Diseases, endocrinologists. MRI
Site search

Geographic facts about Japan. Interesting facts about Japan. Modern Japan. Mountains of Japan

1. In Japan on Valentine's Day Girls show affection and give gifts. I won’t tell you what this tradition is connected with, but today it performs an important social function: it allows girls to say “yes” without waiting for a Japanese man to have the courage to approach her.

2. Japan has cheap fish and meat, but very expensive fruits. One apple costs two dollars, a bunch of bananas costs five. The most expensive fruit, melon, a variety like our “torpedo”, will cost two hundred dollars in Tokyo.
3. In Japan, pornography is sold absolutely everywhere.. In every konbini (grocery store), there is always a separate shelf with hentai on the press counter. In small bookstores, hentai makes up a third of the total assortment; in large bookstores, 2-3 floors are devoted to pornography.

4. Hentai is allowed to be freely sold to minors.

5. The two most popular hentai subgenres this is violence and sex with minors.

6. Having wrapped the cover, they quietly read hentai on the subway.

7. The Japan Subway and JR have women-only cars.. They are added in the mornings so that during rush hour no one harasses the girls. The Japanese are voyeurs, and groping girls on crowded trains is something of a national sport.

8. However, Japan has one of the lowest rape rates in the world.. Five times less than in Russia.

9. Most Japanese characters consist of 2-4 syllables, but there are surprising exceptions. For example, there is a character that reads “hanetokawatogahanareruoto”, it has thirteen syllables! Describes the sound made when flesh is separated from bone.

10. The issue of honor still plays a central role in Japan., even in politics. The last Prime Minister, Yukio Hatoyama, resigned after failing to fulfill his campaign promise (sic!). Two of his predecessors too.

11. Japan is a small country, but there are a lot of big things here. It is home to the world's most expensive amusement park, Disney Sea, and four of the ten tallest roller coasters. Tokyo has the most developed subway system in the world, the largest railway hub and the largest mixed pedestrian intersection.

12. In Japan, it is customary to sculpt snowmen strictly from two balls, and not three, as in the rest of the world. And then the Japanese distinguished themselves.

13. Colonel Sanders one of the main symbols of Christmas in Japan, like Coca-Cola in the USA. On Christmas Eve, the Japanese like to go to KFC with the whole family and eat a large portion of chicken wings.

14. In Japan still 30% of weddings occurs as a result of matchmaking and grooming organized by parents (omiai).

15. In all northern cities of Japan, where snow falls in winter, sidewalks and streets are heated. There is no ice, and there is no need to remove snow. Very comfortably!

16. At the same time in Japan no central heating. Everyone heats the apartment as best they can.

17. There is a word in Japanese(Karoshi), meaning “death from overwork.” On average, ten thousand people die every year with this diagnosis. Studio Ghibli director Yoshifumi Kondo, the author of my favorite The Whisper of the Heart, died with this diagnosis.

18. Japan has one of the most liberal tobacco laws. Smoking is allowed everywhere except on railway platforms and airports.

19. Japan is the last country in the world to formally preserve title of the Empire.

20. Japanese Imperial Dynasty never interrupted. The current Emperor Akihito is a direct descendant of the first Emperor Jimmu, who founded Japan in 711 BC.

21. Japan turned 2671 this year.

22. Japanese people talk about food all the time., and when they eat, they discuss how they like the treat. Having dinner without saying “oishii” (delicious) several times is very impolite.

23. At all, The Japanese love repetition. When girls do this, it is considered kawaii.

24. In Japanese at the same time three types of writing are used: Hiragana (syllabary for writing Japanese words), Katakana (syllabary for writing borrowed words) and Kanji (hieroglyphic writing). It's crazy, yes.

25. There are no guest workers in Japan. This is achieved by a simple law: the minimum salary at which it is allowed to hire a foreign worker in Japan exceeds the average salary of a Japanese worker. Thus, the path to the country remains open for highly paid specialists, and unskilled migrant labor does not dump the wages of local residents. Solomon's solution.

26. More than half of the railways in Japan are private. Non-state carriers are responsible for 68% of the country's total rail traffic.

27. Hirohito was never removed from power; after the war, he led the reformation and ruled until 1989. Hirohito's birthday is a national holiday and is celebrated every April 29th.

28. Mount Fuji is privately owned. In the Shinta shrine Hongyu Sengen, a deed of 1609 has been preserved, with which the Shogun transferred the mountain into the possession of the temple. In 1974, the authenticity of the deed of gift was confirmed by the Supreme Court of Japan, after which there was no other choice but to transfer the ownership of the mountain to the temple. Because property rights in Japan are inviolable.

29. The Japanese language has several levels of politeness.: Conversational, respectful, polite and very polite. Women almost always speak a respectful form of the language, men a colloquial one.

30. Seven percent of the male population of Japan are Hikkikomori. Seven!!

31. In Japanese, months have no names., they are instead designated by serial numbers. For example, is it September?? (kugatsu), which means “ninth month.”

32. Before Japan opened up to the West, the only word to describe romantic attraction was the word (koi), which literally means “an irresistible attraction to something unattainable.”

33. Japan is a mono-ethnic country 98.4% of the total population is ethnic Japanese.

34. In Japan, prisoners do not have the right to vote in elections.

35. In Japan they eat dolphins. They are used to make soup, cook kushiyaki (Japanese kebab), and even eat them raw. Dolphin has quite tasty meat, with a distinct taste and is completely different from fish.

36. There are practically no personal pronouns in Japanese, and those words that are sometimes used as pronouns have at least one more meaning. In Russian, for example, the pronoun “ya” means nothing other than “I”, and in Japanese watashi, “ya” also means “private, personal”; anata, you are “my master.” It is polite to use “anat” only when meeting for the first time; then it is customary to address the interlocutor by name or position.

37. Tokyo is the safest metropolis in the world. Tokyo is so safe that children as young as six can use public transport on their own. This is fantastic indeed.

38. The Japanese consider the outside world very dangerous and are afraid to travel. So a Japanese friend once asked me whether it would be too dangerous for her to stay alone in the area of ​​Kensington Gardens in London. They consider the United States to be the most dangerous country.

39. Ninth Article of the Japanese Constitution prohibits the country from having its own army and participating in wars.

40. In Japan, the school year begins on the first of April. and is divided into trimesters. Schoolchildren study from April to July, then September to December and from January to March.

41. There are no trash cans in Japan, since all waste is recycled. Waste is divided into four types: glass, incinerable, recyclable and non-incinerable waste. Each type of waste is removed on a certain day and can be thrown away only on strictly designated dates. For violating the procedure there is a large fine, in my house it is one hundred thousand yen (about a thousand dollars).

42. There are also no trash cans on the streets at all, only special tanks for collecting bottles. A good example of what is clean where people don’t shit.

43. Japan has very low pensions.. The maximum social benefit for poor old people is 30,000 yen, which is about three hundred dollars. There is also no compulsory pension insurance; it is assumed that every Japanese person must take care of his own old age.

44. Godzilla(Gojira in Japanese) is not a random name. This is a portmonteau of the words “Gorilla” and “Kujira” (whale). One can only guess how they crossed so that they got a reptile.

45. Transport in Japan is very expensive, the cheapest metro ticket will cost 140 yen (50 rubles).

46. ​​In Japan, men are always served first.. In a restaurant, the man is the first to place an order, and the drink is brought to him first. In stores they always greet the man first.

47. Japanese people drive big cars. It is impossible to find city cars even in cramped Tokyo, but there are a lot of jeeps.

48. In all my time in Japan I have not seen one toilet without heated toilet seat and with less than 10 buttons. And recently I discovered that the toilet in my house can make the sound of running water in order to hide, um, its own sounds.

49. In Japan, everyone knows that Hello Kitty comes from England.

50. Tipping is strictly not accepted in Japan.. It is believed that as long as the client pays the prescribed price for the service, he remains on an equal footing with the seller. If the buyer tries to leave extra money, he thereby depreciates the service/product provided to him, reducing equal exchange to a handout.

Japan is a small country, but there are many big and interesting things here. It is home to the world's most expensive amusement park, Disney Sea, and four of the ten tallest roller coasters. Tokyo has the most developed subway system in the world, the largest railway hub and the largest mixed pedestrian intersection.

80 Interesting Little-Known Facts About Japan

1. In Japan, girls show affection and give gifts on Valentine's Day. I won’t tell you what this tradition is connected with, but today it performs an important social function: it allows girls to say “yes” without waiting for a Japanese man to have the courage to approach her.

2. In Japan, fish and meat are cheap, but fruits are very expensive. One apple costs two dollars, a bunch of bananas costs five. The most expensive fruit, melon, a variety like our “torpedo”, will cost two hundred dollars in Tokyo.

3. In Japan, pornography is sold absolutely everywhere. In every konbini (grocery store), there is always a separate shelf with hentai on the press counter. In small bookstores, hentai makes up a third of the total assortment; in large bookstores, 2-3 floors are devoted to pornography.

4. Hentai is allowed to be freely sold to minors.

5. The two most popular subgenres of hentai are violence and underage sex.

6. Wrapped in a cover, hentai can be easily read on the subway.

7. The Japan Subway and JR have women-only cars. They are added in the mornings so that during rush hour no one harasses the girls. The Japanese are voyeurs, and groping girls on crowded trains is something of a national sport.

8. At the same time, Japan has one of the lowest rape rates in the world. Five times less than in Russia. It seemed important to me to note this, after everything I said above.

9. Most Japanese characters consist of 2-4 syllables, but there are surprising exceptions. For example, the character 砉 is read as “hanetokawatogahanareruoto”, that’s thirteen syllables! Describes the sound made when flesh is separated from bone.

10. Another interesting fact about Japan: the issue of honor still plays a central role in Japan, even in politics. The last Prime Minister, Yukio Hatoyama, resigned after failing to fulfill his campaign promise (sic!). Two of his predecessors too.

11. Japan is a small country, but there are a lot of big things here. It is home to the world's most expensive amusement park, Disney Sea, and four of the ten tallest roller coasters. Tokyo has the most developed subway system in the world, the largest railway hub and the largest mixed pedestrian intersection.

12. In Japan, it is customary to sculpt snowmen strictly from two balls, and not three, as in the rest of the world. And then the Japanese distinguished themselves.

13. Colonel Sanders is one of the main symbols of Christmas in Japan, like Coca-Cola in the USA. On Christmas Eve, the Japanese like to go to KFC with the whole family and eat a large portion of chicken wings.

14. In Japan, 30% of weddings still take place as a result of matchmaking and bridesmaids organized by parents お見合い (omiai).

15. In all northern cities of Japan, where snow falls in winter, sidewalks and streets are heated. There is no ice, and there is no need to remove snow. Very comfortably!

16. However, in Japan there is no central heating. Everyone heats the apartment as best they can.

17. In Japanese there is a word 過労死 (Karoshi), meaning “death from overwork.” On average, ten thousand people die every year with this diagnosis. Studio Ghibli director Yoshifumi Kondo, the author of my favorite The Whisper of the Heart, died with this diagnosis.

18. Japan has one of the most liberal tobacco laws. Smoking is allowed everywhere except on railway platforms and airports.

19. Japan is the last country in the world to formally retain the title of Empire.

20. The Japanese imperial dynasty was never interrupted. The current Emperor Akihito is a direct descendant of the first Emperor Jimmu, who founded Japan in 711 BC.

21. Japan turned 2725 this year.

22. Japanese people constantly talk about food, and when they eat, they discuss how they like the treat. Having dinner without saying “oishii” (delicious) several times is very impolite.

23. In general, the Japanese love repetition. When girls do this, it is considered kawaii.

24. The Japanese language simultaneously uses three types of writing: Hiragana (a syllabary system for writing Japanese words), Katakana (a syllabary system for writing borrowed words) and Kanji (hieroglyphic writing). It's crazy, yes.

25. An interesting fact about Japan is that there are almost no guest workers in the country. This is achieved by a simple law: the minimum salary at which it is allowed to hire a foreign worker in Japan exceeds the average salary of a Japanese worker. Thus, the path to the country remains open for highly paid specialists, and unskilled migrant labor does not dump the wages of local residents. Solomon's solution.

26. More than half of the railways in Japan are private. Non-state carriers are responsible for 68% of the country's total rail traffic.

27. Hirohito was never removed from power; after the war, he led the reformation and ruled until 1989. Hirohito's birthday is a national holiday and is celebrated every April 29th.

28. Mount Fuji is privately owned. In the Shinta shrine Hongyu Sengen, a deed of 1609 has been preserved, with which the Shogun transferred the mountain into the possession of the temple. In 1974, the authenticity of the deed of gift was confirmed by the Supreme Court of Japan, after which there was no other choice but to transfer the ownership of the mountain to the temple. Because property rights in Japan are inviolable.

29. The Japanese language has several levels of politeness: colloquial, respectful, polite and very polite. Women almost always speak a respectful form of the language, men a colloquial one.

30. Seven percent of the male population of Japan are Hikkikomori. Seven!!!

31. In Japanese, months do not have names; instead, they are designated by serial numbers. For example, September is 九月 (kugatsu), which means “ninth month.”

