Arab Times

Festival brings sunshine to scandal-hit sumo wrestling

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TOKYO, Japan, April 16, (RTRS): Laughter, sunshine and optimism were the order of the day at the ceremonial Spring Festival sumo tournament held at a controvers­ial war shrine in Tokyo on Monday.

As the ancient sport looks to move on from a raft of negative publicity surroundin­g incidents ranging from assault and bullying to accusation­s of sexism, there were few signs evident that the recent issues would dampen sumo’s popularity.

Hard core sumo fanatics and tourists alike flocked to the event held at the Yasukuni Shrine, seen by many in Asia as a symbol of Japan’s past militarism.

They were treated to exhibition bouts, preceded by time-honoured footstampi­ng ceremonies, as well traditiona­l chanting and even a comedy routine explaining the dos and don’ts of sumo wrestling.

One of the more controvers­ial ‘don’ts’ within the sport, although not mentioned on Monday, is the tradition that forbids women from entering the ring on the grounds that it is sacred and their presence, considered “unclean”, would pollute it.

Earlier this month, Japan Sumo Associatio­n Chairman Hakkaku, who led a prayer during a more reflective moment in the shrine, was forced to apologise after several female medics were asked to leave the ring during a tournament near Kyoto.

They were expelled by a referee when they attempted to revive local Mayor Ryozo Tatami, who had collapsed but later made a recovery in hospital.

Many fans leaving the shrine on Monday believe sumo wrestling should be more inclusive, particular­ly with the next Summer Olympics taking place in Tokyo.

“We, sumo fans, hope to build up the mood of excitement all together, regardless of gender, as we head towards Tokyo 2020 Olympics,” said Takamichi Masui, who had travelled all the way from Mie Prefecture for the festival.

“Although sumo is a traditiona­l and sacred ritual, I believe that (the female medics incident) was a humanitari­an and right thing to do,” added sumo fan Hiromi Omori, who stressed that those traditions should be applied on a caseby-case basis.

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