can speak Japanese since he was in Brazil because my grandma was a teacher before, she's both fluent in Portuguese and Japanese so maybe she taught him. Before, I'm very confused with my father's identity, also myself🥲 (my mom is Filipina, so I'm half Filipina but in my dad's side, I didn't understand about his identity. Like is he half Japanese half Brazilian? Or Brazilian quarter?? lol). Growing up I thought I have a Brazilian blood😭 (I was born in Japan, and I moved to the Philippines with my mom since I was 8 years old). And in 2020, I asked grandma on video call if she's half Brazilian, but her answer was no😭 Like they're fully Japanese by blood but she and dad was born and raised in Brazil. So I was so shocked that time lmao😭😭😭. This year, I talked about nikkei to dad and I find it interesting especially like these videos hehe. じゃ、やっぱり私はフィリピンと日本のハーフか🥲 コメントが長くてごめんなさいw
wow you have an unique background, really interesting.
Your dad lived the first 30 years of his life in Brazil, so he is brazilian.
And, as we always says here, "the son of a fish, is a fish too", so, if you wanna consider yourself brazilian, imo you are :)
Brazilian is not a race, it's a nationality. There is no "brazilian blood". All Brazilians have mixed blood. Only a very tiny percentage of the population are exception, native indigenous people. Your dad was born and raised in Brazil so he is Brazilian. You can say you are a little bit Brazilian too if you want. 😊
wow that was a rollercoaster
@Zima Rina She can be Brazilian if she wants. All she needs to do is to go to a Brazilian embassy or consulate and require her Brazilian citizenship through her father.
Hey, Takashii, Ana Paula's Brazilian Portuguese is PERFECT. Since her Japanese seems to be perfect too, I thought she wouldn't speak Portuguese this well, but it's like she never left Brazil. Amazing! Simply put, she speaks like a native Brazilian.
I really appreciate your videos. It's very nice to get a native Japanese perspective AND to have it delivered in English!! (You're English is wonderful, by the way).
takashi i’m so happy to see your channel growing. you work very hard. thank you so much and keep going 😄
Ótimo video! Um dia ainda vou aprender japonês, porque é um idioma maravilhoso e eu adoro o desafio. A cultura japonesa é sensacional.
Great video! One day I will learn Japanese, because it is a wonderful language and I love the challenge. Japanese culture is amazing.
Ohhhh a second part! I'm so happy, you're amazing
O português da Ana Paula é ótimo, especialmente considerando que não viveu no Brasil. É uma pena saber sobre o preconceito, deve ser realmente uma sociedade muito fechada.
Brasileiro sofre preconceito em todo lugar do mundo, não só no Japão e a culpa É TODINHA DO BRASILEIRO.
*THE BLACK IN JAPAN EXPERIENCE? HOW TO WORK AND START A BUSINESS IN JAPAN*
Canal: Sundai Love
Ela é afro-americana morando no Japão e nesse vídeo acima, ela entrevistas outros afro descendentes morando no Japão e olha o que eles dizem.
@@DMarinari a mulher nunca nem viveu no Brasil, mas a culpa é dela sim.
@@-johnny340 ... e nem precisa morar no Brasil, está no DNA social dela - japoneses são robóticos, frios, racistas e brasileiros são o povo mais bonito do mundo, o mais criativo, o mais legal, o mais amoroso, o mais solidário, o mais etc...EMBORA PESQUISAS NACIONAIS, INTERNACIONAIS E A PRÓPRIA HISTÓRIA DO BRASIL JOGAM CONTRA O QUE O BRASILEIRO ACHA DE SI... o brasileiro aparece em SEGUNDO LUGAR em pesquisa internacional que mede ignorância e isso explica tudo.
