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Old Sep 11, 2013 | 10:04 pm
  #1  
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Donating stuff

We are doing more cleaning of our home.

We have tons of really good quality clothes that we are not going to wear anymore. Where or what to the Japanese do with them?

In Canada, we have various charities we can donate to or send them to consignment stores to see if they can be sold off.

The consignment stores near our home only accept clothes that are within 2 years old or newer and is branded.

I am looking for a Japanese equivalant of "goodwill" - if there is such a thing. If not, do I just throw it away on burnable garbage day? It just seems to be a waste.
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Old Sep 11, 2013 | 10:10 pm
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Check the Salvation Army Japan website !
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Old Sep 11, 2013 | 11:32 pm
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Find a local Hard Off?
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Old Sep 12, 2013 | 12:16 am
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Currently many schools are collecting things on good condition to send to Tohoku as part of student led efforts. I would call around to a few places, they may love to have it.
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Old Sep 12, 2013 | 12:29 am
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Originally Posted by mjm
Currently many schools are collecting things on good condition to send to Tohoku as part of student led efforts. I would call around to a few places, they may love to have it.
Or they may not.
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Old Sep 12, 2013 | 3:09 am
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Originally Posted by Taiwaned
We are doing more cleaning of our home.

We have tons of really good quality clothes that we are not going to wear anymore. Where or what to the Japanese do with them?

In Canada, we have various charities we can donate to or send them to consignment stores to see if they can be sold off.

The consignment stores near our home only accept clothes that are within 2 years old or newer and is branded.

I am looking for a Japanese equivalant of "goodwill" - if there is such a thing. If not, do I just throw it away on burnable garbage day? It just seems to be a waste.
Give the stuff to a homeless person on the streets in Vancouver (I assume that's where you live) - or an institution that helps them - like a church (unless you're talking about golf shoes or fashion items). Especially cold weather clothing (winter is coming). Old clothes basically aren't worth shipping anywhere. If you really want to help people in need anywhere - send money. It's by far the most useful thing you can donate. Robyn
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Old Sep 12, 2013 | 4:53 am
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Originally Posted by robyng
Give the stuff to a homeless person on the streets in Vancouver (I assume that's where you live)
He lives in Japan now.
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Old Sep 12, 2013 | 5:46 am
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Originally Posted by hailstorm
He lives in Japan now.
Then he should do the same in Japan (we've passed by homeless living on the streets during this trip). Robyn
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Old Sep 12, 2013 | 8:28 am
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Yeah right, 120 plus custom men's business suits to hand out to the homeless one by one?

Wouldn't care if they were used by Syrians or other refugees as long as somebody was willing to take them all away at once. We are trying to clean our house not do social service. If by our house cleaning we can help an organization then great.

The Tohoku idea sounds great. Will ask around.

There is a Hard Off fairly near our house, will ask there as well.

Thank you for those who actually give constructive solutions. If there are other ideas, please keep them coming.
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Old Sep 12, 2013 | 10:52 am
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NGO JFSA collects clothes to help a school in a slum district in Pakistan.
Info provided in Japanese only.

http://www.jfsa.jpn.org/index.html
How, when and where to send
http://www.jfsa.jpn.org/iruiinfo_ippan_annai.html

Suits have to be dry cleaned to be accepted.

For shipping, I recommend "Yamato Bin" by Yamato. It's a much cheaper alternative for "Kuroneko Yamato no Takkyubin". They charge by weight or volumetric weight only, regardeless of the number of the packages.
http://www.kuronekoyamato.co.jp/yama...kin/tokyo.html
Delivery date is not guaranteed but just a couple of days more than their regular service.

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Old Sep 12, 2013 | 2:15 pm
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When I moved back to the States, I had a bunch of clothes and household goods that I didn't want to take back with me, so I asked around about how to dispose of them.

Some of the furniture went to newly-arrived gaijin. My landlady had a cousin who had just gotten divorced, so my kitchen items went to him.

An acquaintance told me that there was a Salvation Army in Japan and that they accepted donations. I went there, and sure enough, they were happy to take my unwanted clothes.
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Old Sep 12, 2013 | 4:28 pm
  #12  
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Originally Posted by Taiwaned
Yeah right, 120 plus custom men's business suits to hand out to the homeless one by one?

Wouldn't care if they were used by Syrians or other refugees as long as somebody was willing to take them all away at once. We are trying to clean our house not do social service. If by our house cleaning we can help an organization then great.

The Tohoku idea sounds great. Will ask around.

There is a Hard Off fairly near our house, will ask there as well.

Thank you for those who actually give constructive solutions. If there are other ideas, please keep them coming.
You have 120 business suits to give away. OMG . Is this normal in Japan? Apartments in Japan are rather small. Where do you keep them ?

FWIW - when my husband gave away business suits - he gave them to people we knew (like the husband of our housekeeper) - who were approximately his size - to be used (with minimal alterations) at events like funerals (these people really couldn't afford to buy nice suits). OTOH - he at most gave away 1 or 2 at a time. I doubt my husband has owned even 50 suits during the course of his life. I personally would recommend gifts like this - to people you know. I don't think business suits are very useful items of clothing for the homeless (whether or not they're refugees). Robyn
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Old Sep 12, 2013 | 5:24 pm
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Many universities run bazaars where they sell used clothing and other stuff. I would try someplace international and nearby like Sacred Heart and ask for the Miyashirokai (alumini association). They can put the stuff in storage until their next bazaar. More likely to be used and appreciated than if they're distributed as charity to street dwellers.
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Old Sep 13, 2013 | 12:03 am
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One thing that bugs me is "Japanese people all live in small apartments." Really?
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Old Sep 13, 2013 | 12:12 am
  #15  
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Originally Posted by gnaget
One thing that bugs me is "Japanese people all live in small apartments." Really?
And when they say "We're sorry, but all the seats are reserved," what they really mean is "Get lost, you gaijin scum!"
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