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Carlos Kasuga Osaka : ウィキペディア英語版
Carlos Kasuga

Carlos Kasuga Osaka is a Mexican businessman and public speaker. He is the founder of the Mexican division of the yogurt company Yakult,〔"(Carlos Kasuga, dueño de Yakult, comparte el secreto de su éxito )." ''Terra Networks''. 13 March 2013. Updated 14 March 2013. Retrieved on March 26, 2014.〕 and he served as its director.〔García, Jerry. ''Looking Like the Enemy: Japanese Mexicans, the Mexican State, and US Hegemony, 1897-1945''. University of Arizona Press. February 27, 2014. ISBN 0816530254, 9780816530250. p. (195 ). "()who provided that quote, was born in Mexico to Japanese parents who immigrated in the 1930s. Carlos is the founder and president of the Japanese Mexican School, director general of Yakult, which produces a probiotic health care product, and president of the Pan American Nikkei Association."〕 He also founded the ''Liceo Mexicano Japonés'' and served as its chair.〔Valls, Julio. "(Carlos Kasuga, el líder detrás de Yakult )." ''Forbes Mexico''. July 6, 2013. Retrieved on December 25, 2013. "Es expresidente de diversas asociaciones e instancias, como la Asociación Mexicana Japonesa, del Comité de las Celebraciones del 90 Aniversario de la Migración Japonesa a México, de la Asociación Panamericana Nikkei, de la Federación Panamericana de la Leche, y presidió y fundó el Liceo Mexicano Japonés."〕 He also served as the president of the Pan American Nikkei Association (PANA, ''Asociación Panamericana Nikkei'', APN),〔 having done so since the 1981 establishment of the organization until 1995.〔Asociación Peruano Japonesa, Kokusai Kyōryoku Jigyōdan. ''The Centennial anniversary of the Japanese immigration to Peru, 1899-1999''. Japanese International Cooperation Agency, 2000. p. (210 ). "Acknowledgements We wish to thank Carlos Kasuga, President of the Pan-American Nikkei Association since its foundation in 1981 until 1995."〕
==Personal life==
His parents were immigrants from Japan.〔 They settled in Mexico in the 1930s. Originally Kasuga and his family lived in Cárdenas, San Luis Potosí. He stated that in 1942, when he was seven years old, soldiers came to his house and told his family they had to leave for Mexico City in 72 hours. He stated that later two soldiers came to the house to escort the family to the train station and that everyone in Cardenas came to the station to say goodbye to the Kasugas.〔García, Jerry. ''Looking Like the Enemy: Japanese Mexicans, the Mexican State, and US Hegemony, 1897-1945''. University of Arizona Press, February 27, 2014. ISBN 0816530254, 9780816530250. p. (153 ).〕

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