Se ela mora há tanto tempo no Japão, já deveria saber que o Japão não é esse país racista/preconceituoso que ela está falando - por isso mesmo que mandei um vídeo de afrodescendentes pois sabemos que pretos são os que sofrem mais preconceitos/racismo no mundo e eles, praticamente, só falaram coisas boas do Japão.... se quiser eu mando vídeos de outros canais, inclusive de brasileiros - tem um que é ótimo, a brasileira reclamando do sistema de saúde do Japão - SÓ ELOGIOS DE OUTROS ESTRANGEIROS, mas a brasileira analfabeta reclamando até do intérprete. INTÉRPRETE? Como assim? Você está no pais dos outros e você está reclamando do intérprete? (VOCÊ ESTÁ RECLAMANDO DE UM MIMO QUE FIZERAM PARA VOCÊ?). Ela quis comparar o SUS com o sistema de saúde do Japão, que está sempre entre os melhores do mundo... ela quis falar (MAL) de ter filho no Japão, piorou, porque nesse quesito, o Japão é referência mundial da UNICEF.
Rapaz, você sabia que o governo japonês dá licença paternidade remunerada de um ano, até para quem não é japonês ... e num outro canal de uma brasileira, também reclamona, além da licença maternidade/paternidade remunerada, ainda ganharam 20 mil reais para cuidados com o bebê? De quanto tempo é a licença paternidade para BRASILEIROS no Brasil, mesmo?
Sempre admirei a cultura japonesa e acompanho estrangeiros de tudo quanto é lugar, que moram no Japão... e costuma dar problema só com um povo - aquele que acha que é a bala que matou o Kennedy... aquele que acha que lei não é feita para seguir, e sim para burlar... afinal de contas, eu sou eu, então como pode ter uma lei que quer frear o eu que eu tenho dentro de mim. QUE POVO É ESSE?
É um povo que está sempre nas manchetes internacionais, fazendo caca - Alô Daniel Alves, como é que está a cadeia?
... alguém sabe se o George Santos renunciou? Tudo bem, dizem que ele não é brasileiro, mas a gente jura que já viu esse tipo de comportamento dele, no Brasil, AOS MONTES. Ah! Já vimos.
Eu também já fui um passador de pano, de falar que é perseguição, de chamar os outros de vira-lata, mas com a internet/youtube... não dá para negar a realidade dos fatos.
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O interessante é que os japoneses são bem mais abertos a nós do que outros estrangeiros, relativamente falando.
@@-johnny340 A midia Brasileira passa isso para mundo... Agradeça a Globo.
Great as always! Obrigada, Takashii-san 🤗🌸💕
Takashii’s vids feel like you’re just chillin, hanging out with people while having coffee
This is great! Thanks for sharing how small and amazing the world is with different people of different walks of life breaking down social barriers. We ARE 1!!!!
Sempre tem um brasileiro em qualquer canal no RUclips, e muito engraçado, viva ao Brasil 🇧🇷 hahahaha, aliás, thank you, amazing vídeo 🤩
Keep up the great and interesting videos, Takashi!
As a Brazilian i love this video, i'm a entusiastic from the japanese culture and love to see a compatriot in your channel. Just correcting a litle mistake in translation of the city from the second Guy, he used to live in São Paulo, not São Pablo.
"Salve Rapaziada" Nicolas my bro, 100% Brazilian indeed 😂😂😂 hope he's doing fine 😌
Takashi come to Brazil already. Great ways to make content.
great channel! i really enjoyed hearing about the idea of personality changing with language.
Yaayy, finally a interview with Nicolas Hideo 🇧🇷🇯🇵👏
Its amazing to see people speak multiple languages. Your video really captures that people are people, and we can all connect one way or another!
Love Nicolas energy!
Thank you for interview Brazilians-Japanese again 💙
Your channel is becoming my favorite on youtube, keep it up!! I really want to learn Japanese now
this is an amazing video! Being a brazillian with part of my family in japan, i wanted to see how it was there and finding this video really really helped! good job!
and, the city is called São PAULO not São Pablo. Just noting that
Watching this channel is always rewarding and touching. Thanks for producing such a good content.
7:24 it's São Paulo, not San pablo 😉
私も日本に住んでいるブラジル人です。このビデオを見て、とても嬉しくなりました。ありがとうございます。
As a child living in a small town in the state of São Paulo (Brazil), I've never given a second thought about the people around me that looked different of myself (my family has all kind of skin tone, for exemple). It was normal.
