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Shinto

Samurai Show

While I was researching another piece, I came across the following group: https://theshow.jp The website is all in Japanese at the moment, but you can see the pictures. They offer a Japanese-style dinner show, with Japanese food, and a Japanese story to the play. The play starts with Taira no Masakado, a hero from around Tokyo in the tenth century who defended local people, but was declared an enemy of the Tennō and killed by an army sent from Kyoto. (That much is historical.) Then his daughter, Taki-Yasha-himë, became a… Read More »Samurai Show

Taking the Kami to the People

Jinja Shinpō continues to carry interesting articles about the ways in which different jinja across Japan have responded to the constraints imposed by COVID-19. Last week, there was an article about a Yasaka Jinja in Hakui City in Ishikawa Prefecture, on the Japan Sea coast. The jinja was founded in the late fifteenth century, with the sharing of the kami from Yasaka Jinja in Kyoto. Thus, it is closely connected to prayers for the end of epidemics, and has an annual Gion Matsuri, like the one in Kyoto, only at… Read More »Taking the Kami to the People

Yorishiro

A “yorishiro” is a temporary vessel for kami. They are used when a matsuri is being conducted away from a jinja, where the goshintai (“honourable kami body”) is a permanent vessel for the kami. The scholarly consensus is that in the earliest days of Shinto there were only yorishiro, and that permanent goshintai became part of normal practice around the time Buddhism started to spread in Japan, probably as a result of the influence of Buddhist temples and images. Historically, yorishiro appear to have included trees, rocks, and people. There… Read More »Yorishiro

Assessing Online Matsuri

A couple of weeks ago, I posted a set of links to online videos of matsuri. In the August 3rd issue of Jinja Shinpō there was a report of an extensive, and interesting, discussion of a range of issues concerning the pandemic, including considerable discussion of this point. I’d like to pick that up here. Although the discussion took place online, all three people were from the area around Tokyo. Imai Itaru is a director of Tokyo Jinjachō, and chief priest of a jinja in Tokyo, while Takeda Atsushi is… Read More »Assessing Online Matsuri

Non-Hereditary Priestess

Every issue of Jinja Shinpō includes a column in a series called “Komorëbi”, which means “Sunlight through Leaves”. Around a dozen people are asked to write these for two years, taking turns so that each individual writes about eight columns. They normally try to recruit a range of people with Shinto connections, and priests are normally a minority of the authors. A new cycle is just starting, and a couple of weeks ago one of the authors published her first column. She is the newly-appointed chief priest of ten jinja… Read More »Non-Hereditary Priestess

The Gion Procession

As I have mentioned before, the Gion Matsuri in Kyoto is normally one of the biggest matsuri in Japan. It runs for the whole of July, and includes several large processions, including mikoshi and large decorated floats. This year, due to COVID-19, things have had to be done a bit differently. The matsuri traces its origins back to 863, when a matsuri, called a “goryōë”, was held in the Shinsen’en (“Gardens of the Spring of the Kami”) in Kyoto to appease the angry spirits (goryō) that were believed to be… Read More »The Gion Procession