Toyo Matsuri 2018 Bairro da Liberdade, São Paulo Brazil 祭り

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  • Опубликовано: 4 окт 2024

Комментарии • 10

  • @Kawayoporu
    @Kawayoporu 5 лет назад

    I wish they live here in my country Canada in Toronto better then sao palo!
    They should leave Liberdajee, cus it is becoming a Chinatown just like New York was once a New Amsterdam and live in the Toronto area so they'll go to have their Japantown community there so they have winters there like how in Japan have winters like Canada and both have their own national maples, agreed?

    • @gustavog.hasegawa5360
      @gustavog.hasegawa5360 3 года назад +2

      Stop saying bullshit, Japanese Nikkeis love São Paulo we constructed our culture here, we won't leave it

    • @Kawayoporu
      @Kawayoporu 3 года назад

      @@gustavog.hasegawa5360 Excuse me, bull what?!
      Hasegawa, is that named after a character Mrs. Hasegawa from Lilo & Stitch?
      Watch the language, say bullshoot is a proper way to say, your wrong, Japanese loves Los Angeles, California, San Francisco, New York rather then sao paulo like mexico city, lima or other spanish speaking cities and there should be many went to Toronto like they did to Vancouver, many Japanese didn't go to brazil like mexico, peru, argentina or cuba, many move to US, hosts the largest Japanese population in the world out of Japan is when they arrived in the 1880s, Canada in 1877, but mexico or peru in 1899 and brazil or argentina in 1908, because they speak English as their second many reasons lots move to Northern America!
      They should never play the Toyo festival in that poortuguese speaking town, either, I read they were supposed to go back to Japan and celebrate Toyo there, but the harsh brazilian authorities didn't let them, they also torture them in WWII!
      I read or heard there are also koreans and chinese in this ex-slave neighborhood called liberdade known as Asiantown or brazilian chinatown, I heard brazilians calls it a chinatown!

    • @gustavog.hasegawa5360
      @gustavog.hasegawa5360 3 года назад +2

      @@Kawayoporu You are pretty wrong my friend, first thing:
      Hasegawa is my surname, I'm 4th Japanese generation, I was born in São Paulo and raised in the Nikkei community.
      Second:
      Not all Japanese likes the north american weather and places, Japanese people are all different, and Brazil has the biggest Japanese community, not just in São Paulo but also in other states.
      Japanese people weren't allowed to speak Japanese during the second world war, that's true, but in U.S.A it was much worst, you are being disrespectful with all Japanese community, things aren't like you want and it's funny that u have never been there and calls it a Chinatown, still pretty Japanese until today