32. Before Japan opened up to the West, the only word to describe romantic attraction was 恋 (koi), literally meaning “an irresistible attraction to something unattainable.”

33. Japan is a mono-ethnic country, 98.4% of the total population are ethnic Japanese.

35. In Japan they eat dolphins. They are used to make soup, cook kushiyaki (Japanese kebab), and even eat them raw. Dolphin has quite tasty meat, with a distinct taste and is completely different from fish.

36. There are practically no personal pronouns in the Japanese language, and those words that are sometimes used as pronouns have at least one more meaning. In Russian, for example, the pronoun “ya” means nothing other than “I”, and in Japanese 私 (watashi, ya) also means “private, personal”; 貴方 (anata, you) - “my master.” It is polite to use “anat” only when meeting for the first time; then it is customary to address the interlocutor by name or position.

37. Tokyo is the safest metropolis in the world. Tokyo is so safe that children as young as six can use public transport on their own. This is fantastic indeed.

38. The Japanese consider the outside world very dangerous and are afraid to travel. So a Japanese friend once asked me whether it would be too dangerous for her to stay alone in the area of ​​Kensington Gardens in London. They consider the United States to be the most dangerous country.

39. The ninth article of the Japanese constitution prohibits the country from having its own army and participating in wars.

40. In Japan, the school year begins on the first of April and is divided into trimesters. Schoolchildren study from April to July, then September to December and from January to March.

41. There are no trash cans in Japan because all garbage is recycled. Waste is divided into four types: glass, incinerable, recyclable and non-incinerable waste. Each type of waste is removed on a certain day and can be thrown away only on strictly designated dates. For violating the procedure there is a large fine, in my house it is one hundred thousand yen (about a thousand dollars).

42. There are also no trash bins on the streets, only special bins for collecting bottles. A good example of what is clean where people don’t shit.

43. Japan has very low pensions. The maximum social benefit for poor old people is 30,000 yen, which is about three hundred dollars. There is also no compulsory pension insurance; it is assumed that every Japanese person must take care of his own old age.

44. Godzilla (Gojira in Japanese) is not an accidental name. This is a portmonteau of the words “Gorilla” and “Kujira” (whale). One can only guess how they crossed so that they got a reptile.

45. Transport in Japan is very expensive; the cheapest metro ticket costs 140 yen (50 rubles).

46. ​​In Japan, men are always served first. In a restaurant, the man is the first to place an order, and the drink is brought to him first. In stores they always greet the man first.

47. The Japanese drive big cars. It is impossible to find city cars even in cramped Tokyo, but there are a lot of jeeps.

48, During my entire time in Japan, I have not seen a single toilet without a heated toilet seat and with less than 10 buttons. And recently I discovered that the toilet in my house can make the sound of running water in order to hide, um, its own sounds.

49. In Japan, everyone knows that Hello Kitty comes from England.

50. Tipping is strictly not accepted in Japan. It is believed that as long as the client pays the prescribed price for the service, he remains on an equal footing with the seller. If the buyer tries to leave extra money, he thereby depreciates the service/product provided to him, reducing equal exchange to a handout.

51. During the year of living in Japan, I never encountered any manifestations of racism against myself. I think this is very cool.

52. Japan is the best country in the world.

53. On Japanese MTV there is a popular series Usavich, a cartoon about two birds with one stone, Putin and Kiriyenko, trying to survive in a police state.

54. The age of consent in Japan is 13 years old.

55. Japan is three times the size of England. The area of ​​Japan is 374,744 km², England is 130,410 km².

56. Japan is often cited as an example of an overpopulated country. In fact, Japan's population density is only 360 people per square kilometer. This is less than in England, where there are 383 people per square kilometer.

57. In Japanese, the words “irregular” and “different” are expressed by the same word 違う (chigau).

58. In Japan, things have taken root that twenty years ago seemed like the future, but today leave a strange retro-futuristic impression. Automatic doors in taxis, vending machines that sell everything from fruit, to soups, to used underpants. Fantastic shaped trains and funny fashion. This is all very cool.

59. The Japanese word 御来光 (goraiko) describes the sunrise seen from Mount Fuji. Japanese has a lot of meaningful words.

60. Hitler admired the integrity of the Japanese nation and called them “honorary Aryans.” In apartheid-era South Africa, the Japanese were the only ones who were not disenfranchised, as they were considered “honorary whites.”

61. Japanese phones have a built-in national emergency notification system. When some kind of cataclysm occurs, a loud beep sounds on all phones (even if the sound was turned off) and a message appears explaining what happened and how to behave.

62. There is no looting in Japan. If you type “looting in japan” into Google, you will only find tens of thousands of surprised foreigners who cannot understand why empty houses are not looted in Japan.

63. The Japanese speak almost no English, but use a fantastic number of Anglicisms. Alex Case tried to make a list, counted over 5,000 words and got tired of continuing (Parts 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6) However, the Japanese pronunciation of them is so distorted that you can not hope to understand them, or that they will understand you if you pronounce the word with an original accent.

64. Few people know that the words “cotton wool”, “pollock” and “ivashi” are borrowed from Japanese. I think everyone knows about “tsunami” and “typhoon”.

65. Japanese also has borrowings from Russian. The words イクラ “ikura; caviar” and ノルマ “noruma; norm". There is also a funny expression “ヴ・ナロード” “wu people; to the people,” it was inherited from Alexander II.

66. Japan has the death penalty. Last year, eight criminals were executed in Japan. The last two executions were attended by the Japanese Minister of Justice.

67. An interesting fact is that Japan has the lowest murder rate and the lowest violent crime rate per 100 thousand population of all countries analyzed. It has the highest average life expectancy in the world.

68. Tokyo is home to one of the largest gay districts in the world, Shinjuku-Ni-Chome. It has the largest concentration of gay bars in the world.

69. Japanese and Chinese characters are one and the same. There are regional differences: in Chinese there are more characters and in simplified form they are written differently. But knowing Japanese, you can understand the general meaning of Chinese signs.

70. Instead of a signature in Japan, they put a special personalized hanko stamp. Every Japanese has such a seal and it is used many, many times a day. You can also buy it at any store.

71. Japan is the only country in the world where the criterion for a train being late is a minute mark.

72. In Japan, it is considered impolite to open a gift in the presence of the giver. They thank him for it, and then put it aside to open it in private.

73. The Japanese believe that a person should be able to hide suffering behind a smile. There is even a saying 顔で笑って心で泣く (Kao de waratte kokoro de naku; smile while you suffer inside).

74. The Japanese are a nation of very passionate people. If they do something, they strive for complete authenticity. Thus, in all French bakeries, Japanese inscriptions are duplicated in French. An Italian gelateria will have ice cream labeled in Italian, and a Spanish restaurant will have a menu in Spanish. However, there will be nothing in English. Sometimes it seems that for them it is just “another European language.”

75. In Japan, property rights are strictly observed, so there are dozens of companies with a history of more than a thousand years. For example, the Hoshi Ryokan Hotel has been continuously operating since 718. It has been run by the same family for 46 generations (sic!).

76. Tanuki are wayward Japanese werewolf animals that bring happiness and prosperity. Their eggs are a traditional symbol of good luck. For the canonical happiest tanuki, the area of ​​the eggs should be 8 tatami, which is 12 meters. In case of trouble, they take retribution with them. Studio Ghibli has a wonderful cartoon about them, Pom Poko, check it out.

77. Two thirds of Japan is covered with forests. Japan prohibits commercial logging of its own forests, but it consumes 40% of all the wood that is mined in tropical forests.

78. For 10 years, from 1992 to 2002, Japan was the largest donor of international aid in the world. This is a word for everyone who is now gloating over the Japanese disaster.

79. When the conductor enters the next carriage of a high-speed train, he must take off his headdress and bow, and only then begins to check the tickets.

80. In Japan, the third way has been successful, which we have been looking for for a long time and cannot find. There is a unique organization of society here: on the one hand, a completely Western legal state, on the other, an original culture that lives not only by traditions, but is constantly evolving. I don’t understand why no one in Russia studies the Japanese experience.

Other interesting facts about Japan in this section.

Japan is a special world, and to Europeans its inhabitants - from schoolgirls in knee socks to geishas in kimonos - seem to be aliens from another universe. But we are already accustomed to these aliens from books, films and photographs. However, if you dig deeper, you will discover facts in the life of the Japanese that you won’t even immediately believe - they are so incredible for a person with a European mentality. Here, look!

Keijo is a sport invented for anime.
Anime is such a popular culture that its own special world has long been created around it - with its own slang, habits and fashion. There is even a separate sport that exists only in the world of anime. Keijo is a water gymnastics game invented by the creators of the anime series of the same name. Keijo is practiced exclusively by girls, and the sport itself consists of standing on a special platform swinging on water and knocking your opponent off the same platform, pushing her exclusively with her breasts or buttocks. Nozomi Kamenashi, who studies at Keijo School, is one of the most popular anime characters in Japan today.

Mario kart racing is a popular sport
The Japanese love video games! In particular, the racing simulator "Mario Kart", in which the famous game character named Mario dashes around in a small car. At the same time, any Japanese person can try himself in the role of Mario in real life, buying himself a kart, like in the game, and dashingly riding it through the streets! Every month, Akiba Cart hosts a "Mario Race" in Tokyo, where people wearing fake mustaches like their favorite character get the chance to feel like Mario in real life.

Kancho - the stupidest prank ever
Every country has its own popular stupid jokes. For example, the joke “your whole back is white” is one of them. But the most beloved - and most idiotic - prank, adored by the Japanese, surpasses everyone! The essence of the prank called “kancho” is to run up to an unsuspecting neighbor, form your hands in the shape of a pistol, pointing out your index fingers, place this “gun” closer to the victim’s ass - preferably closer, so to speak, to the exit hole - and shout loudly: "KANCHO!!!" You won't believe it, but the Japanese laugh.

Killer food
If “Russian Roulette” is the lot of the desperate, then “Japanese Roulette” is the lot of the rich and respectable. True, they play it not with a pistol in their hands, but with a knife and fork. Only in Japan there is exquisite and expensive food that can easily kill the eater! Yes, yes, we are talking about puffer fish. It is served only in specially selected expensive restaurants, and is prepared by chefs who have completed a specialized three-year training course. The main thing here is to separate the non-poisonous meat from the poisonous parts of the fish's body with surgical precision. If the cook's hand trembles and the poison still gets into the dish, the eater is finished: fugu poison is 120 times stronger than cyanide. There is always the possibility of error - and this adds spice to the meal.

Dekotora
Dekotora is a decorated truck. All over the world, truck drivers love to decorate their vehicles, but in Japan this custom has reached the heights of art. Trucks shimmer with neon lights, on their sides there are huge paintings, usually with elegant women (here the traditions of truck drivers are unbreakable), the lights flicker and run all over the car, and it seems that there is not a centimeter left on the truck without the acid-colored decorations. In general, a high-quality decor resembles a traveling circus - and is a source of pride for its brutal owner.

Kanamara Matsuri
The Kanamara Matsuri, or Iron Penis Festival, takes place every year at Kanayama Shrine in Kawasaki. During the festival, participants honor the male sexual organ and its fertility. To honor the “power of an ordinary penis,” people from all over Japan, in addition to numerous tourists, come to Kanayama Shrine. At the festival you can see people dressed as phalluses and giant phallic sculptures. Parade floats, candles, sweets, balloons - everything follows the shape of the male genital organ. You won't see this in any sex shop!

Subcultures and street fashion
Representatives of youth subcultures traditionally strive to stand out through clothing. But in Japan it takes absolutely incredible forms! Let's start with the fact that the genre of cosplay, now popular all over the world, was born in Japan, and precisely in the form of street fashion: young girls went out into the street, dressed and made up as their favorite anime characters. And today the street fashion subcultures of Japan amaze with their diversity. Even the Lolita style, popular all over the world, exists here not only in classical, but also in Gothic, androgynous and many other variations.

Zoshi kese - business on high school girls
Zoshi kese, or “jay kay” for short, is an officially existing and very popular type of business in Japan. And it consists of organizing dates with teenage girls on a paid basis, or, more simply put, for money. No, no, don’t think about it, nothing indecent! Only communication, compliments and innocent flirting. At least officially: according to rumors, at times this business takes completely illegal forms, but the police are already dealing with this. The official “Jay Kay” is innocence itself, at least from the point of view of the Japanese. There are even entire girl groups that combine the stage and business "dzoshi kese". Adults and quite respectable fans of such groups as SNH48 and Akushiba Project quite officially pay a lot of money to communicate with their favorites after concerts.

Seijin Shiki
When Russians turn 18, they have the right to buy alcohol and serve in the army. When Japanese people turn 20, the whole country celebrates their birthday with them. "Seijin Shiki" is an annual official holiday, "coming of age day". Its heroes are considered to be everyone who turned 20 after the previous “seijin shiki”. Jubilees are celebrated throughout the country, and they can go from party to party all day long. The girls put on beautiful silk kimonos, the guys also dress up as best they can. After "seijin shiki" the Japanese are considered adults, have the right to vote and... well, yes, drink alcohol, where would we be without it!

