Hi everyone!
It is getting warmer and warmer in Japan. When it is sunny, we feel even hot!
May is one of the most comfortable months here. If you are living abroad, I'd like to recommend you to visit Japan around this time of the year. Not too hot, not too cold, lots of sunny days. Although sakura (cherry blossoms) is over in Honshu island, you can see them in Hokkaido, and also we have many festivals!
One of the most famous festivals in Tokyo is Sanja Matsuri, which is currently taking place in Asakusa.
The highlight is today, but we went to see the festival yesterday to avoid too much crowd.
Sanja Matsuri is annually held on the third weekend of May. Though considered one of the three representative Edo festivals, this festival used to have a rough and wild image with the involvement of local yakuza.
Until several years ago, we had thought that half-naked tattooed men (usually yakuza) dancing and yelling on the mikoshi (portable shrines) was a norm, or rather considered as the essential part of the festival.
We knew that the festival that attracts 1,5 million tourists was an important financial source of yakuza, but took it as a matter of course. According to the survey conducted in 2007 by the Metropolitan Police Department, about 70 percent of mikoshi carriers were related to yakuza.
Since 2008, however, the act that carriers mount on mikoshi has been banned, and since 2012 the organizers has requested yakuza not to wear a hanten matsuri jacket with the name of their "kumi" (group or organization) printed on the back.
If you'd like to know what it was like before, take a look at the photo blog of an amateur photographer Edokko! Sanja Matsuri.
I saw many guys with arm tattoos showing from their half-sleeved hanten jacket yesterday, but you don't have to be scared. They are enjoying the festival and usually don't do any harm to tourists.
Many hochin lanterns with the name of the sponsors, usually small shops and restaurants in the Asakusa district are put up around the Asakusa Shrine, next to the famous Sensoji Temple.
After the purification, more than 100 mikoshi from each district leaves the Asakusa Shrine one after another to stroll the Asakusa area.
Musicians playing the festival music are also townspeople. They include small children.
Looking at people in matsuri jackets, kimono and hakama (trouser-like men's kimono) walking around, you may feel as if you were back in the Edo Period.
Today's useful expression: おみこしは どこで みられますか。 O-mikoshi wa dokode miraremasuka? Where can we see the mikoshi (portable shrines?)
For anyone interested in Japan. Written in both English and easy Japanese. Forgive me if I make too many English mistakes!
Showing posts with label festivals. Show all posts
Showing posts with label festivals. Show all posts
May 19, 2013
May 8, 2013
Don't miss Kanda Festival taking place this week!!
Considered as one of the three biggest festivals of Edo (ancient name of Tokyo), Kanda Festival usually takes place every other year, but it was cancelled in 2011 due to the big earth quake in Tohoku region. Therefore, we were waiting for this year in great anticipation.
The festival will start with a ritual that transports "kami " (shinto gods) to mikoshi, or portable shrines, tomorrow evening (9th) on the precinct yard of *Kanda Shrine, located at 2-16-2 Soto-Kanda, Chiyoda-ku, Tokyo.
*Kanda Jinja is the official name but it normally goes by the name of Kanda Myojin.
The highlight of the festival is on the 11th (Saturday) and 12th (Sunday)
On the 11th, there will be a procession of shinto priests in traditional court costume of the Heian Period and the parade of floats and mikoshi through the central districts of Tokyo (Kanda, Nihombashi, Otemachi, Marunouchi and Akihabara) all day long. They are definitely worth viewing!
A float for the festival was being displayed on the shrine's precinct yard the day we visited. See the close-up shot of the upper part (below).
On the 12th, about 100 mikoshi will gather at the shrine. The precinct yard will be packed with people who carry the mikoshi and of course tourists. The photo is borrowed from the official website of Kanda Myojin Shrine.
Today's useful expression: すみません、とおしてください。 Sumimasen, toshite kudasai.
It means Excuse me (us), please let me (us) go through.
You'll have many chances to use this expression in the situation like the photo above....
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)