
The New York Times has a fascinating story about Japan’s Lost and Found culture… apparently small lost and found centers exist all over Japan which allow citizens to return things they found on the street to the recipient. It’s interesting because $23 million in cash was returned to a lost and found center in 2002. Talk about about a civics lesson.
Anywhere else perhaps, a shiny cellphone fallen on the backseat of a taxi, a nondescript umbrella left leaning against a subway door, a wad of cash dropped on a sidewalk, would be lost forever, the owners resigned to the vicissitudes of big city life. But here in Tokyo, with 8 million people in the city and 33 million in the metropolitan area, these items and thousands more would probably find their way to the Tokyo Metropolitan Police Lost and Found Center. In a four-story warehouse, hundreds of thousands of lost objects are meticulously catalogued according to the date and location of discovery, and the information put in a database.