Toshiba International Foundation Contributes to the Japanese Studies of Mori Ogai Memorial Hall in Berlin



    Toshiba International Foundation (TIFO), a non-profit organization
    funded entirely by Toshiba Corporation, has decided, as part of its
    program of supporting research that enhances understanding of Japan,
    to provide financial support for the Japanese studies program
    conducted by Mori Ogai Memorial Hall in Berlin, Germany. Also, TIFO
    will donate cutting-edge audiovisual equipment and notebook computers
    in order to enrich Mori Ogai Memorial Hall's Japanese cultural
    activities offered to the community.

    On June 3, a grant awarding ceremony will be held at Mori Ogai
    Memorial Hall. Tadashi Okamura, chairman of Toshiba Corporation, other
    Toshiba executives, and Shinji Fukukawa, vice chairman of TIFO and
    chairman of the Machine Industry Memorial Foundation, will attend the
    ceremony with Prof. Dr. Klaus Kracht, director of Mori Ogai Memorial
    Hall and director of the Institute of Japanese Studies, Humboldt
    University of Berlin.

    Mori Ogai (1862-1922), a distinguished novelist and a physician at
    the dawn of Japan's modernization, studied medicine in Germany from
    1884 to 1888. After his return to Japan, he wrote Wita Sekusuarisu
    (Vita Sexualis), Maihime (The Dancing Girl), Seinen, and several other
    highly admired literary works and also translated Goethe's Faust. Mori
    Ogai was a pioneer in introducing German literature to Japan and
    contributed to the cultural relationship between Germany and Japan.

    Mori Ogai Memorial Hall was opened in 1984, commemorating the
    centenary of Mori Ogai's stay in Germany. The building was originally
    a private residence, which was Mori Ogai's first home in Berlin in
    1887. Subsequently, Mori Ogai Memorial Hall became part of the
    Institute of Japanese Studies of Humboldt University.

    Mori Ogai Memorial Hall has exhibitions of Mori Ogai's works and
    related books, collects artifacts associated with him, plans and holds
    events, and offers Japanese cultural programs on such subjects as
    ikebana, the tea ceremony, and shogi. The Institute of Japanese
    Studies of Humboldt University, to which Mori Ogai Memorial Hall
    belongs, is widely admired for its activities. It is the country's
    sole publisher of a journal of Japanese studies written in the German
    language. As one element of the support program, TIFO will provide
    financial support for the editing and production of this journal.

    TIFO is a non-profit organization established in 1989 and entirely
    funded by Toshiba Corporation. TIFO strives to contribute to the
    development of international understanding by promoting exchange
    activities, including the organization and sponsorship of symposia and
    seminars and various other activities that further understanding of
    Japan worldwide.

    TIFO's recent activities in Europe include the following: support
    of the Mazarin Chest Project, a collaborative project for conservation
    of the Mazarin Chest, which is an exquisitely decorated 17th century
    piece of Japanese lacquer in the Japanese Gallery of the Victoria and
    Albert Museum in the UK; production and donation of explanatory panels
    in Japanese for the Louvre Museum in France; and production of CD-ROM
    catalogs for the collection of netsuke (miniature carved ornaments)
    owned by the Naprestek Museum, which houses the largest collection of
    Japanese art in the Czech Republic.

    Every year TIFO accepts applications for projects whose objective
    is to promote understanding of Japan and after careful screening
    provides various types of support for selected projects.

    Mori Ogai greatly contributed to cultural exchanges between
    Germany and Japan and his literary works are translated into German
    and various other languages and are read by people interested in
    Japanese literature all over the world. TIFO's decision to provide
    support to Mori Ogai Memorial Hall reflects TIFO's enthusiastic
    endorsement of Mori Ogai Memorial Hall's intention to further
    contribute to the promotion of mutual understanding between Germany
    and Japan through enrichment of the institution's activities.