As I was getting older, I started to pay more attention to my surroundings and learn about different countries. That it was when I realized that the people around me with Japanese ancestry (my doctor, teachers, schoolmates - and as an adult, coworkers) looked a little bit different physically than some of my pals with Portuguese/Italian/Native/African roots (like myself)..
It is so normal to see Japanese looking people here on the streets or to see the Japanese flag in companies along side the Brazilian one (there are a lot of companies in my city and in the cities nearby that are Japanese - like Toyota - or were founded here by people with Japanese roots). We even have a Japanese festival every year in my city organized by the Japanese cultural center.
For me parts of the cultures are so blended that I find it normal.. and look that my city has a small Japanese group (the city that my father was born, for exemple, was almost half Japanese - first and second generation - when he was a kid).
Thank you for this, very natural and good, God bless both Brazil and Japan, happiness and strength for the love between the two nations amen.
Cool video. It’s nice hearing people’s experiences.
Really good video bro! Perfect questions about personality and behavior, new subscriber!
Brazil and Japan have a strong friendship 🇧🇷🇯🇵
This is an excellent Video!!! Thank you for posting!!!
BTW, my mother tongue is Brazilian Portuguese, but I speak other 2 languages, English and Chinese, I noticed that switching from Portuguese to English or vice versa I don't notice much of a change in my personality, but when I switch to Chinese my personality changes completely, I can act like Chinese person, perhaps that's because I'm living in China for quite some time. Thanks for your great job with those interviews. ❤
Ana Paula is amazing....she looks and smiles like Brazilian and then she speaks japanese absolutely perfect (for me at least).
The japa is just Brazilian....easy going.
First lady went to Japan when she was just 2 years old. She might have been born in Brazil, but she is absolutely japanese now. She'll find hard to adapt to brazilian culture (1:06).
Hey there Takashi! I'm here again, I love your videos with Brazilian people. I'm telling you this because I'm Brazilian too thank again amazing video.
How in the hell does that girls lives in Japan since 2 years old, studied her whole life in japan speaks what my layman's ass could only classify as a perfect Japanese, and STILL speak Portuguese with no accent or what so ever? like a whole life living in japan, speaking, listening, writing and reading Japanese most of the time for all of her life, and still being able to speak perfect Portuguese with a distinct Brazilian accent.
Brazil is the one of the largest immigrant population in Japan, some cities in Japan have their populations mostlh of Brazilians, with signs in Portuguese, there are Brazilian schools, and both cultures mixes a lot (example: Brazilian Jiu Jitsu, in Japan there's carnival too) so she probably grew up around other Brazilians
Most likely because both parents spoke Portuguese at home. Usually, if BOTH parents are fluent, the kid will become fluent, too, but the key is if it's occurring on both ends. My issue back then in America was that only one parent spoke Japanese early on, so in many ways, only now am I reconnecting with the language.
@@marianaluisa3394 Oizumi-machi in Gunma's a great example of this! Highly recommend a visit if you're in Japan.
@@TheZenomeProject thank you!
Thats the value of a good education. Parents who speak both languages to their kids from a young age can develop good bilingual kids
Very good point as far personality one takes when speaking a certain language. Definitely is true.
I'm dying of laughter with São Paulo being understood as San Pablo lol
Great work, man. Love your videos.
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Sometimes in video you put "Sam Pablo" in subtitles, but they are saying "São Paulo"
Sou apenas mais um brasileiro que sonha em viver no Japão algum dia, e o seu canal me ajuda muito a aprender ainda mais sobre o seu país. Valeu, Takashi! 🙏👏👏👏
Thank you again for another great video. I'm fascinated by Japanese culture, I have been there once(Tokyo, Kyoto and Osaka) for vacation. Would love to go back one day!!. I was born in São Paulo, BR. in the town with the largest Japanese community outside of Japan, called Liberdade. but now I live in USA since I was 16 years old. Have a great day and keep up the great work.
