Weekend Argus (Saturday Edition)

experience a more gentle japan at a temple

Staying in a Japanese temple is an extraordin­ary experience, writes Natalie Compton

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A TYPICAL visit to Japan for many tourists consists of a few days in Tokyo, a train to Kyoto, maybe Osaka. You stay in a hotel full of amenities, or, if you’re on a budget, you might be staying in a capsule hotel or hostel.

That trip would be incredible. You’d learn about the country’s most prominent cities, eat and drink amazing things, and inevitably start planning your next trip back in your head on the way home.

But for an off-the-beaten-path travel experience in Japan, consider the shukubo.

A shukubo is a Buddhist temple in Japan that hosts travellers overnight.

Traditiona­lly, temples in Japan have welcomed travellers visiting for religious reasons. Pilgrims have long enjoyed retreating to temple stays for days or more, spending time praying, copying religious scripture, hiking and meditating.

Today, the temple stay is appealing to a new demographi­c of travellers. Regardless of religious or cultural background, the experience can be transforma­tive.

It begins when you take your shoes off at the entrance.

Your focus shifts from the chaos of your own life to the beauty and calm of the temple.

A sense of peace falls over you and lingers throughout your stay.

When you stay in a hotel or Airbnb, the attraction is the city around you. At a temple, the accommodat­ion is the attraction.

There’s joy in wandering the halls, walking around the property and taking part in routines normally reserved for monks and priests, like copying sutras (Buddhist scripture) as a mindfulnes­s activity and eating

shojin ryori vegetarian cuisine.

Then there’s the serenity of a traditiona­l Japanese environmen­t. The sound of sliding back the wooden door to your tatami mat room becomes an ASMR (autonomous sensory meridian response). Soaking in the large, often communal baths makes luxury out of something normally routine.

The internet has helped the

shukubo renaissanc­e.

Last year, a website was launched for the Terahaku (or temple stay) project, an effort to make this form of lodging more accessible.

The project started with 100 options, like the 1 300 year old Miidera shukubo in Shiga prefecture, but the goal is to list 1 000 over the course of three years.

There are ways to book a temple stay outside of the Terahaku project, too. The Koyasan Shukubo Associatio­n built a website to promote its temple stays in the Koya region of Wakayama Prefecture.

Some shukubo take marketing into their own hands by creating Englishlan­guage websites and putting their accommodat­ions on Booking.com, Airbnb and Japanican.com.

Located in Minobusan – a mountain village in Yamanashi prefecture – Kakurinbo has been around for 550 years, making it one of the oldest in the region.

If you’re coming from Tokyo, there’s a bus that takes you right up to the village. From the last Minobusan bus stop, it’s a 10-minute walk to this

shukubo. You can also take the train from Tokyo to Minobu station, where you’d get a taxi cab to take you into the mountains and directly to the temple. Kakurinbo is run by husbandand-wife owners Zeryo (the temple’s priest) and Junko Higuchi.

Since moving into Kakurinbo in the 1990s after marrying Zeryo, Junko has mostly welcomed Japanese guests.

Five years ago, a couple of Swedish cyclists stumbled on their shukubo by mistake, inspiring Junko to seek more foreign guests.

She put Kakurinbo online, hired students to make a foreigner-friendly brochure and map of the area, and created Airbnb experience­s to attract day-trip customers in addition to overnight ones.

Junko is trying to revitalise Minobusan.

The town’s population has dwindled in the past few decades, and despite being one of Japan’s most important religious areas, Minobusan gets left out of most guidebooks.

Junko hopes tourism will help breathe new life into the village.

And for a town snubbed by guidebooks, there’s a lot going on in Minobusan for travellers.

Up the road from Kakurinbo is Minobusan Kuonji Temple, the most important pilgrimage site for devotees of Nichiren Buddhism.

Visitors can walk the 287 stone “steps to enlightenm­ent”, ending up at the stunning structures that make up this temple, more than 700 years old.

There are two prayer ceremonies open to visitors daily – one at dawn and one in the late afternoon.

The chants of the monks and the deafening beating of drums are thundering contrasts to the tranquil setting.

From the temple, you can take a rope way up the sacred Mount Minobu to Okuno-in station, a viewing point where you can see Mount Fuji, depending on the time of year.

Since Minobusan is in the prefecture known for its wine and fruit, the rest of your time at Kakurinbo is best spent eating and drinking.

Junko travels to Tokyo each month to learn cooking techniques from a master chef, taking the skills back to the Kakurinbo kitchen, where she plans ornate meals of vegetarian fine-dining.

And eating is perhaps one of the most memorable aspects of the shukubo stay for Kakurinbo guests. Reviewers gush over Junko’s artful kaiseki lunches and dinners. Junko’s food changes seasonally and highlights the bounty of Yamagata’s local ingredient­s, like a frozen plum orb balanced in a bowl of yogurt – a dish made to look like the Japanese flag – or dinner’s preparatio­n of yuba tofu four different ways.

Leaving behind the interlude of stillness to ricochet back into the real world can be difficult.

You’ll regret not staying at the temple longer and wonder why this kind of experience isn’t more popular among travellers. But if you’re lucky, that sense of calm you acquired can stay with you on your way out. | The

 ??  ?? A FOOD spread is prepared by Junko Higuchi at Kakurinbo, a Buddhist temple in Japan’s Yamagata Prefecture.
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The Washington Post
A FOOD spread is prepared by Junko Higuchi at Kakurinbo, a Buddhist temple in Japan’s Yamagata Prefecture. | The Washington Post
 ??  ?? TYPICAL wood sliding doors seen in room with a garden view at Kakurinbo, a Buddhist temple in Yamagata Prefecture.
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Washington Post
TYPICAL wood sliding doors seen in room with a garden view at Kakurinbo, a Buddhist temple in Yamagata Prefecture. | Washington Post
 ??  ?? “STEPS to Enlightenm­ent” at Kakurinbo, a Buddhist temple in Japan’s Yamagata Prefecture.
“STEPS to Enlightenm­ent” at Kakurinbo, a Buddhist temple in Japan’s Yamagata Prefecture.
 ??  ?? A BATHING house at Kakurinbo, a Buddhist temple in Japan’s Yamagata Prefecture.
A BATHING house at Kakurinbo, a Buddhist temple in Japan’s Yamagata Prefecture.

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