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The Taisho School, Brazil's first Japanese language school, opened in 1915 in São Paulo. [107] In some areas full-time Japanese schools opened because no local schools existed in the vicinity of the Japanese settlements. [108] In 1932 over 10,000 Nikkei Brazilian children attended almost 200 Japanese supplementary schools in São Paulo. [109]
Schools also played an active role in the history of the Japanese community in Brazil because, while Western communities, such as Germans and Poles, had the church as the main socializing nucleus, the Japanese had the school playing this role. In addition, the school reproduced the culture of their ancestors and maintained a nationalist ...
The Taisho School, Brazil's first Japanese language school, opened in 1915 in São Paulo. [10] In the 1980s, São Paulo Japanese supplementary schools were larger than those in other communities. In 1992 the São Paulo Metropolitan Area had 95 Japanese schools, and the schools in the city limits of São Paulo had 6,916 students. [9]
The Escola Japonesa de São Paulo [1] (Portuguese: [isˈkɔlɐ ʒɐpoˈnezɐ dʒi sɐ̃w ˈpawlu], "São Paulo Japanese School"; Japanese: サンパウロ日本人学校, romanized: Sanpauro Nihonjin Gakkō) is a Japanese international day school in Vila Prel [], Capão Redondo, Subprefecture of Campo Limpo, São Paulo, [2] operated by the Sociedade Japonesa de Educação e Cultura.
Japanese School of Manaus (Portuguese: Escola Japonesa de Manaus; Japanese: マナオス日本人学校 Manaosu Nihonjin Gakkō) is a Japanese international school in Manaus, Brazil. [1] The school, which has students between the ages of 6 and 15, has 15 Brazilian Japanese students and 12 Japanese students as of 2013. It was established to ...
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Associação Civil de Divulgação Cultural e Educacional Japonesa do Rio de Janeiro ("Civil Association of Japanese Educational and Cultural Dissemination of Rio de Janeiro"; Japanese: リオ・デ・ジャネイロ日本人学校 Rio de Janeiro Nihonjin Gakkō "Japanese School of Rio de Janeiro") is a Japanese international school in Cosme Velho, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.
Guido del Toro arrived in Brazil from Italy in 1914 and dedicated himself to the evangelization of Japanese immigrants. In 1928, he founded Japanese Catholic College of St. Francis Xavier in a rented house on Liberty Street. He received the present property in 1929 and by 1931 resituated the school there, still dedicated to serving the Japanese.