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TURNING JAPANESE PART 2
By: Dave Aldwinckle
The UMJ Volume 4.2
 
Naturalization into Japan is not easy but it is possible
My previous article discussed why people take Japanese citizenship. This article shows how it can be done.
 
Japanese naturalization, like naturalization procedures anywhere, has three stages --QUALIFICATION, DOCUMENTATION, and DELIBERATION. Each in turn:
To QUALIFY for citizenship, one must:
 
a) Be aged twenty or older,
b) Have lived here continuously for five years,
c) Respect the Japanese Constitution (i.e. not join subversive groups),
d) Demonstrate the means to support your family,
e) Relinquish other nationalities (Japan will soon be the only OECD country requiring this), and
f) Have no major criminal record.
 
Note what is not required: Eijuuken (Japan's "Green Card"), language proficiency (third-year elementary school suffices), or even quantifiable knowledge of Japanese culture (unlike, say, America, which has a history test).
 
However, Japan's hurdles are more subtle, and they become apparent in the next stage.
 
Next is DOCUMENTATION. Since all Japanese citizens have a Family Registry
(koseki touhon), to complete one you must present:
 
1) Your birth certificate and proof of citizenship,
 
2) Papers showing overseas family connections (parents' marriage, siblings, births, deaths, and anything else that would be listed, up to your grandparents, on a koseki).
 
This can be a hurdle, due to more complicated lifestyles and less thorough recording systems abroad. Unwed families, common-law marriages, annulments, adoptions, surname changes, and other legal circumstances unusual in Japan make for unobtainable or nonexistent documents (for example, how can an only child from America legally prove the nonexistence of siblings?).
 
3) Papers showing Japanside family connections, such as koseki for your nuclear family and your spouse's nuclear family, with their Ward Office identification and police records, and,
 
4) Your alien registration card with Japanese addresses for the past five years.
 
Then comes the miscellaneous documentation commonplace in any immigration procedure --employment accreditation, tax statements, income statements, property deeds, etc..
However, Japan becomes unusually intrusive (from a Western standpoint) by requiring:
 
5) Snapshots of your family, home, and workplace, and,
 
6) A "good behavior survey" (sokou chousa).
 
This is the biggest hurdle because it is so arbitrary. The Justice Ministry will visit your house, look at your decor, open your refrigerator, even check your children's toys. They will talk to your neighbors to find out how "Japanese" you are.
 
When I asked officials if this meant I had to wear yukata and sleep on a futon, the response was, "Don't worry. No feeling of incongruity (iwakan) in our inspectors means you pass."
 
Finally, the third stage: DELIBERATION.
 
Applications will take at least a year to process, longer if you have a minor criminal record (like speeding tickets). Preference is given people with Japanese ancestry (like Brazilian returnees) or Japanese spouses, and refusal rates are a closely-guarded secret.
 
If citizenship is granted, you trade in your alien registration card for a koseki, register a new seal, and use it on documents swearing Japanese nationality exclusively. You then choose a new name (If you want kanji, readings must be Japanese. I would choose Arudou Debito.)
And that's it. Welcome to Japan, Arudou-san.
 
In 1993, 11,146 people naturalized, rising to around15,000 in 1997. Most new citizens are ethnic Koreans, but there is the occasional Westerner. The author of this article may well be among them in the near future.
 
There was a photo of me amidst a buncha old crocks at a Houji, holding infant Amy in my arms. The caption read: "Immigration and assimilation: essential for Japan's aging society"
 
Get more details on all of the above at:
http://www.voicenet.co.jp/~davald/essays.html#naturalization

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