School years are wonderful
Many rules in force in Japanese schools have no analogues anywhere in the world. In particular, the school cleaning is done by the students themselves, and girls are prohibited not only from wearing makeup at school, but even from shaving their legs - so that concerns about beauty do not distract from their studies. At the same time, romances between students - of any degree of seriousness - are also considered illegal and punished as violations of discipline.

Crazy prank jokes
The fashion for pranking has been spreading widely across Europe in recent years, but in Japan pranking was a favorite hobby a couple of decades ago. As the Japanese themselves say, in recent years the intensity of passions around stupid pranks has subsided somewhat, but ten to fifteen years ago they were raging with all their might! A story in which the main character created a realistic dinosaur costume for himself and went out into the street in it to scare passers-by is not considered something out of the ordinary. Moreover, it is not even unique: this draw took place on a grand scale in various cities in Japan. Probably many people needed a sedative, but no one was offended by the jokers: it’s a national tradition!

Crazy reality shows
Enthusiastic TV viewers who were frozen in horror when reality show characters fought or ate live worms in front of their eyes simply did not watch Japanese popular TV shows! Their creators do not limit their sick imagination in any way, including the entire range of perversions in the script. Thus, in the TV show “AK-Bingo,” participants were asked to hold a plastic tube with their lips, each on their side, and try to blow a live insect crawling somewhere in the center of the tube down each other’s throats. And this is not the limit, but, one might say, the average level. And reality shows for adults are famous for their overtly sexual things, which, according to rumors, in other countries will not be allowed on television.

Themed restaurants
Themed restaurants exist in many countries, but you will not find such variety and wild imagination as in Japan. In themed restaurants you can find everything you can think of - robots, owls, ghosts, vampires, sexy maids, reptiles... There are fully automated restaurants without waiters, restaurants where food is served on the bodies of naked women, airplane restaurants and much more. other. In the Modern Toilet restaurant, customers sit on toilets, and miniature toilets act as plates. At the Robot Cabaret, guests are entertained by robots and strippers. One of the craziest is the prison themed restaurant Alcatraz. At the entrance, guests are handcuffed and taken to a cell. To call a waiter, you will have to hit the door bars with a stick, and from time to time a siren sounds in the restaurant and a “fugitive” in a prison uniform begins to rush around the room. In general, complete madness!

They eat them, they watch
The Japanese love very fresh food. It is not surprising that their menu also includes live animal food. This is guaranteed freshness! No, “live” is not a publicity stunt, but the most real reality! In Japan, for example, a popular dish is “ikizukuri” - fish cooked with just three strokes of a knife. The cook, cutting off the fish's head with one stroke, brings it on a platter to the client so that he can see that it is still moving and rolling its eyes. When the fillet is cut from the bones, you can see that the heart is still beating. In Japanese restaurants you can also order sashimi with live octopus, shrimp or lobster. Animals are served alive, artistically decorating the plate with pieces of their own flesh.

All countries / Japan/ Interesting facts about Japan

Interesting facts about Japan

Majestic Fuji is a sacred mountain of the Japanese. This symbol of the island empire is considered the most beautiful volcano in the world.

Japan is a mountainous country with vast forests and more than 400 volcanoes, a quarter of which remain active. Located on the islands, the empire lies at the junction of two tectonic plates - the Philippine and Pacific. Due to the fact that the islands are located in a seismically turbulent region, about 1,500 earthquakes occur in this country every year. Some of the tremors are barely noticeable, while others lead to terrible disasters. In 1995, a powerful earthquake measuring 7.0 on the Richter scale almost wiped out most of the industrial city of Kobe, leaving 300,000 people (!!!) homeless. Shopping centers collapsed directly to the ground, highways fell into complete disrepair. Over 6,000 people (!!!) died during this natural disaster. A week after the disaster, the Japanese government declared Kobe a disaster area and began installing residential trailers there. A worldwide debate has begun about the poor performance of earthquake forecasting and the need for disaster insurance. In the person of Kobe, one of the pillars of the Japanese economy was shaken, therefore, a rapid decline in the value of the yen began on the Tokyo Stock Exchange, which was stopped only after massive intervention by the government and the National Bank of Japan.

Geisha is translated from Japanese as “a person of art”, and she was never a prostitute or someone’s wife. These ladies are a kind of actresses, whose main task is to entertain men with their intellect, playing musical instruments, beautiful vocals and national dances. As before, geishas begin to learn the craft from the age of 14 to 16, but now this process is less lengthy and cruel, although very labor-intensive. A geisha of the 21st century, among other things, must be fluent in at least 3 foreign languages.

99.9% of the local population is Japanese, so the attitude towards foreigners here is completely special. European appearance is considered very unusual; on the street, teenagers can run up to a person with blond hair and blue eyes to take a photo with him.

Sumo is considered a traditional national sport in Japan - a type of wrestling in the ring, carried out according to strict rules. Only those who weigh at least 170 kg can become a sumo wrestler.

When the guns fell silent on the European fronts of World War II, and Germany was liberated from Hitler, the war in the Pacific entered a decisive phase. In May 1945, American aircraft began carpet bombing the Japanese islands. On July 16, 1945, American scientists conducted the first successful test of a nuclear weapon in the New Mexico desert. At the beginning of August the President USA Harry Truman gave the order to use new weapons. On the morning of August 6, 1945, the world's first atomic bomb exploded in Hiroshima. 10 km² were completely devastated by the explosion itself, and an even larger area was contaminated with radiation. 200,000 (!!!) people died from the consequences of the bombing, and another 100,000 (!!!) people were injured. The number of radiation sickness victims who died weeks, months and years after the explosion is estimated at at least 120,000 people (!!!). On August 9, 1945, as a result of the American atomic bombing, the city of Nagasaki was destroyed. Nagasaki was chosen by chance for the atomic bombing. The crew of the bomber did not find the main target - the city of Kitakyusu (formerly Kokura), as it was hidden by clouds. The plane returned three times, searching for the object, before heading towards Nagasaki. Nagasaki was also hidden by fog, but a small window formed in it, where the atomic bomb was dropped. In Nagasaki alone, 80,000 people became victims of the atomic bomb. After this, Japan capitulated. But the price was terribly high. For 4 years, Hiroshima remained a lifeless nuclear desert, then natural vegetation appeared. The consequences of radioactive contamination were little studied at that time. The assumption was that cities would remain uninhabited for decades, if not centuries. And although the worst fears were not confirmed and 50 years later the number of inhabitants of Hiroshima and Nagasaki exceeded a million, the scars left by the war are still visible here today. At the site of the explosion in Hiroshima, the outstanding Japanese architect Kenzo Tange in 1956 erected the “Center of the World” complex with a monument to the victims of the atomic bombing; Every year on August 6, a service of remembrance and warning is held here, during which the famous Peace Bell is sounded. Visiting a museum is a moving experience. Next to a child's school uniform torn to shreds is a pocket watch that stopped exactly at the time of the explosion. Inside the museum is an empty stone coffin with the names of those killed in the explosion inscribed on it and the inscription: “Rest in peace, this mistake will never happen again.” People in Hiroshima do not remember their own guilt. There is no evidence in the Peace Center Museum that Japan was one of the initiating states of World War II.

The Japanese language, which is so difficult to learn, has three different writing systems: kata-kana (for transliterating foreign borrowings and names), hirogana and the Chinese kanya script, which uses more than 1,850 characters. In Japanese, months have no names. They are designated by numbers. In official communication, the Japanese use the “language of politeness” - kaigo. The level of politeness depends on the rank of the interlocutor. There are very few curse words in Japanese. In Japanese, "fool" sounds like "baka" (literally stupid person). And a foreigner is like a “gaijin” (literally, a stranger). "Baka-gaijin" in Japanese colloquial means American. The Japanese believe that it is almost impossible for a foreigner to learn their language, therefore, the minimum knowledge of the language delights them.

The famous samurai honor, Bushido, is still alive in Japan - there are cases when politicians resigned from their positions due to the fact that they did not fulfill their election promises.

Kabuki is a traditional national theater in which all roles, including women's ones, were played only by men for a long time. Artists who play exclusively female roles in kabuki are called onagata in Japan.

The Japanese used to call the island of Hokkaido "Ezo", which means "wild".

People in Japan are very honest. If you lost your wallet in the subway, there is a 90% chance that it will be returned to the lost and found office. There is no looting during earthquakes in Japan.

***

In this country, prisoners do not have the right to vote in elections.

If a Japanese person laughs, this is the first sign that he is nervous. It is customary here to respond to sad news with a smile, and long and continuous silence is the first sign of respect for a person and even some degree of admiration.

A distinctive feature of the Ainu is long beards. For this reason, they call themselves "Mo Xing", which means "hairy".

Tokyo's Shinjuku-Ni-Cheme district has the largest concentration of gay bars in the world.

In ancient Ain legends, Lake Akan is called the “lake of the devil.” The indigenous people of Hokkaido still call it this way to this day.

Japan has the death penalty.

The Japanese currency got its name - “yen”, thanks to its shape (“en” in Japanese means “round”), since previous coins had an oval or rectangular shape of a gold or silver bar.

The thinness of the Japanese is a common reason for very serious complexes about appearance. In Japan, it is customary to look at sumo wrestlers with almost admiration. Another reason to feel complex is the lack of body hair among Japanese men. Often young guys use false chest hair, thereby emphasizing their “masculinity.”


Legend has it that the Japanese islands were born from the tears of a goddess. Where a tear fell into the Pacific Ocean, an island appeared. The science of geology describes the origin of the archipelago less poetically: according to scientists, the islands arose as a result of powerful movements of the earth’s crust and the volcanic activity of mountains that erupted lava. Japan, with its 27,000 kilometers of snow-capped mountains and rugged coastline, has some of the most beautiful landscapes in the world. The archipelago consists of four main islands - Kyushu, Shikoku, Hokkaido and Honshu - as well as 3,900 smaller islands and islets.

Instead of a signature, in Japan they put a personal stamp - hanko. Every Japanese has this seal.

In 1972, the XI Winter Olympic Games took place in Sapporo. Since then, the city has often become a starting point for trips to skiing centers such as Teneyama, Teine Olympia and Niseko.

Honshu is the largest of the Japanese islands and is only slightly smaller in size Great Britain . 4 out of 5 Japanese live on Honshu, which is one of the most densely populated regions in the world. The population is concentrated primarily in two urban agglomerations: Kyoto-Osaka-Kobe and Tokyo-Yokohama. The population density here is so high that all these cities are only growing upward. One consequence of the lack of space is the astronomical prices of land in Honshu. Japanese mega-cities are prevented from developing by spurs of mountains that reach a height of up to 3,800 meters and come close to Tokyo and its “brothers”.

The attitude towards marriage in Japan is very serious. People rarely get married here before the age of 30, and the average age of childbearing for Japanese women is 34 years.

In Japan, it is considered insulting to open a gift in the presence of the person who gave it.

Since the geological junction of lithospheric plates is constantly in motion, an average of 3 earthquakes are recorded in Honshu every day. In addition to earthquakes, strong typhoons regularly rage in the south of the island, flooding large areas and leaving many peasants without land and livelihoods.

The Tokyo Stock Exchange is the second most important in the world after Wall Street in New York.

Three large and famous Japanese concerns at once received their names from the large cities of the island of Honshu: Toyota, Kawasaki and Hitachi.

There are more than 50,000 people (!) in Japan who are over 100 years old (!!!).

Japanese youth are distinguished by great extravagance - there is a huge number of subcultures and movements that stand out for their bright clothes, crazy hairstyles and various accessories.

In terms of population, Tokyo is breaking all imaginable records: today 29,000,000 people live in the city and its environs (!!!). In no other region of the world do so many people live and work as in the Tokyo Plain.

Hinomaru is the name of the national flag of Japan.

The majority of Japanese do not condemn one person’s belonging to two religious beliefs at once. A significant part of the population of Japan professes Buddhism at the same time as Shintoism.

Most Japanese do not play games on the computer, preferring Sony Play Station and others. This is due to the high level of online piracy and strict copyright laws. For distributing illegal copies of video games, you can get a very real prison sentence.

The regalia of the Japanese emperor - a mirror, a sword and a jasper necklace - go back, according to legend, to the times when the goddess Amaterasu enthroned the first ruler of the land of the rising sun.

The art of folding paper figures - origami, originates from Japan.

The Japanese produce their own silk. The production of silk begins with the period of incubation of tiny eggs by the silkworm. When the caterpillars pupate, they are covered with a layer of gaseous tissue. For 6 weeks in a row they eat finely chopped mulberry leaves, and then begin to spin their cocoon. To get 1 kilogram of raw silk, you need to feed 5,500 caterpillars. The cocoons are collected and silk threads are unwound. Only when the threads are tightly twisted can they be woven or knitted. Twisting threads is called spinning. And, depending on how exactly they will spin, it turns out either twisted natural silk for the base (organsin), or crepe, or loosely twisted silk, or yarn in one thread. It is from single-strand yarn that shiny transparent fabrics are made, which were in fashion all over the world in the mid-80s.

