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Japonia u progu nowoczesności

9 maja odwiedziłem pierwszą część wystawy “Japonia u progu nowoczesności” (17.03-31.12.2023), którą można oglądać w Kamienicy Szołayskich im. Feliksa Jasieńskiego, oddziale Muzeum Narodowego w Krakowie.

"Touching Japan" na Uniwersytecie SWPS

25 lutego 20223 roku wziąłem udział w festiwalu "Touching Japan" na Uniwersytecie SWPS. Byłem pod wrażeniem uczestników, którzy z zapałem poznawali tajniki kanzashi i kintsugi. Bardzo dziękuję wszystkim zaangażowanym w organizację festiwalu!

Zachęcamy do wzięcia udziału w akcji #ikebanaforukraine

W rocznicę wybuchu okrutnej wojny na Ukrainie, w geście wsparcia i solidarności z walczącymi, oraz z nadzieją na pokój, Muzeum Sztuki i Techniki Japońskiej Manggha wznawia akcję pod hasztagiem: #ikebanaforukraine.

JAPAN - WHERE TRADITION MEETS THE FUTURE | JNTO

This movie vividly portrays the traditional, modern and natural attractions of Tokyo, Kyoto and other locations throughout Japan from a unique perspective.

Emperor Akihito's birthday

Japan, island country lying off the east coast of Asia. It consists of a great string of islands in a northeast-southwest arc that stretches for approximately 1,500 miles (2,400 km) through the western North Pacific Ocean. Nearly the entire land area is taken up by the country’s four main islands; from north to south these are Hokkaido (Hokkaidō), Honshu (Honshū), Shikoku, and Kyushu (Kyūshū). Honshu is the largest of the four, followed in size by Hokkaido, Kyushu, and Shikoku. In addition, there are numerous smaller islands, the major groups of which are the Ryukyu (Nansei) Islands (including the island of Okinawa) to the south and west of Kyushu and the Izu, Bonin (Ogasawara), and Volcano (Kazan) islands to the south and east of central Honshu. The national capital, Tokyo (Tōkyō), in east-central Honshu, is one of the world’s most populous cities. The Japanese landscape is rugged, with more than four-fifths of the land surface consisting of mountains. There are many active and dormant volcanoes, including Mount Fuji (Fuji-san), which, at an elevation of 12,388 feet (3,776 metres), is Japan’s highest mountain. Abundant precipitation and the generally mild temperatures throughout most of the country have produced a lush vegetation cover and, despite the mountainous terrain and generally poor soils, have made it possible to raise a variety of crops. Japan has a large and, to a great extent, ethnically homogeneous population, which is heavily concentrated in the low-lying areas along the Pacific coast of Honshu. Complexity and contrast are the keynotes of life in Japan—a country possessing an intricate and ancient cultural tradition yet one that, since 1950, has emerged as one of the world’s most economically and technologically advanced societies. Heavy emphasis is placed on education, and Japan is one of the world’s most literate countries. Tension between old and new is apparent in all phases of Japanese life. A characteristic sensitivity to natural beauty and a concern with form and balance are evident in such cities as Kyōto and Nara, as well as in Japan’s ubiquitous gardens. Even in the countryside, however, the impact of rapid Westernization is evident in many aspects of Japanese life. The agricultural regions are characterized by low population densities and well-ordered rice fields and fruit orchards, whereas the industrial and urbanized belt along the Pacific coast of Honshu is noted for its highly concentrated population, heavy industrialization, and environmental pollution. Humans have occupied Japan for tens of thousands of years, but Japan’s recorded history begins only in the 1st century bce, with mention in Chinese sources. Contact with China and Korea in the early centuries ce brought profound changes to Japan, including the Chinese writing system, Buddhism, and many artistic forms from the continent. The first steps at political unification of the country occurred in the late 4th and early 5th centuries ce under the Yamato court. A great civilization then developed first at Nara in the 8th century and then at Heian-kyō (now Kyōto) from the late 8th to the late 12th century. The seven centuries thereafter were a period of domination by military rulers culminating in near isolation from the outside world from the early 17th to the mid-19th century. The reopening of the country ushered in contact with the West and a time of unprecedented change. Japan sought to become a modern industrialized nation and pursued the acquisition of a large overseas empire, initially in Korea and China. By late 1941 this latter policy caused direct confrontation with the United States and its allies and to defeat in World War II (1939–45). Since the war, however, Japan’s spectacular economic growth—one of the greatest of any nation in that period—brought the country to the forefront of the world economy. It now is one of the world’s foremost manufacturing countries and traders of goods and is a global financial leader. Land Japan is bounded to the west by the Sea of Japan (East Sea), which separates it from the eastern shores of South and North Korea and southeastern Siberia (Russia); to the north by La Perouse (Sōya) Strait, separating it from Russian-held Sakhalin Island, and by the Sea of Okhotsk; to