The Asian Age

‘Men-only’ on Japanese island now a Unesco heritage site

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Tokyo: A men-only island in Japan where women are banned and male visitors must bathe naked in the sea before visiting its shrine, has been declared a Unesco World Heritage site.

The tiny landmass of Okinoshima is permanentl­y manned by a Shinto priest who prays to the island’s goddess, in a tradition that has been kept up for centuries.

Limited numbers are permitted to land on the island in the Sea of Japan (East Sea) — this year it was 200 — for a yearly festival that lasts just two hours, but they must adhere to strict rules. Most importantl­y, they must be men, but they must also strip off and take a purifying dip in the ocean before they are allowed to set foot on the sacred ground of the shrine.

Despite its inscriptio­n on Unesco’s World Heritage list — often the prelude to a leap in tourist numbers — shrine officials say they are now considerin­g banning future travel for anyone apart from priests, partly out of fears the island could be “destroyed” by too many visitors.

“The island has sometimes been said to ban women, but in principle anyone but the priests who pray there for 365 days a year is barred from entering,” said a spokesman.

The ban on female visitors specifical­ly “has nothing to do with discrimina­tion against women,” the official said.

It is considered dangerous for women to travel by sea to get to the island and the shrine will not change the centuries-old rule, he said. “It is meant to protect women, the birth-giving gender,” he added.

The island, which sits off the northwest coast of Kyushu, the southernmo­st of Japan’s four main islands, was an important window for foreign trade in Japan since ancient times, forming part of a trade route that linked the archipelag­o to the Korean peninsula and China.

Okinoshima is permanentl­y manned by a Shinto priest who prays to the island’s goddess, in a tradition that has been kept up for centuries

It is considered dangerous for women to travel by sea to get to the island

The island has sometimes been said to ban women, but in principle anyone but the priests who pray there for 365 days a year is barred from entering

The island was an important window for foreign trade in Japan since ancient times, forming part of a trade route that linked the archipelag­o to the Korean peninsula and China

 ?? — AFP ?? Meng Meng, one of two Chinese panda bears in the zoo Berlin receives a birthday-cake to mark its fourth birthday in the enclosure at the Zoologisch­er Garten zoo in Berlin on Monday.
— AFP Meng Meng, one of two Chinese panda bears in the zoo Berlin receives a birthday-cake to mark its fourth birthday in the enclosure at the Zoologisch­er Garten zoo in Berlin on Monday.
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