Te amamos Takashi 🫂
deepening the understanding between different cultures, this is so valuable. im glad you've been doing this
I'm Taiwanese Brazilian and have many Japanese Brazilian friends.
Takashii,what are you doing to my sleep man,I’m here can’t stop myself from watching your videos,so addictive 😂❤
I ever can look a diferent between brazilians that lived all your life in Brazil and come to Japan, and brazilian that born in Japan and lived all your life there, they never was go to Brazil so tha cultural shock is like a japanese people for them.
In Brazil if your born in Brazil you are brazilian, doens't matter if your parents are foreigner or not (Obviously, we are the most mixed-race country in the world ) but in the world you "receive" the nationality of parents. But it was like I said, the education of those who have always lived in Japan is different from the Brazilian education, which makes it possible to compare the behavior of each one.
You make videos on very interesting topics! Thumbs up! 👍
Nice! The first girl have a attractive voice tone!
É legal ver que esses brasileiros estão tentando se encaixar na cultura japonesa.Mesmo sendo descendentes de nipônicos,deve ser difícil se acostumar a um cultura tão diferente da nossa.
Incrível onde qualquer lugar que você vai tem um Brasileiro. Pouco a pouco nosso plano de dominação mundial vai se realizar
Cuidado, eles não podem descobrir
Ahhahah
😂😂😂😂😂
I like this video. I'll have to check out your other videos. Nice work.
Takashii, you can drop the "so far" at the end of your videos when you say, "okay, thank you for watching so far." Just say, "okay, thank you for watching".
Nice seeing a content with Nicolashideo
Thank you for this respectful video! As a Brazilian that has lived in Japan and has friends that were born and raised in Japan but are considered Brazilians - it is incredibly difficult to get Japanese citizenship and you can't hold more than 1 citizenship. Even their original Japanese surname is written in katakana (meant for foreign words) instead of the original kanji. So, even symbolic discrimination.
As a moving scholar (anthropologist) who has lived in 9 countries, 5 continents, I have found that countries that only accept "jus sanguinis" (the right of blood) to get citizenship versus accepting also "jus solis" (the right of being born and raised in a country) - usually discriminate foreigners more. It is a very sad social problem to have someone who is born and raised in a country to not being able to hold citizenship of that country - or to have to choose 1 citizenship only when they are multicultural. We have ways to go as a global society - it's not just Japan. In that single instance, at least Brazilian law is more accepting - after all we are a melting pot.
Japan used to allow natural-born dual-citizenship until 1985, as long as the father is a Japanese citizen. So people like President Fujimori was/is legally a natural-born Japanese citizen. Under Jus Sanguinis, he was a Japanese national born outside of Japan.
As the number of international marriages increased, and the number of natural-born dual-citizenship increased, Japanese Citizenship Law was revised in 1984 to ban dual-citizens. The law was also revised so that children of Japanese women who married foreigners were also able to inherit Japanese citizenship. (Many of them were perceived as "War Brides" after WWII, so Japanese society didn't want their children to have Japanese citizenship prior to the change.)
I have no idea whether citizenship rules have anything to do with discrimination. From our perspective, if you desire to be a Japanese citizen, go through the naturalization process and become a Japanese national. We have had naturalized Members of Parliament who were formerly Uzbek, Uyghur, Finn, or Korean. FYI, we have zero desire to make the same mistakes as Europe when it comes to multi-culturalism. But we already have ethnic centers like China-town, Korea-town, or Burmese in Takada-no-baba.
Your channel will be very useful for those who want to come to Japan, and learn Japanese language, however I always watch your channel from Bangladesh♥️♥️♥️
Eu gostaria de morar no Japão também por gostar da cultura, mas para não descendentes é mais difícil.
Foram ótimas entrevistas!
How is it that the people that you interviewed speak English so well. I mean they are really fluent! This video is fascinating and I enjoyed watching it.
É incrível como o brasileiro se adapta bem em qualquer cultura.
another video of excellent quality, as a Brazilian I am again flattered to have another video dedicated to our Brazilian Nikkei culture