Sri Lankans in Japan
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
在日スリランカ人 Zainichi Surirankajin | |
|---|---|
| Total population | |
| 73,067 (in June, 2025)[1][2] | |
| Regions with significant populations | |
| Tokyo, Ibaraki, Chiba, Funabashi, Kawasaki, Sagamihara, Saitama, Yokohama | |
| Languages | |
| Sinhala, Tamil, English, Japanese | |
| Religion | |
| Buddhism, Hinduism, Islam, Christianity |
Sri Lankans in Japan consist of Sri Lankan migrants that come to Japan, as well as their descendants. In June 2024, there were 73,067 Sri Lankans living in Japan making it the 9th largest foreign community in Japan.[1][3]
Edo period and imperial Japan
Ceylon, the name of the island since the Portuguese conquest, was one of the largest strongholds of the Dutch East India Company, which stretched across the Indian Ocean from Dejima in Nagasaki to Cape Town in South Africa. The Dutch-Ceylonese would continue to influence the country strongly throughout British Ceylon due to the expertise they had in administration, and retained strong connections with the trade infrastructure Dutch East India Company while assuming the connections of the British East India Company. Japan maintained links to Ceylon through the various colonial companies and administrations.[4] Artwork from the Edo period shows people with dark brown skin and colourful patterns of the Coromandel design;[5] many of the sepoys and merchants working on the Dutch East India Company ships to Dejima were of Indian or Ceylonese descent.[6]

Ceylon became an important symbolic battleground during the Pacific Threater of WWII. The Japanese were the main antagonist of the war progranda by the allies of WWII in Ceylon. Ceylon was the headquarters of the South East Asian division of the British Navy and a major base for British military operations in southern Asia. It was also viewed as a important base for the Empire of Japan.[7][8]
During the Japanese occupation of Malaya, the Indian National Army (INA) established its primary operational bases within the region. Ceylonese volunteers were categorized by the Japanese administration under the broader classification of "Indians", though a specific regiment for Ceylon also existed. Following the Fall of Singapore in 1942, the Japanese military administration facilitated the INA's reorganization, utilizing the Malay Peninsula and Singapore as central hubs for recruitment and training among the local Ceylonese diasporas. A plan was made to transport them to Ceylon by submarine, to begin the independence struggle, but this was abortive. The Kandy Conference in Ceylon was the location where former Imperial Japan forces of Burma met with British authorities in the aftermath of the Japanese surrender to decide on their new future.[9][7]
Modern
Sri Lankans were also often chosen to work in administrative roles in the East India Companies due to being colonised by the Portuguese, Dutch and British at an earlier stage and having a higher literacy rate.[10] Trade was often imported and exported from Nagasaki to Ceylon by the Dutch East India Company, such as kimonos[11] and copper.[12]

Japan is the leading team in rugby in Asia, and Sri Lanka is the leading Asian rugby team outside East Asia (ranking fifth overall, formerly second behind only Japan).[13] Sri Lanka has lost every single competitive match it has played against Japan.
Japan has become a popular destination for university students from Sri Lanka; advice given to prospective new students includes learning Japanese and learning about local customs and mannerisms.[14] An ever increasing number of children from ethnic Sri Lankan background study at schools in Japan.[15] Universities in Japan have started offering incentives to students from Sri Lanka.[16]

Sri Lankans fill a gap in a number of professional categories including healthcare and ICT. Sri Lankans also have access to the 'Special Skilled Worker' category in nursing care, food service, construction and agriculture.[17]Japan has targeted South Asia and South East Asia as sources for talent.[18]
Schools in Sri Lanka offer training in the Japanese language at O-Level and A-Level targeting employment in 14 sectors including nursing, hospitality, building cleaning, agricultural activities, motor mechanics, electronics and electrical engineering.[19]
In May 2024 a 31-year-old woman from Sri Lanka who came to Japan in 2018 as the first technical intern trainee in the caregiving field completed her education and obtained a qualification as a caregiver.[20]