Search Results
7/22/2025, 9:42:24 AM
>This information was also reported by the Japanese newspaper Nihon Keizai on the 13th. The article included a quote from A, a 40-something male executive working at a large corporation in Korea, who said, 'If I get married, it must be to a Japanese woman. They seem to be polite and many of them enjoy cooking.'
>Nihon Keizai also featured the case of Ms. B (28), a Japanese woman living about an hour away by train from Seoul. Ms. B has loved K-dramas and K-pop idols since middle school and worked part-time in Shinjuku, Tokyo's Korean town, during high school. She later came to Korea on a working holiday visa and met her Korean husband (34), who runs his own business through a matchmaking app.
>Aya Ishikawa (27), a Japanese woman who entered Korea this year on a working holiday visa, said on the 16th to ChosunBiz, 'Once I resolve the visa issue, I want to live in Korea indefinitely,' adding, 'I am also considering marrying a Korean man.'
>Ishikawa, who graduated from a four-year university in Japan, could have found employment locally if she wanted. The employment rate for graduates in Japan is around 98%. Ishikawa remarked, 'I worked as an intern at a Japanese corporation, but there was an atmosphere that belittled women. That made me feel that Japanese society did not suit me.'
>Nihon Keizai also featured the case of Ms. B (28), a Japanese woman living about an hour away by train from Seoul. Ms. B has loved K-dramas and K-pop idols since middle school and worked part-time in Shinjuku, Tokyo's Korean town, during high school. She later came to Korea on a working holiday visa and met her Korean husband (34), who runs his own business through a matchmaking app.
>Aya Ishikawa (27), a Japanese woman who entered Korea this year on a working holiday visa, said on the 16th to ChosunBiz, 'Once I resolve the visa issue, I want to live in Korea indefinitely,' adding, 'I am also considering marrying a Korean man.'
>Ishikawa, who graduated from a four-year university in Japan, could have found employment locally if she wanted. The employment rate for graduates in Japan is around 98%. Ishikawa remarked, 'I worked as an intern at a Japanese corporation, but there was an atmosphere that belittled women. That made me feel that Japanese society did not suit me.'
7/17/2025, 2:06:43 PM
>This information was also reported by the Japanese newspaper Nihon Keizai on the 13th. The article included a quote from A, a 40-something male executive working at a large corporation in Korea, who said, 'If I get married, it must be to a Japanese woman. They seem to be polite and many of them enjoy cooking.'
>Nihon Keizai also featured the case of Ms. B (28), a Japanese woman living about an hour away by train from Seoul. Ms. B has loved K-dramas and K-pop idols since middle school and worked part-time in Shinjuku, Tokyo's Korean town, during high school. She later came to Korea on a working holiday visa and met her Korean husband (34), who runs his own business through a matchmaking app.
>Aya Ishikawa (27), a Japanese woman who entered Korea this year on a working holiday visa, said on the 16th to ChosunBiz, 'Once I resolve the visa issue, I want to live in Korea indefinitely,' adding, 'I am also considering marrying a Korean man.'
>Ishikawa, who graduated from a four-year university in Japan, could have found employment locally if she wanted. The employment rate for graduates in Japan is around 98%. Ishikawa remarked, 'I worked as an intern at a Japanese corporation, but there was an atmosphere that belittled women. That made me feel that Japanese society did not suit me.'
>Nihon Keizai also featured the case of Ms. B (28), a Japanese woman living about an hour away by train from Seoul. Ms. B has loved K-dramas and K-pop idols since middle school and worked part-time in Shinjuku, Tokyo's Korean town, during high school. She later came to Korea on a working holiday visa and met her Korean husband (34), who runs his own business through a matchmaking app.
>Aya Ishikawa (27), a Japanese woman who entered Korea this year on a working holiday visa, said on the 16th to ChosunBiz, 'Once I resolve the visa issue, I want to live in Korea indefinitely,' adding, 'I am also considering marrying a Korean man.'
>Ishikawa, who graduated from a four-year university in Japan, could have found employment locally if she wanted. The employment rate for graduates in Japan is around 98%. Ishikawa remarked, 'I worked as an intern at a Japanese corporation, but there was an atmosphere that belittled women. That made me feel that Japanese society did not suit me.'
7/17/2025, 7:11:48 AM
>This information was also reported by the Japanese newspaper Nihon Keizai on the 13th. The article included a quote from A, a 40-something male executive working at a large corporation in Korea, who said, 'If I get married, it must be to a Japanese woman. They seem to be polite and many of them enjoy cooking.'
>Nihon Keizai also featured the case of Ms. B (28), a Japanese woman living about an hour away by train from Seoul. Ms. B has loved K-dramas and K-pop idols since middle school and worked part-time in Shinjuku, Tokyo's Korean town, during high school. She later came to Korea on a working holiday visa and met her Korean husband (34), who runs his own business through a matchmaking app.
>Aya Ishikawa (27), a Japanese woman who entered Korea this year on a working holiday visa, said on the 16th to ChosunBiz, 'Once I resolve the visa issue, I want to live in Korea indefinitely,' adding, 'I am also considering marrying a Korean man.'
>Ishikawa, who graduated from a four-year university in Japan, could have found employment locally if she wanted. The employment rate for graduates in Japan is around 98%. Ishikawa remarked, 'I worked as an intern at a Japanese corporation, but there was an atmosphere that belittled women. That made me feel that Japanese society did not suit me.'
>Nihon Keizai also featured the case of Ms. B (28), a Japanese woman living about an hour away by train from Seoul. Ms. B has loved K-dramas and K-pop idols since middle school and worked part-time in Shinjuku, Tokyo's Korean town, during high school. She later came to Korea on a working holiday visa and met her Korean husband (34), who runs his own business through a matchmaking app.
>Aya Ishikawa (27), a Japanese woman who entered Korea this year on a working holiday visa, said on the 16th to ChosunBiz, 'Once I resolve the visa issue, I want to live in Korea indefinitely,' adding, 'I am also considering marrying a Korean man.'
>Ishikawa, who graduated from a four-year university in Japan, could have found employment locally if she wanted. The employment rate for graduates in Japan is around 98%. Ishikawa remarked, 'I worked as an intern at a Japanese corporation, but there was an atmosphere that belittled women. That made me feel that Japanese society did not suit me.'
Page 1