In Nagoya, they fish using cormorants from the Inuyamabashi Bridge in the Kiso River. Black-and-brown seabirds are trained to fish together, but it is almost impossible to stop them from swallowing their prey. Therefore, they wear an iron ring around their necks and receive their share of the catch only after finishing the work.

For many Japanese, anime is a source of national pride. Famous characters, including the Pokemon Pikachu, can even be seen on board national airlines.

There is a restaurant in Japan where monkeys work as waiters.

The gilded Buddha statue at Nittaiji Temple in Nagoya is a gift from the Thai King Chulalongkorn (Rama V), who reigned Kingdom of Thailand until the beginning of the twentieth century.

Atsuta Shrine in southern Nagoya is the second most important Shinto shrine in Japan, after Ise Shrine.

Not far from Nagoya lies a mountain range called the “Japanese Alps”. The flora and fauna in these mountains differs little from the European Alps.

For the Japanese, a bath is not only a way to wash away dirt from the body, it is also an effective way to relax the mind, body and spirit. Therefore, many Japanese take hot baths in the evenings and regularly go to hot springs. Unlike the Western world, members of the same Japanese family use the same water for bathing. But they do not take a bath at the same time: the father washes first, the mother follows, and then the children. Almost every Japanese home has a bathtub, but the Japanese use the bathtub more for relaxation than for washing. Of course, the Japanese are very careful about hygiene, but they wash not in the bathroom itself, but in the basin next to it. And after they thoroughly wash themselves and wash off all the soap and dirt, they lie down in the bathroom and relax. Because they wash in a different water, the hot water remains clean and clear for other family members to use. It is interesting that if there is a guest in the house, then he is given the honor of lying in the hot bath first.

Formally, prostitution is prohibited in Japan, but brothels have not gone away. Officially, Japanese call girls charge clients for massages, pleasant company, and even kisses - for everything except sex. Not all brothels employ Japanese women - local pimps prefer to send emigrants with Philippines And China . Tourists may not be allowed into brothels with Japanese girls - they are only for their own people.

Nowhere else in Japan are there such wide streets as in Nagoya, built according to the American model. The width of some highways reaches 100 meters.

Founded in the 8th century AD, Kyoto was the residence of the Emperor of Japan until 1868. In contrast to the city's former name, Heian ("capital of peace and quiet"), the current name of Kyoto simply means "capital".

In Japan, many streets do not have names. Each quarter is assigned a unique number - this number serves as the address. The spaces between the blocks - the streets - remain without names. In Japan, people usually say: “I live in the second block” or “I work in the 13th block” instead of: “I work on Crocodile Street” or “I live on Banana Avenue.” To many people from Western countries, this system may seem confusing and ineffective, but in reality it is not. It is very easy to get used to such a system, it is also easy to use, and thus you can find the desired area very quickly. For example, if the restaurant you are looking for in Tokyo is located in the 12th district, then you need to take a map and find block number 12 on it. And that’s it! In addition, the block number is easier to associate with a place on the map and remember the route than the street names we are used to.

Kyoto is the only Japanese city with a population of one million that was not damaged during the Second World War.
World War.

The Japanese's favorite television programs are cooking shows. According to statistics, 70% of all TV channels in the country must have at least one such program in their broadcast schedule.

The floor in one of the rooms of the imperial palace in Kyoto is specially made of compacted clay: according to ancient tradition, during the ceremony of honoring ancestors, the emperor standing on the clay floor is a symbol of connection with the Earth.

For many Japanese families, especially wealthy ones, it is completely normal to adopt adult men. Firstly, an adult man will become the continuer of the family. Japan, like many other countries in the world, is a patriarchal society, and surnames are passed down through male children. Couples who only have daughters may well consider adopting an adult male into the family to keep the family line alive. Secondly, an adult man will provide the family with additional financial support (if the family is not very wealthy) or help in business. This practice is quite common among wealthy Japanese families who own large companies. Adult men can inherit and manage the family business or start their own. Even if the family has other male contenders for the inheritance, but the father sees that they are not suitable for running the business, he can accept a good leader into the family.

The Japanese national drink sake is sometimes called rice wine; it is usually served warm and tastes somewhat like Andalusian sherry. The idea of ​​sake as rice wine is deceptive: we are not talking about wine at all, but rather about vodka: sake is fermented using molds from purified rice grains.

Osaka has a sister city - Hamburg. The two cities are indeed like brothers: in both, trade and powerful media concerns play a key role.

Japan has its own superstitions about body reactions. For example, if a person sneezes, they say that someone has just remembered him, and if someone has a nosebleed, this is a reason for a joke with sexual overtones.

***

The Japanese are very open when it comes to sex. Some sexual behaviors are considered taboo in the Western world, but are accepted and practiced by many Japanese. A great example is hentai: manga or anime that depict sexual intercourse between humans, monsters, or even tentacles. The Japanese also have tsubashanpu, bukakke and unagi. In the practice of tsubashanpu, a man experiences sexual pleasure from spitting on the faces of numerous girls. In bukakka, a woman or man has the sperm of several men fall on his face. And in unagi, a live eel is placed in a woman’s vagina. The Japanese invented bondage, an important element of BDSM. Also, in Japan there are institutions that offer sadomasochistic services to people if they experience pleasure from pain and humiliation. Every sexual perversion you can imagine is practiced and considered normal in Japan.

Most of the ships of the Japanese Navy that took part in World War II were built and based in Osaka.

Shinto temples in Japan are called “shrine”, and Buddhist ones are called “temple”.

The monument to the children victims of the atomic explosion in Hiroshima, according to legend, is dedicated to a girl who died of leukemia caused by radiation. She believed that death could be defeated by making 1,000 paper cranes. She died having made 954.

Japan is often called the land of the rising sun. There are two versions of why it is called that: the first states that it is the easternmost country in the world, therefore, the sun rises first there. Another version is poetic in nature, but it also has the right to life. The essence of this version is this: in Japanese, the word “Japan” consists of two hieroglyphs that represent the root (beginning, base) and the sun. Literally it sounds like “the beginning of the sun” or the sunrise.

The most dangerous place in Japanese cities is the subway. It is during the rush hour rush hour that sexually anxious individuals regularly appear in such places. Chicanas are the real scourge of Japan, they like to squeeze girls on trains for partially decent or completely indecent seats. But, more often than not, they simply film everything on their phone, slipping it under the girl’s skirt or even attaching the camera to their shoes. Then the pictures or videos are sold online, often making a lot of money. Every year in Tokyo alone, about 4,000 Chicanas (!!!) are arrested, but their number is not decreasing. This is partly due to the Japanese women themselves, who are so shy and restrained in expressing emotions that they would rather remain silent, blushing, than yell at the whole carriage, attracting attention to themselves. Therefore, the authorities even made separate carriages especially for women, where they will feel completely calm.

The moats around the ancient Hiroshima Castle lie lower than the surrounding area. In the Middle Ages, invaders were drowned by opening dams and releasing water into the adjacent valleys.

Cape Ashizuri on the west coast of Shikoku has become notorious: several suicides have thrown themselves from its cliffs into the sea.

The Pagoda of Peace and Remembrance on Mount Otaki, on the island of Shikoku, contains some of the ashes of Buddha.

Tokudashi is not an ordinary striptease in the European understanding. Imagine a bar where several naked girls, moving in unison, crawl to the edge of the stage and sit down with their legs spread wide. That's it - the dance is over. Men, armed with flashlights and magnifying glasses, cannot take their eyes off the exposed female genitals. The entire male audience literally falls into a trance.

Japanese police officers are the most honest people in the world because they never take bribes.

The Japanese really don’t like to say a categorical “no,” so the answer “maybe” can be regarded as “no.”

On the east coast of Kyushu is the city of Beppu, one of the best health resorts in Japan. Life in this city is in full swing in every sense of the word: even residents of Tokyo and Kyoto come here to relax and swim in hot springs on weekends. The most famous of the thermal springs are called "jigoku", which means "underworld" in Japanese. Such springs emit fountains of boiling water from underground, the color reminiscent of milk. Every year, 13,000,000 Japanese visit Kyushu to take a hot bath in "hell".

The Japanese, as you know, are obsessed with technology, so it is not surprising that even their sex dolls are not inflatable women with a senselessly open mouth, but real robots made of latex, which feels similar to human skin. These dolls for adults are called Dutch Wife - “Dutch wife”, as sailors in ancient times called a bamboo pillow that allowed them not to sweat in their sleep even during the suffocating heat. The dolls come with a lifetime warranty and start at $6,000. If something goes wrong and the Japanese “doesn’t get along” with his Dutch Wife, it can be returned to the manufacturer for a decent funeral. The most real ones. Did you think they would resell them later?

Arita is a center for ceramic production. The finest tea cups and pots, which in the old days were painted only white and blue, are highly valued all over the world.

The age of 13 in Japan is the age of consent. From this age, residents can voluntarily agree to intimate relationships, and this will not be violence.

The main office of the Japan Steel Company is located in Kagoshima. This conglomerate is Japan's largest steel producer and one of the largest heavy industrial enterprises in the world.

Japanese women are literally crazy about pointed teeth, which in the Land of the Rising Sun are called “yabea”. Local women are willing to spend hundreds of dollars on cosmetic procedures to attach these mini fangs to their teeth.

The cheapest food in Japan is seafood. It is a common joke here that as long as there are fish in the ocean, no one in Japan will die of hunger. Here, they even eat dolphins. And the most expensive products are fruits and melons. For some varieties of peaches you will have to pay $5 per piece, and “elite” varieties of square watermelons or melons can reach $1000 per kilogram. Unlike the Chinese, the Japanese do not overuse spices, as they consider them harmful to the stomach. Instead, several dozen soy sauces are used. The word “sushi,” which is popular in Russia, is rarely used by the Japanese. Each type of rice and fish roll has its own name - uramaki, futomaki, nigirizushi, and so on. Animal meat has long been banned in Japan due to religious beliefs. Now in most restaurants you can safely order pork or beef prepared in a way that is not prepared anywhere else in the world.

The active Aso volcano on the island of Kyushu has the largest double crater in the world.

School uniform skirts in Japan vary in length depending on age: the older the student, the shorter the skirt. If a woman's dress, skirt or shorts in Japan are short to the point that her panties and butt are visible, then this is normal. In addition, even in cold weather, autumn, winter or spring, schoolgirls are prohibited from wearing tights, only knee socks, as required by the school uniform. A deep neckline is unacceptable in Japan.

***

The Japanese are renowned for their strict hygiene and sanitation habits, so it's no surprise that they have toilet slippers, which are used to minimize contact between the unclean bathroom floor and the clean floor in the rest of the house.

It is difficult to talk about any prerequisites for Japan to become one of the leading export powers: the country has almost no raw materials, it is located on remote islands, and the Japanese language is often difficult, even for the Japanese themselves. However, Japanese products today are considered among the best in many industries, and sometimes even beyond competition. Not the least reason for this state of affairs is the religion of the Japanese, which determines their mentality. In Shintoism, work is considered the greatest virtue, and for a Japanese there is nothing worse than being out of work. Many managers work 6 days a week, leaving little time for family life. Arriving to work on time is considered bad manners in Japan. You need to be there at least half an hour earlier. The Japanese, in general, are considered a very hardworking nation - it is not customary here to take vacations, and they often work late at work. There is even a word in Japanese called “karoshi,” which literally translates to “death from overwork.” On average, every year 10,000 people die with this diagnosis (!!!). There is no concept of “senior” in Japan. By law, every employment contract is concluded with a person for life, and the employee can hold a position as long as his health allows him to perform his duties. Government officials can manage the markets and investments of large concerns on a scale unimaginable by US and European standards. And this brings success. It is in high-tech areas that used to be the domain of, for example, Germany, that the Japanese now have practically no equal: the production of motorcycles, televisions, video equipment, computers, copy machines and other similar products is almost completely controlled by the Japanese.

The Japanese automobile industry is the largest in the world: 10,000,000 cars roll off the production line every year.
(!!!) cars, and 2/3 are exported. Consistent rationalization and mechanization of production minimized the percentage of defects and reduced production costs.

On Valentine's Day in Japan, only girls give gifts and show affection.

Japanese mayonnaise is no different from ordinary mayonnaise, but it is its use that makes the Japanese strange. While the rest of the world typically uses mayonnaise on sandwiches and salads, the Japanese use traditional Kewpie mayonnaise for... ice cream, chips and even pancakes.

One of the manifestations of Japanese fetish is the purchase and sale of used panties. High school girls put on fresh panties in the morning, and in the evening the already worn and stale panties are sold to special sex shops. Then these panties are beautifully packaged and sold to anyone who wants them. An office clerk who is tired from work can calmly brighten up his leisure time in front of the TV with porn by pulling fragrant panties over his head. It is not surprising that one of the most common thefts in Japan is the theft of washed women's panties from balconies. But there is no smell in washed panties, therefore, concerned Japanese men have to take extreme measures - stealing panties from school locker rooms... Once, in Japan, a 55-year-old worker in a store was caught, who was accused of stealing women's panties from his neighbors. The woman who called the police most likely thought that he was just another loser pervert, but when the police came to search the man’s house, they found more than 3,000 (!!!) women’s panties.