the northeast by the southern Kuril Islands (since World War II under Soviet and then Russian administration); to the east and south by the Pacific; and to the southwest by the East China Sea, which separates it from China. The island of Tsushima lies between northwestern Kyushu and southeastern South Korea and defines the Korea Strait on the Korean side and the Tsushima Strait on the Japanese side. Relief The mountainous character of the country is the outcome of orogenic (mountain-building) forces largely during Quaternary time (roughly, the past 2.6 million years), as evidenced by the frequent occurrence of violent earthquakes, volcanic activity, and signs of change in sea levels along the coast. There are no sizable structural plains and peneplains (large land areas leveled by erosion), features that usually occur in more stable regions of the Earth. The mountains are for the most part in a youthful stage of dissection in which steep slopes are incised by dense river-valley networks. Rivers are mostly torrential, and their valleys are accompanied by series of river terraces that are the result of movements in the Earth’s crust, as well as climatic and sea-level changes in Holocene times (i.e., the past 11,700 years). Recent volcanoes are juxtaposed with old and highly dissected ones. The shores are characterized by elevated and depressed features such as headlands and bays, which display an incipient stage of development. The mountains are divided into many small land blocks that are separated by lowlands or deep saddles; there is no long or continuous mountain range. These land blocks are the result of intense faulting (movement of adjacent rock masses along a fracture) and warping (bending of the Earth’s crust); the former process is regarded as dominant. One consequence is that mountain blocks are often bounded by fault scarps and flexure slopes that descend in step formation to the adjacent lowlands. Coalescing alluvial fans—cone-shaped deposits of alluvium that run together—are formed where rivers emerge from the mountains. When the rivers are large enough to extend their courses to the sea, low deltaic plains develop in front of the fans; this occurs most frequently where the rivers empty into shallow and sheltered bays, as in the deltas of Kantō (Kwanto), Nōbi, and Ōsaka. In most places, however, fan surfaces plunge directly into the sea and are separated by low, sandy beach ridges. Dissected plains are common. Intense disturbances have caused many former alluvial fans, deltas, and sea bottoms to be substantially uplifted to form flat-topped uplands such as those found in the Kantō Plain. Frequently the uplands have been overlain with volcanic ash, as in the Kantō and Tokachi plains. Geologic framework Japan is one of the world’s most geologically unstable areas. The country experiences some 1,000 tremors annually, most of them minor, though major quakes—as in Tokyo-Yokohama in 1923 and Kōbe in 1995—cause considerable loss of life and widespread destruction. Violent volcanic eruptions occur frequently, and at least 60 volcanoes have been active within historical time. Volcanoes born since 1900 include Shōwa Volcano on Hokkaido and Myōjin Rock off the Beyoneisu (or Bayonnaise) Rocks in the Pacific. Among the major eruptions since 1980 are those of Mounts O (1983) and Mihara (1986) in the Izu Islands and Mount Unzen (1991) in Kyushu. The country’s abundant hot springs are mostly of volcanic origin. Many of the gigantic volcanoes are conical in shape (e.g., Mount Fuji), while others form steep lava domes (e.g., Mounts Dai and Unzen). Conspicuous shield volcanoes (broad, gently sloping volcanic cones) are rare, and extensive lava plateaus are lacking. One of the characteristics of the volcanic areas is the prevalence of calderas (large, circular, basin-shaped volcanic depressions), especially in the northeast and southwest, many of which are filled with water, such as Lakes Kutcharo, Towada, and Ashi. The cause of this instability—indeed, the reason for Japan’s existence—is the tectonic movement of several of the Earth’s major crustal plates in the vicinity of the archipelago. Most important is the subduction (sinking) of the Pacific Plate (in the north) and the Philippine Plate (in the south) beneath the Eurasian Plate, upon which Japan lies. The movements of these plates have formed six mountain arcs off the northeastern coast of Asia: from northeast to southwest, the Chishima Range of the Kuril Islands; the Karafuto (Sakhalin) Mountain system of Hokkaido; the Northeast, Southwest, and Shichito-Mariana ranges of Honshu; and the Ryukyu Island formations. More … Source: https://www.britannica.com/place/Japan  

Umowa wykonawcza o japońsko – amerykańskiej współpracy przy załogowej księżycowej stacji kosmicznej Gateway

18 listopada 2022 roku Minister Edukacji, Kultury, Sportu, Nauki i Technologii (MEXT) Nagaoka Keiko spotkała się z Administratorem NASA Billem Nelsonem. Podczas spotkania podpisano umowę wykonawczą o japońsko – amerykańskiej współpracy przy załogowej księżycowej stacji kosmicznej Gateway. Minister Nagaoka powiedziała, że MEXT będzie dalej rozwijało współpracę międzynarodową, na czele z projektami ISS i Artemis, tak, aby w drugiej połowie lat 2020 japoński astronauta mógł stanąć na Księżycu jako pierwszy astronauta spoza USA.

