Home > About Us > Prizes for Global Citizenship > The Japan Foundation Prizes for the Promotion of Community-Based Cultural Exchange (1997)

The Japan Foundation Prizes for the Promotion of Community-Based Cultural Exchange (1997)
International Citizen's Association of Sendai
The
city of Sendai, Miyagi Prefecture, has many institutions of higher education,
including universities, attended by many foreign students from around the
world, especially from Asian nations. Since its establishment in June 1987
the International Citizen's Association of Sendai (ICAS) has been working
actively to deepen relationships between foreign residents of Sendai, mainly
students and their families, and local citizens. In the Tohoku region of
northern Honshu, ICAS is a pioneer in organizing various Japanese-language
courses, with volunteer members as instructors, and these programs are
highly regarded for their professionalism and outstanding achievements.
ICAS activities to identify problems in teaching Japanese as a second language
have attracted nationwide attention, extending the reach of its activities
beyond regional borders. The group has also become active overseas in recent
years through increasing exchanges with students who have returned to their
home countries, and further developments are expected. ICAS, with its orthodox
approach, manifests a keen insight into the times, as well as a firm belief
in the value of its activities.
The Executive Committee on the International Workshop of Ceramic Art in Tokoname
Mutual
exchange of paintings by elementary school children in Penang, Malaysia
and Asagasumi-machi, Saitama Prefecture, was initiated by a single family.
It subsequently spread throughout both countries, and today the number
of schools exchanging such works of art has increased and developed into
such international exchange activities as exchange of art works, exhibitions,
and home stays with children in the leading role.
The Kamou-go Teko Bozu Drum Ensemble
Attracted
by taiko drumming performed to celebrate the fiftieth anniversary of the
founding of their town in 1979, young people of Kamou, Kagoshima Prefecture,
formed the Kamou-go Teko Bozu drum ensemble in April 1986 with the aim
of creating a new local performance culture. In 1987 ensemble members received
Korean students on home stays under the Japan-Korea Koguma Exchange (koguma
derives from the Korean word for sweet potato), which led to an arrangement
for the ensemble to perform in Seoul. Distrust of Japanese culture was
deeply rooted in Korea at that time, but in 1988 the ensemble gave the
very first public performance by a private Japanese citizens' group in
Korea. Since then, exchange with Korea has led to expansion of the ensemble's
activities to in-clude performances in New Zealand and Singapore. Further,
the ensemble performed with a group invited from Korea at the Nihon Ichidai
Kusunoki Donto Aki Matsuri (Japan's Greatest Camphor Tree Donto Autumn
Festival), an outgrowth of the local autumn festival. Such activities have
made the ensemble a leader in international exchange in the area. The ensemble
has been involved in protecting and nurturing local performing arts in
an agricultural region that is experiencing depopulation. Its effort to
develop international exchange through these activities, particularly fruitful
exchange with Korea, "the distant country next door," deserves praise.