Pakistanis in Japan (在日パキスタン人, Zainichi Pakisutanjin) form the country's third-largest community of immigrants from a Muslim-majority country, trailing only the Indonesian community and Bangladeshi community. As of December 2023, official statistics showed 25,334 registered foreigners of Pakistani origin living in the country.[5][2][3] There were a further estimated 3,414 illegal immigrants from Pakistan in Japan as of 2000.[6] The average increase in the Pakistani population is about 2-3 persons per day.[7]

Pakistanis in Japan
Total population
25,334 (in December, 2023)[1][2][3]
Languages
Japanese, English, various languages of Pakistan
Religion
Islam[4]
Related ethnic groups
Pakistani diaspora

Migration history

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As early as 1950, only three years after the independence of Pakistan in 1947 which created the Pakistani state, there were recorded to be four Pakistanis living in Japan.[8] However, Pakistani migration to Japan would not grow to a large scale until the 1980s. The later Pakistani migrants in Japan largely come from a muhajir background; their family history of migration made them consider working overseas as a "natural choice" when they found opportunities at home to be too limited. While Pakistanis saw North America as a good destination to settle down and start a business, Japanese employment agencies commonly advertised in Karachi newspapers in the 1980s, when Japan offered some of the highest wages in the world for unskilled labour; it came to be preferred as a destination by single male migrants, who came without their families.[9] The wages they earned could reach as high as twenty times what they made in Pakistan.[10][9]

Pakistani citizens once enjoyed the privilege of short-term visa-free entry to Japan, but when controversy arose in Japanese society over illegal foreign workers, the Japanese government revoked this privilege.[11] With little chance of acquiring a work visa or even permission to enter the country, Pakistanis paid as much as ¥300,000 to people smugglers in the late 1980s and early 1990s to enter the country.[12] According to Japanese government statistics, the number of Pakistanis illegally residing in Japan peaked in 1992 at 8,056 individuals and declined after that.[6] However, Pakistani sources suggest that as late as 1999, the total population of Pakistanis was 25,000 and still included a significant amount of illegal immigrants.[13] Some Pakistanis were able to obtain legal resident status by finding Japanese spouses.[11]

Demographics

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Pakistan festival in Ueno Park, Tokyo

According to 2008 Japanese government figures, 19.9% of registered Pakistanis lived in Saitama, 17.8% in Tokyo, 12.3% in Kanagawa, 10.4% in Aichi, 8.98% in Chiba, 7.59% in Gunma, 6.02% in Ibaraki, 4.44% in Tochigi, 4.21% in Toyama, 3.27% in Shizuoka and the remaining 4.98% in other prefectures of Japan.[14] Only an estimated 200 Pakistanis hold Japanese citizenship.[13]

Business and employment

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Many Pakistanis in Japan run used car export businesses. This trend was believed to have begun in the late 1970s, when one Pakistani working in Japan sent a car back to his homeland. The potential for doing business in used cars also attracted more Pakistanis to come to Japan in the 1990s.[15]

Though many migrants come from a middle-class family background in Pakistan, because they often work at so-called Dirty, Dangerous and Demeaning (3D/3K) jobs and because of their portrayal in the Japanese media, even their co-workers tended to misperceive their background and level of education.[9]

Religion

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Many Japanese wives of Pakistani migrants have converted to Islam and in fact form the largest group of native Japanese converts to Islam. They often send their children to mosques so that they can learn about their ancestral religion and study the Arabic language.[11]

Media

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Japan has some Urdu language media aimed at Pakistanis, such as the freely distributed Pak Shimbun, as well as other Japanese-language publications targeted towards Muslims at large.[16]

Notable people

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  • Hussain Shah, professional boxer, represented Pakistan in 1988 Seoul Olympics & won a Bronze medal, moved to Japan to become a boxing coach afterwards.
  • Shah Hussain Shah, son of Hussain Shah, judoka, represented Pakistan at Rio Olympics in 2016

References

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Notes

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  1. ^ 令和5年末現在における在留外国人数について
  2. ^ a b Statistics of Foreign Residents
  3. ^ a b "在留外国人統計(旧登録外国人統計) 在留外国人統計 月次 2022年12月 | ファイル | 統計データを探す".
  4. ^ Sakurai 2003, p. 76
  5. ^ 令和5年末現在における在留外国人数について
  6. ^ a b Sakurai 2003, p. 41
  7. ^ "Statistics Bureau Home Page/JAPAN STATISTICAL YEARBOOK 2020 - Chapter 2 Population and Households".
  8. ^ Minamino & Sawa 2005, p. 7
  9. ^ a b c Igarashi 2000
  10. ^ Sakurai 2003, p. 77
  11. ^ a b c Yasunori 2007
  12. ^ Sakurai 2003, p. 78
  13. ^ a b "Akhbar-e-jehan Political Diaries". 25 August 2009. Archived from the original on 25 August 2009. Retrieved 9 January 2018.
  14. ^ 7Number of Registered Pakistanis in different prefectures of Japan, Pakistan Association Japan, 11 March 2010, archived from the original on 21 July 2011
  15. ^ 中古車輸出業を営むパキスタン人 [A Pakistani who manages a used-car export business], Asahi Shimbun (in Japanese), 6 January 2008, retrieved 1 December 2008 [dead link]
  16. ^ Sakurai 2003, pp. 170–172

Sources

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Further reading

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  • Kudo, Masako. "Constructing "Home" across National Boundaries: A Case of Pakistani-Japanese Marriage" (Part II: International Migration and Marriage: Chapter 7). In: Zhang, Jijiao and Howard Duncan. Migration in China and Asia: Experience and Policy (Volume 10 of International Perspectives on Migration). Springer Science & Business Media, April 8, 2014. ISBN 940178759X, 9789401787598. Start p. 103.
  • Kudo, Masako (工藤 正子) (May 2008), 越境の人類学—在日パキスタン人ムスリム移民の妻たち [Cross-Border Anthropology: The wives of Pakistani Muslim migrants in Japan], Tokyo University Press, ISBN 978-4-13-056303-1
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