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Cleaning

There was a nice column in the June 7th issue of Jinja Shinpō by a priest in Kumamoto Prefecture, in western Kyushu. He, Revd Kudō, was talking about the importance of cleaning the jinja precincts, and, in particular, sweeping up the leaves that drop from the trees planted around the sanctuaries. He quotes, without objecting, another chief priest as saying that most of a Shinto priest’s job is cleaning. Traditionally, this is done while in vestments, with a bamboo broom, but he confessed that he had started using a leaf… Read More »Cleaning

Enshrinement

The May 31st issue of Jinja Shinpō contained three articles, about different jinja, that cast light on different aspects of the idea of the enshrinement of a kami. There is not enough material for an essay, but it will make a substantial blog post. The first, and simplest, was about repairs and rebuilding at a relatively small jinja in Tokyo, Eiju Inari Jinja. The main job of the chief priest of this jinja is assistant priest at Kanda Jinja, one of the most important jinja in Tokyo. As is normal,… Read More »Enshrinement

Japan Experts Podcast

About a month ago, I was interviewed by Miyuki Seguchi of the Japan Experts Podcast, and that podcast went live a few days ago. It’s about 30 minutes long, and I hope I managed to be interesting. It is, of course, about Shinto in general, rather than about the very specific sorts of information I tend to write about here.

Fish in the Lake

The May 24th issue of Jinja Shinpō contained a very thought-provoking article. Futarasan Jinja in Nikkō has just erected a monument near its middle jinja to celebrate the actions of one of its late nineteenth century chief priests. Nikkō is a mountainous area in Tochigi Prefecture, most famous for Nikkō Tōshōgū, a World Heritage site and the main jinja enshrining Tokugawa Ieyasu, the founder of the Tokugawa Shogunate. Futarasan Jinja is, however, about a thousand years older, and also part of the World Heritage Site. It honours one of the… Read More »Fish in the Lake

Standing Committee Meeting

The June 7th issue of Jinja Shinpō included a front-page article about the meeting of the Standing Committee of Jinja Honchō’s Oversight Council. I mentioned that it might be a bit livelier than normal. Was it? It began with a call to debate a motion of no confidence in the President. Yes, it was a bit livelier than normal. The article only gets around to that opening gambit at the end, because apparently that member of the committee was told that he had to wait until later in the process… Read More »Standing Committee Meeting

Kasuga Taisha

Kasuga Taisha is in Nara, the site of Heijōkyō, the eighth-century capital of Japan. The jinja was founded in the early eighth century, soon after the foundation of the capital, to enshrine the patron kami of the Fujiwara clan. The Fujiwara had become politically important about fifty years earlier, and were to remain of great importance for another four centuries. The jinja enshrines four kami, and each has their own small main sanctuary. Like Jingū, Kasuga Taisha had a tradition of rebuilding the sanctuaries every twenty years, and unlike Jingū… Read More »Kasuga Taisha