On the shelves of Japanese grocery stores there are some very strange products - horseradish-flavored chocolate, blueberry-flavored potato chips and even carbonated tomato juice. The attitude towards drinks in Japan is very specific. Here you can try cucumber-flavored Pepsi or coffee-flavored Coca-Cola. Very often the Japanese resort to food coloring. For example, ginger turns pink only after coloring - its natural color is pale yellow. And flying fish caviar, which is so popularly used for various types of sushi, is generally colorless.

In the northern cities of Japan, all sidewalks are heated, so there is never ice here. However, in Japan there is no central heating. Everyone heats the apartment as best they can.

While in the Western world, falling asleep in the office is considered unacceptable behavior, which can result in a reprimand or worse, Japanese business culture allows office workers who work so much to do so-called “inemuri”—napping in the workplace. Some employees even imitate inemuri to make their bosses think they are working really hard.

Investments in research and development of technology in Japan are greater than anywhere else in the world.

Japanese hosts are, in the modern world, male geishas. It will be very strange for a European woman that they will pay a lot of money just to hear compliments addressed to them from the lips of these same hosts. Their appearance, or rather their hairstyle, will also be very strange. The hosts are carefully trained, they know how to move, dress and smile in a special way, using all their skills of proper communication with the client to promote her. They skillfully establish strong interpersonal contact over drinks, trying to draw the woman in so that they can continue to dynamize her for as long as possible. Only very wealthy people can afford this kind of communication. The host is an incredibly nice guy who offers himself as a companion for the evening. With him you can feel like the heroine of a wonderful fairy tale or novel, but you shouldn’t forget yourself, because the main goal of the host is to extract as much money from you as possible.

Japan's high-speed passenger rail lines are called Shinkasen ("new gauge"). In 1964, the first such line put into operation was unique for its time. Japan is the only country in the world where a train delay of 1 minute is considered a significant delay.


“Japanese super toilets” - toilet seats with a water supply function that will wash... the butt and genitals. And although the Japanese have long been accustomed to such... care, foreigners are sometimes frightened by such a charge in the ass.

In Japan, even the grocery store sells pornography. In every konbini (grocery store), there is always a separate shelf with hentai on the press counter. In small bookstores, hentai makes up a third of the total assortment; in large bookstores, 2-3 floors are reserved for pornography (!!!). Hentai is allowed to be freely sold to minors (!!!). The two most popular genres of hentai are violence and underage sex. Having wrapped the cover, hentai is quietly read on the subway.

There are no guest workers in Japan. This is achieved by a simple law: the minimum salary at which it is allowed to hire a foreign worker in Japan exceeds the average salary of a Japanese worker. Thus, the path to the country remains open for highly paid specialists, and unskilled migrant labor does not dump the wages of local residents.

Until recently, the widespread custom of yobai, or “stalking in the night,” in the Japanese hinterlands was an introduction to sexuality for many young people. The yobai consisted of the following: a mysterious stranger slipped into the room of a sleeping girl (or not quite a girl anymore), positioned himself behind her and ambiguously declared his intentions. If the young lady didn’t mind, the couple would have sex until the morning, trying to make as little noise as possible, after which the night visitor would just as quietly leave. Logically, the young man-yobaist should have known the girl and her family. Often the yobai was a kind of prelude to a further wedding, and the parents, supposedly, did not notice the secret visits and allegedly did not hear anything, but at one fine moment they “caught” the yobaist, publicly reproached him, he blushed and agreed to everything, and after a couple days, the couple went down the aisle to indulge in sex legally. But it often happened that during the harvest, when the peasant hired foreign migrant workers, he had to be prepared for the fact that the workers sleeping under the same roof with him could well choose his daughter as an object for yobai. In some cases, a group of young people went several kilometers to a neighboring village, and then yobai became an exciting night adventure with a complete stranger. Some were not particularly lucky with girls, and they found themselves in a strange position - once they climbed into the house and discovered the sleeping ugly one, there was no turning back. After all, otherwise the young man could have been accused of theft and, God forbid, killed on the spot. In fact, the girl’s firm consent is not required, yobai is not considered rape, the main thing is to follow some rules: you must enter the house naked (you cannot attack a naked person who has entered the house, because he is most likely engaged in yobai, not theft ). Even if you are completely naked, you should try to remain quiet. You need to practice safe sex - cover your face with a cloth or mask to protect yourself and the lady from shame if for some reason she suddenly starts screaming: “Save me! They're raping me!" Yobai is still practiced in Japan, although less so.

To the southeast of Honshu is the island of Miyakejima with the active Oyama volcano. Since its last eruption, there has been a constant leak of poisonous gas, forcing everyone on the island to wear gas masks... all the time! If a sharp rise in sulfur content is noticed in the air, alarms are triggered.

In homes and a number of public institutions in Japan, it is customary to take off your shoes. Having taken off your shoes, you must turn them with your toes towards the exit - this is the requirement of the ancient custom.

Beer in Japan is sold only in glass bottles of the same shape, which the buyer must return to the store for reuse.

This country has one of the highest suicide rates. Every year, more than 30,000 (!!!) men and women take their own lives: it is estimated that 24.4 people out of 100,000 Japanese citizens are likely to commit suicide. Suicide has become a serious problem in Japan: in fact, it is the leading cause of death for women aged 15 to 34 and men aged 20 to 44. Why does this happen in a wealthy, highly developed country? Apparently, Japan has a big problem with unemployment. If they suddenly fail to keep their jobs, many former employees take their own lives. The saddest thing is that, most often, young people commit suicide due to problems with work, many of them are recent university graduates. Other causes of suicide among Japanese are depression and financial difficulties.

Capsule hotels first appeared in Tokyo in 1979 and, since then, have successfully served hundreds of thousands of clients - from busy businessmen to drunks who are afraid to go home late at night.

At no-pan kissa (no panties cafe), the waitresses wear short skirts and nothing underneath. Visitors are willing to pay twice as much for food and drinks as in other places, just to see a little more than decency dictates. And for a generous tip, you can ask the waitress to get something from the top shelf or, conversely, ask to pick up a fallen fork or spoon from the floor. Many of these establishments are lined with mirrors to prevent visitors from spraining their necks while looking at the staff. By the way, there is no end to girls who want to work as waitresses: firstly, they pay a lot, secondly, the aforementioned tips, and thirdly, all establishments adhere to a “no-touch” policy. The first no-pan kissa, called Johnny's, opened in Kyoto in 1978, and then places like Mushrooms began popping up all over Japan. Moreover, the cafes were replaced by quite serious restaurants, serving mainly shabu-shabu or yakiniku (meat prepared directly on the table by the client himself). Recently, the police are increasingly shutting down such establishments for “nudity in public places,” but their owners are not embarrassed, they install mirrored floors, cameras mounted in them, broadcasting everything directly to mini-screens on the tables, and force the girls to put on panties. True, absolutely transparent.

In Japan, men are always served first. In a restaurant, the man is the first to place an order, and the drink is brought to him first. In stores they always greet the man first.

Public transport in Tokyo transports 24,000,000 people (!!!) every day.

The misconception about the special “coolness” of the Japanese mafia “Yakuza” appeared thanks to numerous films on this topic. “Yakuza”, as a rule, are somewhat more cultured and less aggressive, which is explained by rich traditions. Japanese organized crime controls the shadow economy and illegal businesses. Just like in other countries, Japan also has unorganized crime, which is the most dangerous for ordinary citizens, but its level is significantly lower than, for example, in Russia or on Ukraine . As for culture and traditions, the Yakuza code of honor contains the concept of charity, which is synonymous with the word heroism. When, for example, there was a terrible earthquake and tsunami in Japan in 2011, the Yakuza sent tons of food, water, medicine and warm clothes to evacuation centers in the affected areas. In addition, representatives of the yakuza in many prefectures were the first to arrive at the scene of the tragedy, providing assistance to the wounded and rescuing the injured.

The Japanese have the intention of replacing the hieroglyphic script, once borrowed from China, with the Latin alphabet.

Nyotaimori is a ceremony of eating sushi and rolls from a naked female body. It should be noted that the intimate parts of the body are always covered with some kind of garnish, in extreme cases - a lotus leaf, otherwise the degree of closure depends on the modesty of the model. But, more often than not, there is still no porn – pure aesthetics. Body sushi gained particular popularity in the West in the 90s, although in Japan itself, establishments where food is served in this way are rather an exception, often belonging to mafia structures, rather than a widespread mainstream. In addition to simply being a beautiful sight, it is believed that a woman, as a serving table, heats food to body temperature - the most natural temperature for absorption by the body. Although many who try it are not at all delighted with warm sushi, slightly damp with sweat. The nyotaimori profession is extremely nervous and delicate in every sense of the word. After all, girls need to be trained to lie for hours without moving, without flinching, food scattered in different directions, from touching with chopsticks, not always gentle, or from cold water or hot tea accidentally getting on their skin. They must be carefully shaved and squeaky clean (although many restaurateurs, caring about hygiene, still cover the girl’s body with transparent cling film). Logically, she should also be a virgin, because it is believed that their body odor is pleasant and does not spoil food. Although now this point is almost not observed. On the other hand, strict rules have also been introduced for clients - you cannot talk to the “plate”, annoy it or insult it. But you can grab sushi from your body directly with your lips. To finish off the meal, we can’t help but mention wakama sake. Warm sake is poured onto the girl’s body and drunk from the “bowl” formed by her tightly clenched thighs. Wakame is seaweed, in this case it refers to the pubic hairs floating in the drink. Although, of course, wakame sake is not as widely practiced as nyotaimori.

The collection of the most ancient Japanese poems dedicated to Mount Fuji is called “Manyoshu” and occupies 10,000 pages (!!!).

It was in 2012 that millions of people became acquainted with the subculture of “donut heads” - people who pump medical saline under the skin on their foreheads to create an artificial donut-shaped tumor. A dropper with 400 ml of saline solution, a few hours of time - and for almost a day you will wear a huge “donut” on your head and scare people with the sight of a terrible fairy-tale monster. Canadian photographer Jerome Abramovich was the first to inject saline solution under the skin on the forehead back in the early 2000s. But the phenomenon became as popular (as possible) in 2012, when “donut heads” were shown on Japanese television (they were looking for unusual types after the Fukushima disaster) and the National Geographic channel in a program from the “Taboo” series. The procedure also carries a certain danger: you can cause an infection or dehydrate the body if you make a mistake and take a solution that is too saturated.

In Japan, raw horse meat, also called basashi, is considered a delicacy and is served in many restaurants. This is not a new fad - the Japanese have been eating raw horse meat for many decades. Basashi is much healthier than pork and beef, and it is much more difficult to catch E. coli from it. Horse meat is high in protein and linoleic acid, but low in calories. In addition, horse meat may be able to prolong life. Demographic data published in 2013 showed that people from Nagano Prefecture live the longest in Japan: the average life expectancy is 80 years for men and 87 for women. Their secret is that they eat horse meat.

Japan is the only Empire today. The dynasty of emperors in Japan has never been interrupted - the current Emperor Akihito is a direct descendant of Jimmu, who founded Japan in 711 BC.

Imekura (image clubs) differ from ordinary brothels or “love hotels” in that they indulge all the basest fantasies of local males. There are only a few rooms here, but they are all decorated differently - like a school classroom, an office, a locker room or another completely public place. For men here, nothing seems to excite them more than the prospect of having sex in public places. Of course, each room is equipped with an “actress” ready for anything: in the hospital ward - a nurse, in the office - a secretary, in the classroom - a schoolgirl or a strict teacher. Each of them plays, at first, the role of the touchy-feely, as it should be. By the way, in very special cases they can even build an analogue of a subway car, where those who dream of becoming a Chican can touch supposedly unsuspecting schoolgirls.

Catering establishments all over the world use canned food, but it was at the Japanese restaurant Mr. Kanso visitors eat unheated canned food directly from the cans using plastic knives and forks and wash it all down with drinks exclusively from plastic utensils. The canned goods store in Osaka existed since 2002, but in 2012 it was turned into a restaurant (it must be said that no drastic changes were required). Despite all the doubtfulness, Mr. Kanso has become wildly popular and the 10th restaurant under this name will soon open.

The name "Fujiyama" is most likely borrowed from the Ainu language and means "god of fire." The Ainu people are an ethnic minority living on the island of Hokkaido who try to protect their culture from foreign influences. The Ainu, who once made up the main population of the island of Hokkaido, previously lived in the territories of Russia, in particular in the south of Kamchatka, Sakhalin and the Kuril Islands. A distinctive feature of the Ainu is their European appearance. Today, about 30,000 descendants of the Ainu live in Japan, however, over many centuries they managed to assimilate with the Japanese.

Women have only been allowed to summit Mount Fuji since 1867. The first lady to climb, in 1867, was Lady Parkes, the wife of an English diplomat. It is believed that the first ascent of the mountain was made by an unknown monk in 663. Today, everyone who wants to climb to the top of Fuji is given a free trash bag at the beginning of the ascent, since littering in the national park is strictly prohibited. For travelers on the slopes, there are also dry toilets, albeit for a fee.

