moises martinez comes from venezuela only two percent of the people living in japan are foreigners he was married to a japanese woman she died but he was allowed to stay to begin with he was given the cold shoulder by locals social contact with foreigners is rare in this island nation where even today few speak english and immigration is rare and usually called to the job it's a good while the. other time i go back home. that's all you see. at the heart of the language. the hardest part is better to learn. before you entered this business but there's been strong resistance to migration it took pressure from the country's businesses to ensure that three hundred fifty thousand killed workers now enter the country to work in different sectors. and for no more than five years migration activists say that's unfair. i think it's an a phobia despite the realities the theory of an ethnically homogenous nation is still firmly rooted in japan but japan can only be preserved by japanese they only want to have to deal with themselves. that moises martinez feels at home in japan has lived here for