Akemi Solloway Aid for Japan Supported by YCC

Akemi Solloway Aid for Japan Supported by YCC
Akemi Solloway Aid for Japan Supported by YCC
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Akemi Solloway Tanaka is the daughter of an old samurai family and grew up immersed in the traditional arts and culture of Japan. Her name in Japanese means "Bright and Beautiful".

In addition to her university education, she attended the Tchiyoda Gakuin Finishing School, where she formally studied Occidental and Oriental etiquette. She is a lecturer and consultant of Japanese culture, and leads study tours to Japan each spring and autumn. She is active in the worlds of business, diplomacy, education and the arts, where she strives to combine traditional beliefs, such as Bushido, with the best of modern technology and ideas. In her presenting and consulting, she aims to promote awareness and appreciation of authentic Japanese culture in an accessible and enjoyable manner.

Akemi is responsible for organising the Bunkasai Club and Bunkasai events, both of which take place in Central London. This event celebrates a wide variety of Japanese culture including tea ceremony, kimono displays, brush-writing, cosplay, martial arts, manga workshops, traditional Japanese food and much, much more.

Through a desire to help people understand the traditional culture behind many of the modern aspects of Japanese art and lifestyle, Akemi has worked closely with the Anime and Manga community, speaking at many conventions and founding AJAMCA, the Anglo-Japanese Anime and Manga Cultural Association. AJAMCA is in Japanese embassy's web site.

She also has a lot of time and appreciation for people involved in Cosplay. Indeed, she has described her own use of western clothing in her free time as a form of reverse Cosplay, as she spends most of her life dressed in kimonos.

Among her past activities, she has dressed Kelly Osbourne in a kimono for a magazine photo shoot, performed a tea ceremony for the Lord Mayor of London, worked with a BBC documentary team on Japanese ideals of beauty and assisted a prince of the Japanese imperial family with a speech to an international gathering of martial artists. She was interviewed by BBC World and talked about Japanese table manners.

Aid for Japan
Why start a new charity for Japanese orphans?
Well, after the tsunami and earthquake in Japan on 11 March 2011, I really thought about the orphans left behind. According to the July 2011 newspapers, 229 children under 18 years old lost both parents and 1295 children lost one parent in these disasters. Some orphans have yet to be counted because their relatives are still in refuges and are yet to be reunited.

More information is available here: www.aidforjapan.co.uk