J-List is a wonderful toybox of things from Japan - come see
Every time you don't click over to J-List, God kills a kitten

The personal log of Peter, owner of JLIST.com, the home of "wacky things from Japan"

Wednesday, February 20, 2008

On the Alien Registration Card for Gaijin

All registered foreigners living in Japan carry one of these, a Gaikokijin Toroku Shomeisho, aka the Alien Registration Card, which you get from the City Office in your local town when you first come to Japan to live. It lists the name, current address, employment status and photograph of the person in question, and generally provides whatever information authorities might need access to. It's quite an analog system, actually -- when information needs to be updated, the changes are hand-written on the back of the card by a City Office employee, along with a special stamp that proves that an authorized official has made the change. Theoretically, any policeman can ask to see the registration card of any foreigner, but I've never been asked to show mine and have always found Japanese policemen to be very courteous and nice.

Do you like my Alien card? ^_^

Alien Registration Card

9 Comments:

Blogger Vicky said...

What a handsome bugger you are! You must have all the ladies drooling after you! ^_^

11:40 AM

 
Blogger Peter in Japan said...

Yes, I am quite a "lady killer"...

11:42 AM

 
Blogger Adrian in Phoenix said...

Charge #1: Defacing an official document

Charge #2: Copying an official document

Charge #: Making copies of an official document available to others (via the Internet).

Please report to the local police station for re-education.

Cheers.

2:25 PM

 
Blogger Peter in Japan said...

Heh, I doubt anyone would care. Japanese authorities always forget these cards exist until we pull one out. Unless we're standing in line at Narita or something. When you were in Okinawa was it still the U.S., or was it after the return?

4:19 PM

 
Blogger Emily said...

Ne, Piitaa-san, honto ni 6-gatsu 20-ka? Atashi to onaji tanjoubi na no yo!

12:32 AM

 
Blogger Peter in Japan said...

Wow, same birthday? That's amazing. I was born in 1968 so the birthday that's coming in a couple months will be a big one. Ugh..

12:46 AM

 
Blogger Emily said...

Celebrate, celebrate, celebrate! I'm a few years younger (inoshishsi-doushi) but my husband just celebrated his 4-0 and we had a serious bash.

12:57 AM

 
Blogger Philip said...

Happy 40th~

I live in Tokyo - they go through about 2 weeks a year, or every 10 months or so out here where they check cards like mad. If you get checked once, you'll likely get checked at least once more before the day is through and the same every day for like a week or so.
It's an annoying couple of weeks...

1:23 AM

 
Blogger Peter in Japan said...

Really? I've not heard of that, but then I'm out here in the sticks where many kobans don't have anyone in them, they just sit there empty because of course nothing like a crime would ever happen here. ^_^

1:55 AM

 

Post a Comment

<< Home

 


,