Udział w Forum Ekonomicznym w Karpaczu, zwanym „Polskim Davos”

Po raz pierwszy wziąłem udział w Forum Ekonomicznym w Karpaczu, zwanym „Polskim Davos”. Wraz z Ministrem Rozwoju i Technologii Waldemarem Budą, Członkiem Zarządu PAIH Grzegorzem Słomkowskim oraz przedstawicielami japońskich firm rozmawialiśmy o zwiększeniu japońskich inwestycji w Polsce oraz o tym, dlaczego warto inwestować właśnie w Polsce.

Spotkanie wojewody pomorskiego z ambasadorem Japonii

Współpraca gospodarcza, sytuacja na polsko- ukraińskiej granicy, przekop mierzei wiślanej i energetyka to główne tematy spotkania Wojewody Pomorskiego Dariusza Drelicha z ambasadorem Japonii w Polsce Akio Miyajimą. Była to pierwsza wizyta ambasadora w województwie pomorskim.

Wizyta Ambasadora Japonii na Podkarpaciu

Ambasador Japonii w Polsce Akio MIYAJIMA przebywał z wizytą na Podkarpaciu, gdzie spotkał się z wicewojewodą podkarpackim Jolantą Sawicką. Wizyta odbyła się 1 sierpnia br. i miała charakter kurtuazyjny. W spotkaniu z ambasadorem Akio MIYAJIMA uczestniczyła druga sekretarz Ambasady Japonii Isozaki Kaori. Podczas spotkania rozmawiano m.in. o aktualnej sytuacji i wyzwaniach związanych z kryzysem migracyjnym.

Udział Ambasadora Miyajimy w 14 Europejskim Kongresie Gospodarczym

W dniach 24-26 kwietnia Ambasador Japonii w Polsce Akio Miyajima odwiedził Katowice (woj. śląskie). Podczas wizyty, Ambasador wziął udział w XIV Europejskim Kongresie Gospodarczym, gdzie wygłosił wystąpienie na temat współpracy między Azją i Unią Europejską.

Hayashi Yoshimasa przebywał z wizytą w Polsce

Od 2 do 4 kwietnia Minister Spraw Zagranicznych Japonii Hayashi Yoshimasa przebywał z wizytą w Polsce, jako specjalny wysłannik Premiera. Minister Hayashi odwiedził m.in. ośrodek dla ukraińskich uchodźców w Warszawie oraz przejście graniczne w Medyce, gdzie miał okazję osobiście zaobserwować jak ciepło i z wielkim sercem Polacy przyjmują Ukraińców, co wywarło na nim ogromne wrażenie.

Spotkanie Ambasadora Miyajimy z Panem Andrzejem Bittelem, Sekretarzem Stanu w Ministerstwie Infrastruktury

W dniu 20 stycznia 2022 roku Ambasador Miyajima spotkał się z Panem Andrzejem Bittelem, Sekretarzem Stanu w Ministerstwie Infrastruktury. Podczas rozmowy potwierdzono dalsze rozwijanie współpracy obu państw w dziedzinie kolejnictwa, jak również wdrażanie planu działania w ramach partnerstwa strategicznego Japonia – Rzeczpospolita Polska, podpisanego podczas spotkania Ministrów Spraw Zagranicznych Japonii i Polski w maju 2021 roku.

Współpraca polsko-japońska w dziedzinie kolejnictwa

20 stycznia 2022 r. wiceminister infrastruktury Andrzej Bittel spotkał się z Ambasadorem Japonii w Polsce Akio Miyajimą. Tematyka rozmów dotyczyła możliwości współpracy między Polską a Japonią w dziedzinie kolejnictwa, w tym w zakresie modernizacji linii kolejowych oraz inwestycji taborowych.

Spotkanie z Ambasadorem Japonii

Wicemarszałek Józef Gawron spotkał się z Akio Miyajimą, który od listopada 2020 r. pełni funkcję Ambasadora Japonii w Polsce. Ambasadorowi towarzyszył Kotaro Hashimoto, attaché kulturalny w Ambasadzie Japonii, zastępca dyrektora Wydziału Informacji i Kultury Ambasady Japonii.

