In Mexico, a Japanese traditional dancer shows how body movement speaks beyond culture and religion

Aimi Kawasaki, left, and Eiko Moriya, Japanese traditional Hanayagi-style dance students, practice with their handkerchiefs in Professor Naoko Kihara's studio in Mexico City, Friday, Nov. 24, 2023. Born in Mexico after her parents moved from Japan, Kawasaki says that Hanayagi is like ballet, but with an important exception: While Japanese traditional dancers are delicate and elegant, they never stand on the tip of their toes or pull their bodies toward the sky. (AP Photo/Ginnette Riquelme)

MEXICO CITY (AP) — When music requires her to cry, Japanese traditional dancer Naoko Kihara barely alters her expression. It’s her arms and torso that move like a slow-motion wave.

“Expression is minimal because we cry with our body,†said Kihara, wrapped in her white and navy kimono, on a recent day at her dancing studio in Mexico, where an estimated 76,000 Japanese descendants live.

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