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We talked with ethnographer Seiko Tanizaki, who lives in Sepsiszentgyörgy with her husband and three children, about her experiences in Transylvania, the difficulties of integration, and the difference between home and home. Seiko Tanizaki decided to learn Hungarian during her university years in Japan - for a reason she could not explain - but she did not expect that her experiences in Hungary, but especially in Transylvania, would change her life. He was impressed by the diversity of Hungarian folk art: he wrote two books in his native language about traditional Transylvanian handicrafts, and collected folk costumes, which he presented at exhibitions in his native country. More recently, he is also trying to promote the traditions of Hungarian culture in Japan on his personal blog.