Emperor Akihito's birthday

Japan, island country lying off the east coast of Asia. It consists of a great string of islands in a northeast-southwest arc that stretches for approximately 1,500 miles (2,400 km) through the western North Pacific Ocean. Nearly the entire land area is taken up by the country’s four main islands; from north to south these are Hokkaido (Hokkaidō), Honshu (Honshū), Shikoku, and Kyushu (Kyūshū). Honshu is the largest of the four, followed in size by Hokkaido, Kyushu, and Shikoku. In addition, there are numerous smaller islands, the major groups of which are the Ryukyu (Nansei) Islands (including the island of Okinawa) to the south and west of Kyushu and the Izu, Bonin (Ogasawara), and Volcano (Kazan) islands to the south and east of central Honshu. The national capital, Tokyo (Tōkyō), in east-central Honshu, is one of the world’s most populous cities. The Japanese landscape is rugged, with more than four-fifths of the land surface consisting of mountains. There are many active and dormant volcanoes, including Mount Fuji (Fuji-san), which, at an elevation of 12,388 feet (3,776 metres), is Japan’s highest mountain. Abundant precipitation and the generally mild temperatures throughout most of the country have produced a lush vegetation cover and, despite the mountainous terrain and generally poor soils, have made it possible to raise a variety of crops. Japan has a large and, to a great extent, ethnically homogeneous population, which is heavily concentrated in the low-lying areas along the Pacific coast of Honshu. Complexity and contrast are the keynotes of life in Japan—a country possessing an intricate and ancient cultural tradition yet one that, since 1950, has emerged as one of the world’s most economically and technologically advanced societies. Heavy emphasis is placed on education, and Japan is one of the world’s most literate countries. Tension between old and new is apparent in all phases of Japanese life. A characteristic sensitivity to natural beauty and a concern with form and balance are evident in such cities as Kyōto and Nara, as well as in Japan’s ubiquitous gardens. Even in the countryside, however, the impact of rapid Westernization is evident in many aspects of Japanese life. The agricultural regions are characterized by low population densities and well-ordered rice fields and fruit orchards, whereas the industrial and urbanized belt along the Pacific coast of Honshu is noted for its highly concentrated population, heavy industrialization, and environmental pollution. Humans have occupied Japan for tens of thousands of years, but Japan’s recorded history begins only in the 1st century bce, with mention in Chinese sources. Contact with China and Korea in the early centuries ce brought profound changes to Japan, including the Chinese writing system, Buddhism, and many artistic forms from the continent. The first steps at political unification of the country occurred in the late 4th and early 5th centuries ce under the Yamato court. A great civilization then developed first at Nara in the 8th century and then at Heian-kyō (now Kyōto) from the late 8th to the late 12th century. The seven centuries thereafter were a period of domination by military rulers culminating in near isolation from the outside world from the early 17th to the mid-19th century. The reopening of the country ushered in contact with the West and a time of unprecedented change. Japan sought to become a modern industrialized nation and pursued the acquisition of a large overseas empire, initially in Korea and China. By late 1941 this latter policy caused direct confrontation with the United States and its allies and to defeat in World War II (1939–45). Since the war, however, Japan’s spectacular economic growth—one of the greatest of any nation in that period—brought the country to the forefront of the world economy. It now is one of the world’s foremost manufacturing countries and traders of goods and is a global financial leader. Land Japan is bounded to the west by the Sea of Japan (East Sea), which separates it from the eastern shores of South and North Korea and southeastern Siberia (Russia); to the north by La Perouse (Sōya) Strait, separating it from Russian-held Sakhalin Island, and by the Sea of Okhotsk; to the northeast by the southern Kuril Islands (since World War II under Soviet and then Russian administration); to the east and south by the Pacific; and to the southwest by the East China Sea, which separates it from China. The island of Tsushima lies between northwestern Kyushu and southeastern South Korea and defines the Korea Strait on the Korean side and the Tsushima Strait on the Japanese side. Relief The mountainous character of the country is the outcome of orogenic (mountain-building) forces largely during Quaternary time (roughly, the past 2.6 million years), as evidenced by the frequent occurrence of violent earthquakes, volcanic activity, and signs of change in sea levels along the coast. There are no sizable structural plains and peneplains (large land areas leveled by erosion), features that usually occur in more stable regions of the Earth. The mountains are for the most part in a youthful stage of dissection in which steep slopes are incised by dense river-valley networks. Rivers are mostly torrential, and their valleys are accompanied by series of river terraces that are the result of movements in the Earth’s crust, as well as climatic and sea-level changes in Holocene times (i.e., the past 11,700 years). Recent volcanoes are juxtaposed with old and highly dissected ones. The shores are characterized by elevated and depressed features such as headlands and bays, which display an incipient stage of development. The mountains are divided into many small land blocks that are separated by lowlands or deep saddles; there is no long or continuous mountain range. These land blocks are the result of intense faulting (movement of adjacent rock masses along a fracture) and warping (bending of the Earth’s crust); the former process is regarded as dominant. One consequence is that mountain blocks are often bounded by fault scarps and flexure slopes that descend in step formation to the adjacent lowlands. Coalescing alluvial fans—cone-shaped deposits of alluvium that run together—are formed where rivers emerge from the mountains. When the rivers are large enough to extend their courses to the sea, low deltaic plains develop in front of the fans; this occurs most frequently where the rivers empty into shallow and sheltered bays, as in the deltas of Kantō (Kwanto), Nōbi, and Ōsaka. In most places, however, fan surfaces plunge directly into the sea and are separated by low, sandy beach ridges. Dissected plains are common. Intense disturbances have caused many former alluvial fans, deltas, and sea bottoms to be substantially uplifted to form flat-topped uplands such as those found in the Kantō Plain. Frequently the uplands have been overlain with volcanic ash, as in the Kantō and Tokachi plains. Geologic framework Japan is one of the world’s most geologically unstable areas. The country experiences some 1,000 tremors annually, most of them minor, though major quakes—as in Tokyo-Yokohama in 1923 and Kōbe in 1995—cause considerable loss of life and widespread destruction. Violent volcanic eruptions occur frequently, and at least 60 volcanoes have been active within historical time. Volcanoes born since 1900 include Shōwa Volcano on Hokkaido and Myōjin Rock off the Beyoneisu (or Bayonnaise) Rocks in the Pacific. Among the major eruptions since 1980 are those of Mounts O (1983) and Mihara (1986) in the Izu Islands and Mount Unzen (1991) in Kyushu. The country’s abundant hot springs are mostly of volcanic origin. Many of the gigantic volcanoes are conical in shape (e.g., Mount Fuji), while others form steep lava domes (e.g., Mounts Dai and Unzen). Conspicuous shield volcanoes (broad, gently sloping volcanic cones) are rare, and extensive lava plateaus are lacking. One of the characteristics of the volcanic areas is the prevalence of calderas (large, circular, basin-shaped volcanic depressions), especially in the northeast and southwest, many of which are filled with water, such as Lakes Kutcharo, Towada, and Ashi. The cause of this instability—indeed, the reason for Japan’s existence—is the tectonic movement of several of the Earth’s major crustal plates in the vicinity of the archipelago. Most important is the subduction (sinking) of the Pacific Plate (in the north) and the Philippine Plate (in the south) beneath the Eurasian Plate, upon which Japan lies. The movements of these plates have formed six mountain arcs off the northeastern coast of Asia: from northeast to southwest, the Chishima Range of the Kuril Islands; the Karafuto (Sakhalin) Mountain system of Hokkaido; the Northeast, Southwest, and Shichito-Mariana ranges of Honshu; and the Ryukyu Island formations. More … Source: https://www.britannica.com/place/Japan  

