There is a small community of Mongolians in Japan, representing a minor portion of emigration from Mongolia. As of June 2024, there were 20,416 registered Mongolian citizens residing in Japan, according to the Immigration Services Agency, up from 2,545 in 2003.[2]

Mongolians in Japan
Total population
20,416 (2024)[1]
Languages
Japanese, Mongolian
Mongolians in Japan
Japanese name
Kanji在日モンゴル人
Transcriptions
RomanizationZainichi Mongorujin
Mongolian name
MongolianЯпон дахь Монголчууд
Yapon dakhi Mongolchuud
日本ダヒ モンゴルチュード

Students

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International students form a large proportion of the registered population of Mongolians in Japan.[3] The earliest Mongol exchange students, all three of them women, came to Japan in 1906, when Mongolia was still ruled by the Qing Dynasty.[4] Japan was also a popular destination for students from Mengjiang (in today's Inner Mongolia) in the late 1930s and early 1940s; among them were several who would go on to become famous scholars, such as Chinggeltei.[5][6] Japan and the Mongolian People's Republic officially agreed to send exchange students to each other in 1974; the first Mongolian student to arrive under the agreement came in 1976. As of May 2006, 1,006 Mongolian students were studying in Japanese institutions of higher education.[3]

Aside from Mongolian citizens, there were also estimated to be roughly 4,000 members of the Chakhar-speaking Mongol minority of China residing in Japan as of 2005. Like migrants from Mongolia proper, they also came mostly on student visas, beginning in the 1990s; they were sponsored by professors of Mongolian studies at Japanese universities. They are a close-knit community; they reside mostly in the Nerima and Sugamo areas of Tokyo and in many cases the same apartment has been occupied serially by successive migrants for more than a decade, with each passing the lease on to another migrant before leaving the country or moving on to different accommodation.[7]

There are also Buryats and Kalmyks that have immigrated to Japan from the former Soviet Union.[citation needed]

Sumo wrestlers

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Asashōryū Akinori and Hakuhō Shō glaring at each other

Since the 1990s, Mongolians have become prominent in sumo; as of 2005, Mongolians composed roughly 5% of all ranked sumo wrestlers, making them more than 60% (37 out of 61) of non-Japanese rikishi in Japan.[8][9] In a 2009 survey conducted by a Japanese statistical agency, of the four sumo wrestlers named as most famous by Japanese people, three were Mongolian.[10] Sumo bears similarities with Mongolian wrestling—the traditional sport of Mongolia. Additionally, Mongolians are noted for their sturdy frames and large stature, which is part of the reason they often partake in contact sports such as sumo.[citation needed]

Notable people

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See also

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References

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  1. ^ 令和6年6月末現在における在留外国人数について
  2. ^ "令和6年6月末現在における在留外国人数について | 出入国在留管理庁". www.moj.go.jp. Retrieved 2024-10-18.
  3. ^ a b Embassy of Japan in Mongolia 留学生交流, Mongolia: Embassy of Japan, retrieved 2007-08-17
  4. ^ 横田 素子[YOKOTA Motoko] (2009), 1906年におけるモンゴル人学生の日本留学 [The first Mongolian students in Japan in 1906] (PDF), East West South North (in Japanese) (15): 155–172, archived from the original (PDF) on 2011-09-30, retrieved 2009-10-18
  5. ^ 徐志民 [XU Zhimin], 抗战时期日本对蒙疆地区留日学生政策述 [Review of policies towards Mengjiang students studying in Japan during World War II], Journal of Inner Mongolia University (in Chinese (China)), 38 (5)
  6. ^ 草原名人:开创蒙古语言研究黄金时期的清格尔泰 [Famous man of the plains: Chinggeltei, who pioneered the golden age of Mongolian language research], People's Daily (in Chinese (China)), 2007-07-19, retrieved 2010-06-02
  7. ^ Le Bail, Hélène (September 2005), "The New Chinese Immigration to Japan: Between mobility and integration", China Perspectives, 2005 (61), doi:10.4000/chinaperspectives.521
  8. ^ Wallace, Bruce (2005-02-27), "Beating Japanese wrestlers at their own game", San Francisco Chronicle, retrieved 2007-09-05
  9. ^ Himmer, Alastair (2007-05-22), "Mongolians running amok in sumo", Reuters, retrieved 2009-10-18
  10. ^ "Mongolians Most Famous in Japan", UB Post, 2009-08-21, retrieved 2009-10-18
  11. ^ Frederick, Jim (2003-04-21), "Asian Heroes - Dolgorsuren Dagvadorj", Time Magazine, archived from the original on April 22, 2003, retrieved 2007-08-17
  12. ^ "Hakuho hits sumo summit", Taipei Times, 2007-05-31, retrieved 2009-11-01
  13. ^ "Bis in die Haarspitze", Der Spiegel (in German), 2007-06-02, retrieved 2007-09-05
  14. ^ "Taka, Musashimaru win, set up all-yokozuna finale", Honolulu Star-Bulletin, 1999-11-20, retrieved 2007-09-05
  15. ^ "Mongolian striving to become top sumo wrestler", Japan Weekly Monitor, 2002-01-25, retrieved 2007-09-05
  16. ^ "Rising Mongolian star wins first sumo tournament", Agence France-Presse, 2009-05-24, archived from the original on March 12, 2011, retrieved 2011-01-26
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