יהודי טוקיו
Region: Asie orientale
Memory register · custodian, not owner
The Jewish presence in Tokyo, and more broadly in Japan, began with the country's opening in the Meiji era and the settlement of foreign merchants and residents. A more visible community took shape in the twentieth century, fed notably by refugees fleeing pogroms, the Russian Revolution, and then Nazism, some of whom transited through Japan. Tokyo developed an organized communal life, with a synagogue and institutions serving a population composed mainly of expatriates. The community remains modest in size but durably established, with an active religious and cultural life.
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