The Japanese love vending machines - there are about 5,520 different ones scattered across the country. Over the years, these machines have improved significantly, some of them are very convenient, others are completely strange. In most countries, vending machines usually sell snacks: chips, candy, soda. But the Japanese combine the practicality of vending machines with their love of innovation and everything unusual. In Japan, it is completely normal to buy fresh eggs, bags of rice, bouquets of fresh flowers, toilet paper, condoms, umbrellas, live fish, porn magazines - anything you can imagine from vending machines. Unusual, but at the same time very convenient.

Japan is a small country, but a lot of people live in it. That's why the apartments here are tiny and very expensive. Young Japanese live under the same roof with their parents and grandparents, and share their room with sisters and brothers. As a rule, the walls of the apartment are so thin that you can hear everything the neighbors are doing. And what they do in bed, too. What should you do if you want to scream loudly from orgasm or swear at the top of your lungs? There is only one answer: go to “slave hotera”. This name is a distortion of the English love hotel, that is, “hotel of love.” The forerunners of “love hotels” appeared four hundred years ago. In those days, brothels in Japan were called "tea houses." Almost everyone had a separate entrance or even a whole system of secret tunnels through which clients of prostitutes entered the chambers of their mistresses. And in the 20th century, entrepreneurs appeared who began to rent out spare rooms in their houses for prostitutes and their clients. The heyday of this business came in 1958, when prostitution in Japan was officially prohibited. But just then, it turned out that the demand for “love hotels” was also from ordinary guys and girls, and even married couples who wanted to be alone, without relatives. The variety of styles is amazing: skyscrapers, palaces, even a flying saucer... One of the most famous “love hotels” is built in the form of a luxurious castle. Usually owners try to give them foreign names. Here no one will meet you at the entrance: not the doorman, not the administrator, not even the smiling girl at the reception. In such hotels, the staff tries to be as inconspicuous as possible so as not to embarrass visitors. Some hotels are designed in such a way that you cannot see the staff or other guests at all. The reception desk is separated by a mirror partition so that employees and guests do not see each other. This way, hotel guests can maintain anonymity. You can pay for a few hours or the whole night. There is no need to book rooms in advance. Some rooms of the “love hotel” look like regular hotel rooms, only more spacious. You will have a TV with adult channels and a bed of such a size that a luxury room in a regular hotel will seem too modest. But, if this is not enough, in “love hotels” you can make almost any fantasy come true. For example, have sex on a spinning bed or on a mattress filled with sea water in which fish swim. Some rooms are furnished like a school classroom or a doctor's office. Many rooms have special facilities for bondage, spanking and other BDSM elements. There are costumes and accessories available to play teacher and student or, say, patient and nurse.

The most famous photographs and paintings depict the sacred Mount Fuji with its snow-capped peak appearing to float against a backdrop of blue skies. And, in fact, only 2 months a year the mountain can be seen without its white cover.

Japan is prohibited from having a standing army or participating in wars.

The Sea of ​​Japan is 3 times smaller than the Mediterranean.

The city of Minamata is located on the Japanese island of Kyushu. A disease is named after him, which is transmitted to people through marine animals infected with mercury and leads to weakening of the senses. In the most severe cases, minamata is fatal.

The Japanese buried radioactive waste in the southern part of the Sea of ​​Japan.


Tokyo is the safest metropolis in the world - here six-year-old children can safely use public transport on their own.

Many people associate the word “tanuki” with Japan, although not all Europeans know what it is. Tanuki are a representative of raccoon dogs that live on the Japanese islands - the only one of the entire species that hibernates for the winter. In ancient times, some tanuki built temples and were worshiped as gods. Nowadays in Japanese speech you can find several humorous sayings related to this animal. Tanuki-o-suru means someone deliberately pretending to be asleep when immediate action is required. “Tanuki-oyaji” is often called a cunning old man who plots good-natured intrigues for someone, and “tanuki-baba” is just a grumpy old woman.

1609 - the time of drawing up a deed of gift to the Shinto shrine Hongyu Sengen, according to which Mount Fuji is still its property.

Previously, Japanese traffic lights used blue instead of green. The color was changed long ago, but the habit of calling traffic lights blue (“aoi”) remains.

Shibari, or kinbaku, is an ancient Japanese art of bondage that occupies a dominant role in Japanese erotica and the art of sex, the basis of which is the traditional theme of dominance and submission. But the ideology of shibari itself contrasts sharply with the Western view of tying up a partner. Because nawashi (“one who binds”) does this not anyhow, but using intricate asymmetrical rope structures.In addition, the entire art of shibari is focused on awakening voluptuousness in the zhuzhun (“one who submits to tying”) and receiving the greatest pleasure. MMeanwhile, the art of Japanese bondage comes from hojojitsu - a medieval military technique for capturing enemies, when samurai tied prisoners tightly and reliably, without causing them pain, but excluding the possibility of escape.Shibari practitioners unanimously claim that submission and humiliation actually liberates a woman, or at least allows her to escape the confines of generally accepted conventions.

43 meters, at an angle of 121°, in 2 seconds there is a sheer fall from the Takabisha slide in an amusement park in Yamanashi Prefecture, which became the reason for its inclusion in the Guinness Book of Records.

3 monkeys covering their ears, eyes and mouth with their paws are the national symbol of the non-action of evil - “mizar, kikazaru, ivazaru”, which translates as “see no bad, hear no bad, say no bad.”

4 is a hieroglyph, which also means death, therefore, there are no floors, chambers and rooms with No. 4 in the buildings.

Japan is home to a huge number of martial arts - karate, judo, aikido and many others were invented here.

The speed of 480 km/h (!!!) is achieved by a Japanese train, such as the “MLXoi maglev” - one of the world speed record holders.

After Japan's defeat in World War II, the island of Okinawa was separated from the rest.
state and was under the control of the United States of America for 27 long years. Accordingly, they built a huge number of military bases in this territory. In 1972, Okinawa peacefully came under the jurisdiction of Japan, although some of its politicians thought about sovereignty for the island. The fact is that from the Middle Ages until 1879, the Ryukyu kingdom, independent of the other islands, was located here. The local population even had their own Ryukyun language, which was hardly understood by other Japanese. Ryukyu is now considered an endangered dialect, although it is sometimes used at folk festivals.

In Japan, it is not customary to tip; it is considered an insult to the service staff. Leaving money over the check, in the minds of the Japanese, devalues ​​his work and is perceived as a handout.

There are no trash cans on the streets of Japanese cities. Garbage containers can be found in cafes, hotels and some stores.

***

The Tsushima Current (Kuroshio) carries warm water from the south along the eastern shores of the Sea of ​​Japan. Cold water is carried from the north by the Kuril Current (Oyashio), which runs along the mainland.

One of the world's fastest elevators is located in Tokyo, in eastern Ikebukuro, in the Sunshine 60 skyscraper. This elevator takes passengers to the 60th floor in 35 seconds.

Fugu fish is one of the most expensive and deadly dishes in Japanese cuisine. « He who eats fugu is a fool, but so is he who does not eat it. » , - this is a popular proverb in Japan. Fugu fish is a true legend of Japanese cuisine, an object of horror, curiosity and lust for gourmets around the world.The cost of a set lunch, the basis of which is fugu, can exceed $1,000. One fish in Japan sells for about $300. Such a high cost is justified not only by the relative rarity of the fish, but also by the complexity of its preparation.The fact is that the body of the fugu is literally saturated with the deadly poison tetrodotoxin. In one fish, which easily fits in the palm of your hand, it will be enough to poison 30 - 40 people (!!!). Tetrodotoxin is 10 times (!!!) more toxic than the famous poison curare and 400 times (!!!) more toxic than strychnine. The venom of the fugu quickly paralyzes the muscles and leads to respiratory arrest. It is possible to save a poisoned person only if he is immediately taken to an artificial respiration and circulatory support apparatus. There is no effective antidote for tetrodotoxin yet. Fugu fish is included in the list of the 10 most dangerous foods in the world. If you touch the insides of a fish with your bare hand, you can die almost immediately. Therefore, the work of those chefs who know how to cook fugu is well paid in Japan. A person who decides to try this deadly dish must understand that his life completely depends on the skill of the specialist who will prepare it. By the way, the exclusivity of the fugu is added by the fact that its fishing and sale are prohibited in many countries of the world.

The small Sengakuji Temple is known throughout Japan. It was here that on December 14, 1702, 47 ronin (samurai left without a master) committed suicide, avenging the death of their master. Knowing that they would be condemned to death, they still decided to kill the person responsible for his death. This plot is one of the most popular in Japanese art.

The Yoshiwara area was the most famous entertainment district in Edo-Tokyo until the beginning of the 20th century. Opened back in 1626, by personal order of Shogun Ieyasu Tokugawa, this red light district provided employment to thousands of courtesans. Many legends are associated with Yoshiwara about men who lost their heads and fortunes because of their love for the beautiful inhabitants of these quarters.

There are different versions of the origin of the name Fuji, but none of them is reliable. “Immortality”, “incomparable”, “inexhaustibility”, “divine fire”, “slim as a ear of rice” - all these assumptions are beautiful, but doubtful. Japanese toponymist Kanji Kagami argued that the word "fuji" has the same root as the words "wisteria" and "rainbow". The image of the mountain was even embodied in a young girl wearing a wide-brimmed hat and a wisteria branch on her shoulder. “Dance of a Girl with Wisteria” is included in the repertoire of the Kabuki Theater.

The name Mount Fuji, familiar to Russian ears, is not entirely correct. "Yama" in Japanese already means "mountain", that is, this part of the word is redundant. The Japanese themselves call the holy mountain respectfully: Fuji-san.

Surrounding Mount Fuji is the gloomy Aokigaharu Forest. He is notorious in Japan. Firstly, due to the influence of magnetic fields and the volcanic landscape, it is easy for a traveler to get lost here. And secondly, and this is the main thing, Aokigahara is called the “suicide forest”. More than 30 people commit suicide here every year. It is the second most popular suicide site in the world, after the Golden Gate Bridge in San Francisco.

Japan's population is extremely homogeneous, but there are two exceptions. The first is about 600,000 Koreans. The second is about 3,000,000 Buraku-min, descendants of the medieval caste of cattle slaughterers, leather workers and scavengers, considered “people of dirty labor.”

***

There is an assumption that the prototype of the national symbol of Russia - the nesting doll - was a figurine of the Buddhist monk Fukurumu brought from the island of Honshu, which contained several figures nested one inside the other.

"Harakiri" literally means "cutting the stomach." The Japanese themselves call the ritual “seppuku”. Seppuku was committed only in cases where the samurai's honor was tarnished: if he could not protect his master from death, or as punishment for a serious offense in the family circle. Adherents of the Zen Buddhism religion believed that the stomach is the repository of the human soul. Therefore, death through cutting it open was considered noble and thoughts sincere. Seppuku was committed in front of many witnesses. In addition, above the suicide stood the kaishaku - a warrior who, after hara-kiri, had to cut off the samurai’s head so that no one would see the face of the murdered man, distorted with pain. The seppuku ritual itself was performed with the help of a tachi (long sword), wakizashi (short sword) or tanto (knife). In the absence of kaishaku, the samurai had to stab himself in the throat with a blade after hara-kiri. When the seppuku ceremony was performed, the samurai dressed in a white kimono and was served his favorite dish and a glass of sake. It was imperative to sit in a stable position so that after the blow the body remained in the same position. Part of the blade of the blade was wrapped in paper, which the samurai held onto (not the handle). The suicide bomber had to first make a jerk from left to right, and then up - so that the insides would fall out, “baring the soul” of the warrior. Seppuku was officially banned by the government only in 1968. But, until now, Yakuza crime bosses take their own lives in this way.

The area of ​​the island of Hokkaido is approximately equal to the territory of Austria .

***

There are many hot springs throughout Hokkaido. The most interesting of them is Jigokudani, or the Valley of Hell. The area received such an ominous name because of the numerous geysers that periodically soar above the ground. Japanese macaques are big fans of swimming in the geothermal waters of local springs. Here they can often be found in winter.

***

Kyushu is the 37th largest island in the world; it is smaller than Spitsbergen, but larger Taiwan.

***

The city of Chiran, near Kagoshima, is famous for having a training base for kamikaze pilots during World War II. Here they trained and from here they took to the skies for the last time, setting off on a mission.

***

Osaka's 16-story Gate Tower is an amazing building: an expressway runs right through it on the 4th to 7th floors. The building was built later than the road, and since land in Japan is expensive and scarce, they decided not to lose a convenient location and simply built a building over the highway. The only inconvenience is that office elevators from the fourth floor, without stopping, go straight to the eighth.

***

There are about 1,300 bridges in Osaka.

***

Midosuji Boulevard in Osaka is lined with ginkgo trees, whose name means “silver apricot” in Japanese. This is truly a living fossil - a miracle of botany: the ginkgo that has survived to this day (presumably a descendant of the most ancient seed ferns) is the only representative of the ginkgo class. This relic was widespread in the Mesozoic era, and is now mainly cultivated in botanical gardens. Its seeds, boiled or fried, have long been consumed as food, and the Chinese and Japanese used them for medicinal purposes. Today, pharmacology is once again turning to the healing qualities of this plant and using it in preparations for the treatment of blood vessels.