    • @Kawayoporu
      @Kawayoporu 3 года назад

      +@@gustavog.hasegawa5360 Dang, so you didn't take the name after this character disney.fandom.com/wiki/Mrs._Hasagawa so do you know her by any chance?
      There was another named Yuki, I wish she is Lilo's bestfriend like Victoria!
      So your forth generation, did you ever asked your great-grandparents to why did they not move back to Japan or to move to Northern America from Japan instead rather latin america?
      Were you raised only bilingually speaking English and Nihongo like the Japanese in Japan speaks Nihongo their first and English their second too?
      Are you closed, your whole generation still full fledge Japanese Nikkei?
      Other states, you meant about Little Tokyo, Los Angeles, Japantowns or Nihonmachi in San Francisco, San Jose, Seattle all in California or New York in the east?
      What, Japanese do likes snow and North America, because Japan too has snow, my art teacher even told me lots of Japanese want to be born or live in Canada or America, it's not true they do not like snow or that nice white kamakura festival weather they really missed out on!
      There was a Japanese guy who told me he would liked to be born in Canada 3 years ago he once comment me, he was born in cafelandia, but he told me he and his grandma do not liked the US was, because of the bombings, it was a shock and disappointment, because I heard Japanese loves USA, but did not told me nothing if his grandpa, parents or siblings hate or love USA, there was even a video about why Japanese don't hate US for dropping the bomb, oh, he also told me after he likes to be born in Canada instead, he said brazil where he was born is full of corruption and said he was happy to go back to his ancestry Japan, but then I did not have a comment from him, again, he only reply me once, but never the second time, I was really curious, because I waited him to answer something else I asked for years now, I really want to know if he planned to live in Japan for the rest of his life or have planed to move to go live in Canada, not sure.
      During the world war, they also put the Japanese to interment camps in brazil too, corridor of death they did to them much worse too, they shouldn't forbid them to not speak Japanese, they should import them back to Japan like some they did move back I've read instead of torturing them in brazil?
      What are you talking reply about all Japanese community, the Japanese Canadian or Japanese American communities, I am part of the English and Japanese speaking Nikkei community!?
      No, liberdade wasn't a Japanese town built by Japanese, but today it got Chinanized or has Koreans too then the slave or now it's kind of ex-Japanese place, but did you know this "Liberdade was known as Camp day Fork (Field of the Gallows) until the late 19th century, and was an area reserved for the execution of slaves and convicts. Death was considered the only path to liberty (liberdade) for slaves. The condemned were led to the Igreja Nose Senhor dah Bow More (Church of Our Lady of Good Death) to perform a final prayer for a rapid and painless death. The church remains on Rude do Carmen at the corner of Roo Tabatingerah. Slaves and other convicts were executed in the Largo da Forkah (Gallows Square), the public square now known as Praca day Liberty. Cemiterian do Aflits (Cemetery of the Afflicted) was created in 1774 to bury executed slaves, those who had committed suicide, and others who could not be interred elsewhere. The cemetery was replaced by housing development in the 20th century, and the simple Capel do Aflits on Roo do studantes is a remnant of the era. Igreja day Santa Cruise days Alas do Enforkdo (Church of Santa Cruz of the Souls of the Hanged), prominently located to the south of the public square, commemorates the dead of Camp dah Forkah. Executions were carried out in Camp day Fork until 1891, and the square was renamed Liberdayde." know the history of this?
      Little Tokyo or Japantown in USA is better then the dark town past of liberdade!
      Here's info of each country's Japanese populations!
      *Japanese arrived in Hawaii - USA, since 1868 - 1880 to present has over 2 million Japanese today.*
      *Japanese arrived in Canada, since 1877 to present has 121,485, but should of been a million like USA today!*
      *In 1899 until WWII peru has over 103,949 Japanese left today.*
      *In 1900 until failed or in WWII mexico has over 76,000 Japanese left today, it also said this "The official census of 1940s counts only 1,550 Japanese nationals in the country, the overwhelming majority men, although other studies put the number higher, as many as over 6,000. Even with the 6,000 figure, it pales against the number of Japanese in other countries in the Americas at the time such as the United States (285,000), Brazil (205,000), Canada (22,000) and Peru (18,000) ." from wikipedia.*
      *In brazil in 1908 had the Japanese arrived, then stopped for 10 years between 1942 until 1951, cus of the war and then, again in 1973 a Japanese guy has told me who is born in Japan said the Japanese government do not allow them to go to brazil anymore and the total of the Japanese left in brazil today are a total of 242,643 like mexico did!*
      *In argentina they had the Japanese came there the same year as in brazil, but stopped in WWII like mexico or peru and brazil almost until 1973 later, argentina has over 65,000 Japanese left today.*
      *In dominican republic the Japanese arrived in 1959 until 1959 and, again after WWII until 1962 like brazil have and like mexico said also did not get to have a large scale of Japanese which is total of 800 or 873 left today.*
      *In cuba arrived in 1903 until 1943 too has the same amount of Japanese then dominican has, but was like argentina has over 1,200 Japanese left.*
      *In venezuela there are Japanese speaking English and Japanese there, English for moving out by the country's crises, only 1,172 Japanese left, I think lots of them moving out of the country like in cuba did!*
      That's all the info of populations each country.
      How old are you, 15?

    • @gustavog.hasegawa5360
      @gustavog.hasegawa5360 3 года назад +2

      @@Kawayoporu
      No, i don't know this character
      My grandparents came to Brazil because their family was already here that came before the second war to work on coffee plantations.
      Also you are just being racist towards Nippo-Brazilians, I can't understand why, they are in Brazil because they liked, most of then have conditions to go back to Japan and you won't understand because you have never been in any of both countries.
      And no I'm not 15 as I wish to be, I'm 25 and married with another Nikkei