Global Times

Japan’s ‘usho’ keep art of cormorant fishing alive

- Page Editor: xuhailin@globaltime­s.com.cn

In the pitch black night, fires burn alongside a river in Japan's Gifu as a handful of men prepare for a ritual that dates back over 1,300 years: fishing with cormorants.

Dressed in traditiona­l clothes, they look like they come from another time. They wield their cormorants, tied together with strings, like puppeteers.

Their profession, known as “ukai,” was once common in waterside villages and towns throughout Japan and other parts of the world.

But it has been on the decline for centuries, and now lives on in Japan as a tourist attraction and a carefully protected part of the country's national heritage.

At 46, Shuji Sugiyama is the youngest of the “usho” in Gifu, in western Japan. And he is one of just nine people to hold an imperial license for the practice.

“It's because we live together, the man and the cormorants, that ukai fishing is possible,” he told AFP. “For example, I could never fish with another master's cormorants,” he added.

By the time the palace began issuing imperial licenses to usho in 1890, the art was already on the decline.

Now there are only a few dozen usho in Japan, and just nine of them hold imperial licenses, turning over eight catches a year to the palace and receiving a symbolic salary of 8,000 yen ($71) a month.

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