***

Mr. Denbei, the son of an Osaka merchant, became the first Japanese whose visit to Russia was documented. True, the visit was quite accidental: the merchant’s ship literally washed up on the shores of Kamchatka, where Denbey landed in 1695, and by 1701 the brave man reached Moscow . There the Tsar's people noticed the Japanese, and Peter I hired him as a Japanese teacher.

***

American sculptor and designer of Japanese origin Isamu Noguchi designed floating fountains for Osaka: their transparent support is hidden by water, which creates the illusion of floating.

***

Hot springs warm the water in the Toyohira River, so you can swim in it even in winter.

***

At the Sapporo Snow Festival, very large structures are built, for example, a castle over 20 meters high and weighing 2,000 tons (!!!).

In 1937, Sapporo was chosen to host the 1940 Winter Olympics, but Japan refused to host them due to the Second Sino-Japanese War that began in 1937. The IOC decided to hold the games in Saint Moritz, Switzerland , but the Swiss were unable to reach an agreement with the IOC. The IOC then proposed that the 1940 Games be held in Garmisch-Partenkirchen, Germany. But, in September 1939, Germany started World War II. The first post-war Winter Olympics took place in Saint Moritz only in 1948.

***

During the bombing of Sapporo in 1945, American bombers dropped 889,000 bombs on the city. 190 residents were killed, 6,788 were injured, and 78,000 were left homeless.

***


In the 15th century, the famous master of the tea ceremony, poet and garden architect Kobori Enshu, who agreed to lay out a park in Kyoto, set three conditions for the Shoun from the Tokugawa dynasty: not to limit his funds, not to rush the deadlines and not to let anyone in until the work was completed. Only in 1624, 4 years after the start of work, the first visitors were allowed into the Katsura Palace Park, who were delighted by its beauty.

***

The name of the temple Sanju-sangendo means “33”: this is the number of identical intermediate rooms between the columns, symbolizing the 33 stages of the incarnation of the goddess Kannon into man. The hall contains a row of 1,001 small Kannon statues.

***

The 56-meter five-story pagoda of To-ji Temple in Kyoto is the tallest in Japan.

***

Kyoto artist Miyazaki Yuzen (1654 - 1736) invented a special method of decorating fabric, which received his name: yuzen zome. This method allows you to reproduce subtle graphic designs on clothing and is still a type of decoration specific to Japan.

Respect for the ancient capital of Japan, Kyoto, is so high among the country's population that the Japanese strive to visit this city at least once in their lives, and a third of the country's population visits the city annually.

Suma is the tallest temple in Kobe. There are 120 very high steps leading to its top. In ancient times, only priests were allowed to climb to the top of the temple to be closer to the god, and the high steps forced them to bow to their deity with every step up.

The Akashi-Kaikyo Bridge crosses the Akashi Strait and connects the city of Kobe with the city of Awaji on the island of the same name. The bridge, with a total length of 3,911 meters, was opened in 1998 and is the longest suspension bridge in the world.

Kinsen Hot Spring, near Kyoto, is called "golden » for yellow-brown water containing iron and salts. Ginsen is called "silver » , since the water in it is colorless and contains radium and carbonate. There is so much iron in Kinsaeng water that if you leave a towel on, after a while it will turn completely red.

Throughout the world, the city of Kobe is known for its breweries and sake factories, as well as for its special type of meat - marbled beef, which is produced here using special technologies.

While Yokohama is a port that mainly specializes in imports, Kobe ships goods for export.

In 1910 to the Ryukyu Islands from India The mongoose was introduced to help local residents cope with the invasion of the poisonous habu snake (a type of viper).

The island of Okinawa holds the record for the number of long-livers: the average life expectancy for men is 88 years, for women - 92 years, which is 10 to 15 years higher than in the rest of Japan.

The name of the island of Okinawa means “rope (twist) on the seashore,” which refers to its geographical features.

Off the coast of Okinawa there is a 20-kilometer coral reef - the largest in Japan.

The island of Okinawa is the birthplace of Japanese karate. Under the influence of Chinese varieties of wushu, the local style of tote (or Okinawa-te) was formed.

At low tide, between the islands of Iriomote and Yufu, crossing is carried out on an ox cart.

Previously, the Ryukyu Islands were called the Lycean Islands. Thus, the Japanese name of the archipelago was imitated - Liu Kiu, or Rio Kiu.

Only in Okinawa are they made figurines of shisa - demons that look like lions and dogs that guard houses. There are usually two figures: one with an open mouth (she does not let evil spirits into the house), the second with a closed mouth (she does not let good things out of the house).

The underwater pyramid of Yonaguni is a strange formation off the coast of the Ryukyu Islands. A large monolithic structure, this pyramid looks both artificial and natural at the same time.

From Yokohama, many European technical and household innovations spread across Japan: gas jets, electric lamps, telegraphs, running water, Western-style buildings, telephones, soap, sewage systems, hairdressers, photo studios and even prosthetics.

American air raid on May 29, 1945, known in history as « The Great Air Raid on Yokohama” lasted 1 hour and 9 minutes. During this time, bombers destroyed 42% of buildings in the city.

Unlike the other three large islands of the Japanese archipelago - Kyushu, Hokkaido and Honshu, Shikoku has no volcanoes at all.

Pilgrims visiting the 88 sacred sites of Shikoku Island are easily identified by their white jackets bearing the inscription "Doyoninin", which means "Travel Two, Travel Together".

Shikoku is home to the oldest surviving national theater (kabuki) in Japan, called Kamamaru-za. The theater is declared a cultural heritage of Japan, the performance is given only once a year, and tickets are incredibly expensive.

The emblem of Nagoya, approved in 1907, is the hieroglyph “eight » , enclosed in a circle. In Japanese mythology, the number eight represents infinity, therefore, the emblem symbolizes endless development and prosperity. This is an ancient symbol of the medieval rulers of the city from a side branch of the Tokugawa family.

Four scientists from Nagoya State University were awarded the Nobel Prize.

Nagoya is famous for, among other things, the production of exquisite porcelain dolls for girls' festival and boys' festival. These exquisite dolls are not for play: throughout the year they decorate something like an iconostasis, a must in every Japanese family, and children receive them only on girls’ holidays and boys’ holidays.

There is much evidence of the use of kites during wars. They were used in reconnaissance, for transmitting signals and commands, and warning about the beginning or end of a war. Kite lines were thrown onto castle towers in order to catch on, climb onto the roof and penetrate into the premises. One of the plays of the traditional kabuki theater, “The Stealing of Fish Scales,” included the following plot: a peasant turned robber, with the help of a kite, managed to get to the “kinshachi” - golden fish figurines with tiger heads that decorate the roof of Nagoya Castle, and steal its precious scales. If this is true, then it was not easy: the castle stands on the top, consists of five levels and seven floors. Before the construction of skyscrapers, golden dolphins could be seen ten kilometers away.

Why hammerhead sharks gather in large numbers just off Yonaguni Island is one of its mysteries.

Only Yonaguni in Japan produces hanazake - a strong alcoholic drink, a type of Okinawan rice vodka awamori (sake).

Yakushima Island's hydroelectric dams provide more than half of the island's electricity. Excess electricity was used for the company's experiments « Honda » : hydrogen was produced here for the engines of new car models. However, there is not a single hydrogen fueled car on the island itself, but the local municipality uses electric cars.

Yakushima Island is the largest nesting site for loggerhead sea turtles in the North Pacific Ocean.

Formed more than 4 million years ago, Lake Biwa is second in age only to lakes Baikal and Tanganyika.

The city of Otsu is famous in Japan as a growing area for edible chrysanthemums, used in Japanese cuisine during the preparation of tempura dishes, as well as for garnishing sashimi dishes.

***

Deer roam completely freely in a park in the Japanese city of Nara. Everyone treats animals with respect
with the greatest respect, because according to Japanese mythology, when the first emperor of the country, Jimmu, descended from heaven, he rode into Nara on a deer. Since then, Nara deer have been considered descendants of the imperial deer, sacred but accessible creatures. To feed sika deer, shika-senbei deer food, a type of traditional Japanese rice cracker, is sold everywhere in the city. There are many posters in the city warning tourists that deer kick painfully, get into bags without asking, and can take children’s ice cream. Every year in October, the Shika-no-tsunokiri festival takes place in Nara, when deer are caught and their antlers that have managed to grow are cut off.

In 1907, in the Todai-ji Temple, two ancient iron swords decorated with gold, silver and glaze were found under the floor at the foot of a giant bronze statue of a seated Buddha. It was only in 2010 that museum officials announced that these were two sacred swords that had been lost for more than 1,250 years. Previously unnoticed inscriptions “Eken” and « Inken": these were swords donated to the temple in 756 by Empress Kome.

During the Nara period, emperors practiced various methods of dealing with the misfortunes that befell Japan. So, in 770, under Empress Shotoku, one million protective spells “Hyakumanto Dharani” were printed », which were placed in wooden models of pagodas for the purpose of ritual disposal of defilement.

In one of the first James Bond films, You Only Live Twice, Himeji Castle served as the setting for a secret ninja school.

Kegon Falls is notorious for numerous suicides, a wave of which took place at the beginning of the 20th century, after student Misao Fujimura committed suicide here in May 1903, suffering from unrequited love.

In Japan, the area of ​​rooms is traditionally measured in tatami mats, and this is even taken into account when developing the architectural design of a house. The standard dimensions and area of ​​a tatami are 90 x 180 cm (1.62 m²).

The classical ensemble of Japanese Shinto religious music, Gagaku, consists of three wind instruments (hichiriki, ryuteki and sho), three percussion instruments (kakko snare drum, shoko and taiko bass drum) and two string instruments - biwa and koto-so. All instruments are considered sacred, must be respected, and a complex set of ceremonies must be observed in their handling. The taiko drum was used in the worship of the wind god Susanoo.

Itsukushima's ritual torii gate is one of the country's most popular attractions: together with the Amanohashidate sandbar and Matsushima Bay, the view of the torii is included in the so-called « Three famous landscapes of Japan » .

Visitors to Itsukushima wait for low tide, walk from the island to the ritual torii gate and leave coins in the cracks of its supports.

In 2004, Itsukushima's torii gate was severely damaged by Typhoon Sognda, so much so that tourists and pilgrims had to temporarily stop accessing it.


In order to preserve the ritual purity of Itsukushima Island, women are taken from the island when they are due to give birth. The same rule applies to seriously ill and very old islanders.

There is not a single traffic light on Itsukushima Island.

Since the Okinawan city of Nago is located in a subtropical climate zone, it is one of the first cities in Japan where cherry blossoms begin to bloom and the Sakura Viewing Festival is held in January.

The Okinawan rail is a bird with a body length of up to 30 cm, which has almost lost the ability to fly, except perhaps to fly up to the lower branches of trees. It is listed in the International Red Book as an endangered species, as there is only one very small population and only in Okinawa. Her enemies are feral cats and dogs, mongooses, large-billed crows and massive deforestation (in particular, for the construction of golf courses). Many birds die on the roads without having time to jump out from under the wheels.

At the beginning of the Sengoku period (second half of the 15th century - beginning of the 15th century), there were 30 - 40,000 fortresses in Japan. During the same historical period throughout Europe, including Palestine and the island Cyprus , there were half as many castles - about 15,000. Unlike European castles, the location for which was chosen solely by the will of the feudal lord - in a gorge, on a plain or in the mountains - the Japanese built their fortresses, taking into account frequent and destructive earthquakes. First, they chose a hill of the required height, hewed the slopes into ledges along the contours of the future wall and lined it with stone. On this basis, the main tower was erected - the center of the fortification and the owner’s living quarters. Unlike medieval Europe, the Japanese did not build stone castles due to the constant threat of earthquakes. However, they always built a stone foundation for wooden towers (tenshu), which played the role of a kind of shock absorber during earthquakes. During the atomic bombing of Japan in 1945, Hiroshima Castle was completely burned down, but the stone foundation suffered only minor damage. Only a few stone castles were built in Japan, and one of the features of their equipment is that the tatami in them were made not from rice straw, but from dried edible plants that were used as food during the siege.

The Cypress obtufolia tree is highly valued in Japan for its high quality wood. It is used for the construction of palaces, temples, traditional theaters and baths. The wood has a lemon aroma, is pinkish in color and is highly resistant to rot.

The most amazing detail of the Ninomaru Palace is the so-called nightingale floors. The builders made metal-based floors in the corridors in such a way that when a person steps on them, they begin to make characteristic sounds reminiscent of nightingale trills. Such floors were laid in the corridors so that the sounds could warn people in the event of an intrusion by strangers.

In Japanese history, Tokugawa Ieyasu is called the Unifier of Japan. A cunning and resourceful politician, who was made so by the then political life in the country: almost all of his ancestors were beheaded, and the survivors, including Tokugawa Ieyasu himself, were expelled from their own residences. He hid in monasteries and was a prisoner in fortresses until he came into power and created the new powerful Tokugawa shogunate (clan).

