The Oklahoman

Kyoto shopping street lures visitors with yokai characters

- BY HIROFUMI HAJIRI

KYOTO, JAPAN — A variety of yokai monsters used to hold nocturnal parades through what is now the neighborho­od of the Taishogun shopping district in Kyoto — or so legends from the Heian period (794 to circa 1192) tell us. Local shop owners have taken advantage of this eerie inheritanc­e in a bid to boost the community.

During a visit to the shopping district in May, this reporter was greeted by many yokai-inspired objects, which looked more humorous than scary. Other visitors enjoyed a walking photo safari, snapping pictures of “monsters” whenever they encountere­d statues of them in front of shops.

For example, a kimono store set up an object in the shape of Neko Musume, a cat girl clad in yukata summer kimono, while a tea shop has a doll depicting Nurarihyon, a creature with a wizened face, with a teacup on a tray. A sign at an intersecti­on carried the warning “Watch for cars!” along with an illustrati­on of Tofu Kozo, a monster in the form of a boy carrying tofu on a tray.

About 20 yokai figures, many made of foam polystyren­e, greeted customers in front of shops. A rest area also had many monster-shaped objects and masks on display.

“It’s fun looking for what yokai can be found and where they are,” said Masaaki Yoshida, 55, a public servant who was visiting the shopping district from Amagasaki, Hyogo Prefecture.

Wojtek Roman, 62, a visitor from Poland, took an interest in an object depicting a tengu, a creature with an extraordin­arily long nose. “It looks similar to people in the West, rather than the Japanese,” he said. “I find there’re many types of yokai.”

There are about 30 shops in the Taishogun shopping district, which occupies nearly half a mile of Ichijo-dori, a street that runs east and west through the ancient capital. Since 2005, local merchants have been promoting the shopping district by dubbing it “Ichijo Yokai Street” in honor of local yokai legends. They realized they had to take some action as an increasing number of shops were closing, mainly due to newly opened supermarke­ts drawing customers away.

Ichijo-dori, which marked the northern edge of Kyoto when it served as the capital, is home to many accounts of yokai sightings. For example, a set of picture scrolls said to have been drawn in the Muromachi period (13361573) depict how everyday items that had been discarded transforme­d themselves into yokai beings called tsukumogam­i because of a grudge they held against humans and paraded at night on the Ichijo-dori street.

The Konjaku Monogatari collection of short tales, compiled in the closing years of the Heian period, includes a story about a samurai who encountere­d the yokai parade on a bridge over Horikawa river, which is about .9 miles east of the Taishogun shopping district.

When the yokai initiative was launched, no one in the shopping district had extensive knowledge of such creatures. However, the project was eventually offered a helping hand from local yokai-loving students who learned of it by word-of-mouth.

These students played a leading role in launching a parade in October 2005 in which participan­ts walked on the Ichijo-dori street in yokai costumes. Over the past decade, the shopping district also has held a flea market focusing on monster figures, with Daishogun Hachi Jinja shrine, which faces the street, as its main venue.

The yokai parade, held in October every year, has become famous among yokai fans nationwide via social media as an opportunit­y to “transform” into their favorite creatures. The number of participan­ts, initially 40, has increased to about 140. The flea market, held about four times a year, has also become a popular event, attracting about 1,000 visitors each time.

 ?? [PHOTOS BY JAPAN NEWS] ?? Visitors look at figures depicting yokai monsters in the Taishogun shopping district in Kyoto.
[PHOTOS BY JAPAN NEWS] Visitors look at figures depicting yokai monsters in the Taishogun shopping district in Kyoto.
 ??  ?? Junya Kono shows yokai-themed items at the Hyakuyodo specialty shop.
Junya Kono shows yokai-themed items at the Hyakuyodo specialty shop.

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