This post is taken from the weekly newsletter “Darons Daronnes” on parenting, which is sent every Wednesday at 6 p.m. You can subscribe to this newsletter for free by following this link. Around 150,000 children are “abducted” by one of their parents in Japan each year, according to figures from the NGO Kizuna. Illustration. YOSUKE TANAKA / AFLO / PLAINPICTURE Time flies: that’s one of the thoughts I had when I went to see Romain Duris play Jérôme in Une Part Missante, by Guillaume Senez, last week. He who was the casual and charming young hero of my entire generation of high school students in The Young Peril now plays a father in turmoil, as he already did recently in The Animal Kingdom, by Thomas Cailley – a film which haunts me and which I will perhaps talk to you about again one day. Time passes, and is etched in the furrowed forehead of this middle-aged man, Jérôme, nicknamed Jay, a Frenchman who has been roaming the streets of Tokyo for nine years at the wheel of his black taxi in the hope of finding his daughter. , Lily. When the film begins, he has resigned himself and is preparing to return to France. His daughter’s mother, a Japanese woman, left when the child was 3, and he has never been able to see her since. This is fiction, and it is not: in Japan, when parents separate, the first one who takes the child has custody, and can refuse the other any contact. This is not written in any legal text, it is even prohibited by article 224 of the penal code, which punishes the kidnapping of minors; but the police, like the judges, do not intervene in what they consider to be a private matter, and thus protect the parent who left with the child. You have 82.38% of this article left to read. The rest is reserved for subscribers.
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The suspended lives of parents deprived of their children in Japan
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