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Japan trip
Day 5 - 10th June - Fushimi-Inari Shrine, Taue-Sai Festival (Rice Planting Ritual), Kyoto (Part 4)
While in Japan I witnessed not one, not two but three Matsuris (festivals) - Taue-Sai Festival (Rice Planting Ritual) in the Fushimi-Inari Shrine, Kyoto; Onda Shinji (Rice Planting Festival) in Osaka and Aoba-san in Koyasan. Luckily, each was more interesting than the last.

Map


Roadside shrine with rock with bib inside

Female Japanese Priest (I'm not sure whether they're nuns, monks, priests or priestesses - I Google Image-d "japanese priest female" - and got softcore pornography ([with the words: ""She is not a virgin anymore," pronounced the conservative Japanese priest. "She has been bonked in her dreams," he added."] Damn Japs.)

Unagi before it's been seasoned to death

Exhibition space (?)


Wooden tablets with people's names (?) on them


Another map
[Japanese] Buddhist temples and Shinto shrines are generally more private places than churches, with some of the sacred area closed off (even if you're not barred from entry altogether, like at Ise), even from worshippers (let alone tourists). They don't even let you look at the most sacred bits sometimes.


God in gate (?)

Information plaque


Statue of Inari, the fox god

A peek at a ceremony



Shrine
I then made my way to the venue of the festival.




Empty field

Kiasu photographers

Sign

Observers. People came prepared, with some bringing their own chairs. Almost all were old - the young have foresaken their traditions (the giggling gaggles of schoolkids were conspicuous by their absence). Also, note the Catholic nun. Maybe she was there to disrupt the ritual.

Guy with a Twin Lens Reflex (Yashica 12). It must be ancient!
I don't often do this, but:

KAWAII!!!




You see how hard it was to get the Samurai Dog to look at me.

With tardiness uncharacteristic of the Japs ("Researchers Robert Levine and Ellen Wolff rank Japan as the country with the best “punctuality concept.”"), the festival started more than an hour late (it wasn't wrong information from the hostel, since posters advertising the festival also stated 1pm). This means that the rice harvest will be poor this year (since Fushimi-Inari starts the ball rolling with the rice planting rituals).



1 hr 10 minutes late, some farmers finally came in with a sacred chest and proceeded onto the stage, preceded by a priest and followed by other priests

People in bathrobes from the rest of Japan then filed into the VIP seats



After blessing of the fields...



And the fields were blessed

After more milling

The old rice farmers shuffled down

Made-up girls prepared to dance

Everyone took their positions