Zimowe wydaniem magazynu Kizuna

Zachęcamy do zapoznania się z zimowym wydaniem magazynu Kizuna, oficjalnej publikacji rządu japońskiego. W tym numerze znaleźć można informacje o premierze Japonii Fumio Kishidzie, jak również ciekawostki o pięknie japońskiej zimy.

Co drugie polskie jabłko pochodzi z Mazowsza

Zgodnie z obietnicą daną podczas ostatniego spotkania, w środę 10 listopada 2021 roku, marszałek Adam Struzik przedstawił ambasadorowi Japonii Miyajima Akio możliwości i potencjał mazowieckiego sadownictwa. Marszałek wraz z ambasadorem wspólnie odwiedzili jedno z grójeckich przedsiębiorstw zajmujących się produkcją, przetwórstwem i eksportem jabłek.

Wizyta Ambasadora Japonii w Muzeum Trebinka

9 listopada 2021 roku Muzeum Treblinka odwiedził Ambasador Japonii Pan Akio Miyajima. Podczas wizyty Ambasador wraz z tłumaczką Panią Dobrawą Dudzień w obecności dyrektora Pana Edwarda Kopówki oraz pracowników muzeum zwiedził teren po byłym Obozie Zagłady Treblinka II. Po zapoznaniu się z historią tego miejsca oddał hołd osobom pomordowanym w obozie.

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