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Lycée Seijo : ウィキペディア英語版
Lycée Seijo
The was a Japanese boarding high school in Kientzheim, Haut-Rhin,〔(Home page )" ((Archive )).''Lycée Seijo''. Retrieved on 2 January 2014. "8, route d'Ammerschwihr, 68240 KIENTZHEIM, FRANCE"〕 in the Alsace region of France, near Colmar.〔"(Seijo Gakuen closes French campus )." (archived from (the original )) ''The Japan Times''. Sunday February 13, 2005. Retrieved on 2 January 2013. "Former Prime Minister Tsutomu Hata, a graduate of Seijo Gakuen, said in a speech at the ceremony that he truly regrets the closure. Hata was accompanied by his second eldest son, who was one of the school's first graduates."〕 It was operated by Seijo Gakuen, an educational society affiliated with Seijo University, and therefore was an overseas branch of a Japanese private school, or a ''Shiritsu zaigai kyoiku shisetsu'' (私立在外教育施設).〔"(過去に指定・認定していた在外教育施設 )" ((Archive )). Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology. Retrieved on March 1, 2015.〕
==History==
In the 1980s officials in the Alsace region sent an invitation for a Japanese school to establish itself there as a way of attracting Japanese companies to establish operations in the region.〔 The director of the Alsace Development Agency, Andre Klein,〔Schoenberger, Karl. "COLUMN ONE : 'Japaning' of Europe at Full Tilt : Companies rush for a foothold before the 1992 integration of the European Community. Alsace is a case in point." ''Los Angeles Times''. August 2, 1990. p. (2 ). Retrieved on January 9, 2015.〕 received contacts from several Japanese educational institutions after he had asked a ''Nihon Keizai Shimbun'' reporter to write an article about a possible site for an overseas Japanese boarding school: a former convent in Kientzheim.〔Schoenberger, Karl. "COLUMN ONE : 'Japaning' of Europe at Full Tilt : Companies rush for a foothold before the 1992 integration of the European Community. Alsace is a case in point." ''Los Angeles Times''. August 2, 1990. p. (3 ). Retrieved on January 9, 2015.〕 Seijo Gakuen, the organization controlling Seijo University, accepted the offer. It wanted to establish a Japanese school in 1987 to celebrate its 70th anniversary. In 1984 negotiations to establish the school finished successfully.〔
The school opened in April 1986.〔 The first principal was Jokichi Moroga.〔''The Bulletin, Volume 108''. J. Haynes and J.F. Archibald, 1986. p. (143 ). "An Outpost Deep in Alsace Principal Jokichi Moroga is eating soggy noodles in the school cafeteria at Lycee Seijo Gakuen, and he doesn't exactly seem enthusiastic about it. "This is the first time our French cooks have made these," explains()" - Preview page appears blank but you will see the page if you put the quotes in the Google Books search〕 After the school opened Sony decided to open a factory in Alsace. Other Japanese companies including Ricoh followed.〔
In 1990〔 and 1991 the school had 180 students in grades 7 through 12.〔 The school's enrollment declined due to a declining Japanese birthrate and a decreased economic presence of Japanese companies in France, due to the recession in Japan. On Friday February 11, 2005 the school held its final graduation ceremony, with 13 students graduating. In the school's history a total of 556 students had graduated.〔 The European Centre for Japanese Studies in Alsace ((フランス語:Centre européen d'études japonaises), CEEJA, (日本語:アルザス・欧州日本学研究所) ''Aruzasu Ōshū Nihongaku Kenkyūsho'') opened at the site of the former school.〔"(Du lycée Seijo au Centre d’études japonaises )." ((Archive )) ''L'Alsace''. 19 March 2013. Retrieved on 2 January 2014. "L’ancien lycée Seijo, à Kientzheim, a accueilli des élèves japonais entre les années 1980 et 2006. On y trouve aujourd’hui le Centre européen d’études japonaises." and "Le lycée Seijo a compté jusqu’à 200 élèves vers 1990. Il a fermé ses portes en 2006, suite au déclin progressif de la présence nippone."〕

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