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Japan's Princess Kako honors Japanese immigrants to Brazil

Japan's Princess Kako honors Japanese immigrants to Brazil

NHK06-06-2025

Japan's Princess Kako, who is visiting Brazil, has prayed for the souls of Japanese immigrants who laid the foundations for the world's largest overseas Japanese community.
The second daughter of Crown Prince and Princess Akishino arrived in the city of Sao Paulo on Thursday morning.
Brazil is home to more people of Japanese ancestry -- about 2.7 million -- than any other country. Of those, nearly 1.3 million live in the southern state of Sao Paulo.
In the capital of the state, the princess offered flowers and a prayer before the memorial monument for Japanese settlers who died in the region.
She also visited the Japanese Pavilion, which was built with contributions from immigrants from Japan and the Japanese government.
The facility was built entirely in Japanese style and is known for its garden with "nishikigoi" colorful carp swimming in a pond.
On the premises are trees planted by members of the Imperial family who previously visited the facility. Princess Kako planted a cherry sapling near the tree her parents had planted 10 years ago.
The princess will stay in Brazil through June 15. During the latter half of her trip, she will attend a ceremony in the capital Brasilia to commemorate 130 years of diplomatic ties between the two countries.

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