***

The goddess Kannon in other countries where Buddhism is widespread is called in its own way: in China - Guanyin, in Korea - Gwangseum, in Vietnam- Quan Am. In most temples where there is an image of her, she appears with four, eight or a thousand arms. It is extremely rare (due to the technical complexity of translating the image into stone and paint) to find images of a goddess with 84,000 arms (!!!). The goddess needs such a number of hands in order to simultaneously come to the aid of as many as possible who are eager to participate. The eyes depicted on each palm help the goddess to find them.

Shogun Tokugawa Iemitsu (1604 - 1651), on whose orders the Kiyomizu-dera temple was restored, ruled Japan from 1623 until his death in 1651. The almost thirty-year reign during the years when other shoguns were replaced almost every year (poisoned, hanged, drowned or killed during rebellions) was explained by the severity with which Tokugawa Iemitsu suppressed any attempt to take up arms against him. Under pain of death, he forbade the samurai to change owners at their own discretion, slaughtered gangs of free samurai (highway robbers), and took away from the peasants everything that could resemble weapons. Equipment for working in the fields was given to them according to lists. And he even introduced something like registration, ordering all residents of the country to come to the nearest monastery and register. He banned Christianity as a mind-stimulating religion. The Japanese who were abroad during his reign were denied entry into their homeland so that they would not bring in corrupting ideas.

Water from the three streams of the Otava Falls is scooped up with a cup tied to a long pole. It is generally accepted that one stream gives longevity, the second - success in studies, the third - happiness in love. The Japanese consider drinking from all three streams in one visit a manifestation of blatant greed.

Ginza is a noisy and crowded place: the Ginza-Yonchome intersection in Tokyo is officially declared the busiest in the world.

Every day, more than 2,000 tons (!!!) of fish and seafood (more than 400 species) are sold at the Tsukiji wholesale fish market in Tokyo. In 2012, during an auction, a record was set that has not yet been broken: a bluefin tuna weighing 222 kg was sold for $1.8 million (!!!).

The Great Kanto Earthquake, with a magnitude of 7.9, occurred on September 1, 1923, completely destroying Tokyo and Yokohama. Its epicenter was located at sea, 90 km southwest of Tokyo. Over the course of two days, 356 (!) tremors occurred; a 12-meter tsunami wave arose in Sagami Bay, washing away all coastal villages. It is precisely known that 142,800 people died, 40,000 people, to this day, are listed as missing, over 1,000,000 (!!!) were left homeless. After the earthquake, the Japanese government seriously considered the need to move the capital. The memory of the terrible disaster is so strong that in 1960, after almost 40 years, the government declared September 1 as Natural Disaster Prevention Day.

The American Air Force bombed Tokyo in 1942 and 1944-1945. The total number of civilian deaths was up to 200,000. The most destructive was the bombing of March 9-10, 1945, which killed about 100,000 people and left 1,000,000 homeless. The Americans called this operation « Rendezvous House » , for the Japanese it remains forever « Night of black snow » .

1,500 cherry trees of 75 shapes and varieties were planted in Shinjuku Gyoen Imperial Park in Tokyo. A park -
one of the most popular places for hanami - the ancient Japanese tradition of admiring cherry blossoms in March - April.

Shinjuku is the busiest train station in the world, with 3.64 million passengers passing through the station every day. It was here, on the platforms of the Yama-note and Chuo lines, that the position of « passenger pusher » . Strong young people are selected for this job, literally pushing passengers into cars during rush hour.

The Tokyo government building was nicknamed by Tokyoites themselves « tax tower » , they were so outraged by its cost. The new government complex cost the city budget a billion dollars (!!!).

After the earthquake off the east coast of Honshu in 2011 (the Japanese themselves call it the Great East Japan Earthquake) on the roof of a skyscraper « Shinjuku Mitsui Building » Six large pendulums appeared in Tokyo. Installed in 2013, they will have to counteract tremors during the next earthquakes. According to calculations, the pendulums will halve the amplitude of the building’s vibrations, even during such a strong earthquake as in 2011, the magnitude of which was 9.1.

Shibuya Station is famous all over the world for the story of the Akita Inu dog Hachiko. Every day from 1925 to 1934 he came to the platform and waited for his deceased master, becoming a national celebrity. When the dog died, a day of mourning was declared in the country where he was everyone’s favorite. In memory of man’s faithful friend, a bronze monument was erected near the railway station, and « exit Hachiko » on the west side of the station is a popular meeting place. The dog's remains are kept stuffed at the National Science Museum.

Yoyogi Park in Tokyo, once the site of maneuvers and parades of the Tokyo garrison, was one of the main venues for the 1964 Summer Olympics. The marathon course ran throughout the area. Another special feature of the park is that it allows dogs to walk without a leash, but within the boundaries of one of three dog zones, distributed by breed and size of the animal.

The Ueno Zoo in Tokyo houses more than 2,600 animals from 464 species, including such rare animals as the Sumatran tiger and the western lowland gorilla. There are about a dozen pandas in the zoo, all of them are rented (each for approximately 1 million dollars (!!!) per year): all pandas in foreign zoos are considered the property of China. The only exception was Lin-Ling, who died in 2008: he was donated to Japan as a sign of Sino-Japanese friendship. Since the zoo is located in an area of ​​​​high seismic danger, once a year exercises are held to catch animals that have fled from their cages. The animals are portrayed by employees dressed in appropriate costumes. And since the zoo does not close on this day, a lot of people come here to watch the fascinating spectacle. In 1943, all the zoo animals were killed to avoid chaos in the streets if they ran away. In March 1945, Ray Halloran, a captive pilot of the American B-29 long-range heavy bomber, was placed stripped naked in an empty tiger cage for all to see. « Super-fortress » . According to Halloran's own recollections, he cried and prayed all the time.

During the period of Jesuit rule in Nagasaki in the 16th century, the city had a more humane civil code, different from the Japanese one, in which corporal punishment was used for the slightest offense. Foreigners who visited Nagasaki noted an unusually high number of children, compared to other Japanese cities. This was explained by the fact that in this Christian enclave there was an unspoken ban on the custom of “mabiki” or infanticide: strangulation of newborns, quite common in Japanese society of that time. "Mabiki" existed at the beginning of the twentieth century. As a rule, one or all of the twins were killed: it was believed that they were fiends of hell.

Tours to Japan special offers of the day

Japan has never ceased to amaze with its culture and traditions. The Japanese are distinguished by their special hard work, politeness, hospitality and many other positive qualities.

In this article we have prepared for you interesting facts about Japan and the Japanese. Surely some of the proposed facts will surprise you, since this one is extremely original.

For example:

  • Tipping is strictly not accepted in Japan. It is believed that as long as the client pays the prescribed price for the service, he remains on an equal footing with the seller.
  • People in Japan are very honest. If you lost your wallet on the subway, there is a 90% chance that it will be returned to the lost and found office.
  • Tokyo is the safest metropolis in the world. Tokyo is so safe that children as young as six can use public transport on their own.
  • In the northern cities of Japan, all sidewalks are heated, so there is never ice here.
  • In Japan, you can see vases with umbrellas on the streets. If it starts to rain, anyone can take it from a passerby, and then when the rain stops, it must be placed in a nearby vase.

So, let's begin!

Japanese food is a whole culture. If you have ever been to Japan, then there is no doubt that you understand what we are talking about. So, interesting facts about Japanese cuisine.

Ice cream with mayonnaise

In fact, the Japanese can eat this sweet not only with mayonnaise, but also with other “strange” ingredients: charcoal, chips, cactus and pancakes.

Slurp as loudly as possible

It may surprise you, but in Japan it is really not customary to eat food in silence, especially when you have been invited over. Here it is considered quite normal to slurp while eating and make other similar sounds to demonstrate how tasty it is to you.

Food on the edge

The fact is that if this fish is not properly cut, it can easily lead to death, which sometimes happens. However, this does not frighten the Japanese at all.

And even if the cook makes a mistake that leads to the death of the visitor, he will not suffer anything for it.

But he can rehabilitate his honor by eating the remains of the dish he prepared.

Another way to spend your lunch in an extreme way is to eat octopus.

The fact is that if the eater does not have time to swallow it in time, the octopus can crawl into his throat with its tentacles and cut off the oxygen supply.

Those who do not risk eating live octopuses are allowed to eat them dead. But it's not that simple! If you pour soy sauce on octopus tentacles, they will begin to shrink.

As a result, the dinner will seem “alive,” which will bring a decent Asian pleasure that is dubious for a European.

Unusual Pepsi

In Japan, this drink is especially popular. It comes in a variety of flavors: milk, yogurt, strawberry, and even pickled cucumber. You will not find such a variety of flavors in any country in the world.

Dolphin kebab

This dish is in great demand among the Japanese. An interesting fact is that they like to eat the meat of these mammals boiled, fried and even raw.

Interesting facts about education in Japan

  • In Japan, there is a practice of compulsory pre-school education. Young children are sent to such educational institutions at the age of 3 years. After this, each student must pass the relevant exams before enrolling in school.
  • In primary school, children are not given any homework. However, then their number increases every year.
  • To prevent Japanese schoolgirls' knee socks from falling off, they glue them directly to their feet with glue.
  • Students are required to wear a specific uniform. If, for example, someone decides to wear knee socks of the wrong color, they will be removed and confiscated.
  • There are no cleaning staff in schools, since cleaning classrooms falls on the shoulders of the students themselves.
  • Interesting fact: to learn Japanese, you need to master 2,500 letter symbols.
  • Every child should be able to read and write in three different ways: traditional Japanese, the Japanese version of Chinese, and the Latin alphabet.
  • The beginning of the school year in Japan does not begin on September 1st, but for some reason on April 6th.
  • Students are strictly prohibited from taking any food with them to school.
  • In higher education institutions, students have the discretion to choose the subjects that interest them.

Karosi

The Japanese are fanatical about their work. They are true workaholics, as a result of which they even have the corresponding term “karoshi”. It denotes death resulting from overwork.

It is considered quite normal for the Japanese to arrive at work half an hour before the scheduled time.

Japanese economy

Here is another interesting and curious fact that may surprise you. There is no central heating in Japan, although the country has very cold winters.

Every resident warms himself as best he can. In supermarkets you can buy special things that can give off heat for a long time if they are first placed in a microwave oven.

In addition, all members of a Japanese family bathe in the same water. Of course, you need to save money, but this seems to be too much...

About indecent

Despite the high culture and traditions of the Japanese, some interesting facts may simply shock you.

One example known to almost all tourists is the free sale of pornographic magazines.

They can be freely purchased anywhere, even in stores that sell food. Amazingly, even children are allowed to buy such literature by law.

It should be added here that in order to regulate by law the sexual life of young people and prevent the involvement of children in prostitution, the official uniform age of consent in Japan is 13 years.

However, it is overlapped by regional age limits, which differ in some prefectures but are set below 17 years. This age limit is set in Tokyo.

Perhaps because of this, in subway cars, harassment of unfamiliar girls is quite normal.

It has gotten to the point that during peak hours, additional carriages are added to the trains, in which only representatives of the fairer sex can be seated.

Friend-Alien

The Japanese are very respectful of each other. When meeting their brothers, they are ready to bow to the ground. And although they do not show open aggression towards foreigners, they will show indifference with their entire appearance.

About modesty

Even though the Japanese are generally modest, it can manifest itself in strange ways. For example, when taking a nude bath in open springs, they may put a scarf on their head as a sign of their modesty.

The logic in this case is quite simple: since the entire body except the head is under water, a scarf in this case is quite enough.

An interesting fact is that it is not customary for the Japanese to give each other money, as it is considered something indecent and offensive. They even pay off their debts in some kind of envelopes.

Myths about Japan and the Japanese

Since Japan seems to be a mysterious country to Europeans, there are many interesting facts, myths and misconceptions about it.

We have collected for you the most popular and widespread myths about Japan and the Japanese.

The Japanese have nowhere to live

There is a myth that this island nation is so small that there is not enough space for all its citizens to live a full life. This is not true, since Japan is larger in area than countries such as Germany and Italy.

In addition, one important and interesting fact is reliably known: in Japan they treat forests very carefully and do not resort to cutting them down to increase the residential area.

Martial arts

Many movies often show Japanese people who are fluent in various martial arts. Because of this, one may get the false impression that almost every representative of Japan is.

In fact, these rumors are greatly exaggerated. Just very strong. Of course, there are skilled fighters in Japan, but overall there are not that many of them. However, like any professional athletes.

Narrow eyes

We are used to calling this nation “narrow-eyed”, however, this is not so. In fact, the Japanese have the same eyes as ours. The cause of false perception is optical illusion.

An interesting fact is that it occurs only in Europeans, since they are accustomed to seeing a different arrangement of facial features. If it’s hard for you to believe this, try not to make a mistake when looking at it.

About alcohol

The attitude towards alcoholic beverages in Japan is twofold: that is, from complete denial to passionate drinking. Here, as in other countries, drunk people can be forgiven for some things that would be taken as an insult if they were sober.

However, there is one important rule in this regard: the morning after drinking, a Japanese must, under any circumstances, show up to work sober and on time.

Well friends, these are all the interesting facts about Japan that we wanted to tell you. If you know something on the topic that we did not indicate in the article, write about it in the comments.

Did you like the post? Press any button: