Houston Chronicle Sunday

Shinto festival carries on centuries-old tradition in Japan

- By Malcolm Foster

CHICHIBU, Japan — As fireworks light up the winter night, scores of men, women and teenagers crying “washoi, washoi” haul the last of six towering, lantern-covered floats up a small hill and into the town center, the culminatin­g moment of a Shinto festival that has evolved from a harvest thanksgivi­ng into a yearly meeting between two local gods.

The Chichibu Night Festival, which has roots stretching more than 1,000 years, is one of three famous Japanese festivals to feature huge floats, which can top 23 feet and weigh up to 15 tons. They are pulled through the streets on large wooden wheels by hundreds of residents in traditiona­l festival garb — headbands, black leggings and thick cotton jackets emblazoned with Japanese characters — to drums, whistles and exuberant chants.

Shinto is Japan’s indigenous religion that goes back centuries. It is an animism that believes there are thousands of kami, or spirits, inhabiting nature, such as forests, rivers and mountains. People are encouraged to live in harmony with the spirits and can ask for their help. Ancestors also become kami and can also help the living.

This two-day festival has its roots in an older tradition of villagers giving thanks to the nearby mountain god for helping them during the planting and harvesting season, said Minoru Sonoda, the chief priest of the Chichibu Shrine and a former Kyoto University professor of religious studies. In 2016, it was designated a UNESCO intangible cultural heritage.

“It’s a time to celebrate the bounty of nature,” Sonoda said.

During medieval times, the festival evolved into a celebratio­n of an annual rendezvous between the nearby mountain god and the goddess of the town. The latter is carried in an ornate arklike box by a group of white-clad men through streets to the central park, where it rests while the six floats slowly converge on the crowded square, each one’s arrival celebrated with a burst of fireworks.

But these days, many Japanese who flock to the festival, which draws about 200,000 people every December, don’t know either of those stories and say the event holds no religious meaning for them — but they do want to maintain the tradition.

“I like the fireworks and the food. Purely to enjoy. I don’t really think about the religious aspects,” said Mitsuo Yamashita, a 69year-old retiree who has come to the festival for the past 15 years. “Japanese aren’t very religious, and in other ways we’re all over the place religiousl­y.”

Many Japanese freely mix religions depending on the occasion, visiting a Shinto shrine at New

Year’s, holding a Buddhist funeral or getting married in a Christian wedding, a popular option even though only 1 percent of the population is Christian.

“I don’t know if that means we’re flexible or if we don’t have conviction­s,” Yamashita said.

Different view

Roaming the streets in the afternoon, a group of high school girls decked out in festival jackets and headbands who later joined in pulling the floats said the festival wasn’t religious at all for them. And yet they emphatical­ly said they believed the story about the two gods meeting that evening.

“It’s romantic!” said Rea Kobayashi, 17.

The girls also said they would celebrate Christmas with a decorated tree and gift-giving and didn’t see any problem mixing religions.

“No problem! That’s normal. Most Japanese do that,” said Rio Nishimiya, 18. “We’re good at that. If it’s fun, that’s all that matters.“

Such views are shared by many Japanese. Attitudes toward religion are ambiguous. Many would say they aren’t religious — and yet every year millions of Japanese visit Shinto shrines and Buddhist temples across Japan and have little shrines in their homes where they pray.

In Japan, religion is more of a cultural, communal and ritualisti­c thing than a personal faith.

Shinto has no sacred text or clearly defined theology, and many Japanese would be hard-pressed to summarize it, including many visitors to this festival.

“It’s a religion of life,” said Sonoda, the chief priest, in an attempt to summarize Shinto. “It’s something inherited from ancestors that provides a spirituali­ty passed on from parent to child. And this isn’t just for humans, but we are also linked to animals and all living things. It’s because of them that we’re alive.”

“Worldview may be a better way to describe it,” he said.

There are no definitive numbers on Shinto believers in Japan simply because there’s nothing definite to count. “We don’t use the phrase ‘believers,’ ” Sonoda said. There are no weekly services and no missionari­es to spread Shinto.

Peaceful coexistenc­e

Sonoda said other folk religions share traits with Shinto. He recalls visiting a Hopi native American community years ago.

They were holding a festival giving thanks to the spirits that lived in a nearby mountain and came down every spring to help the people with the planting season, and in winter would return to the mountain, he said.

“That made a big impression on me,” he said.

There are more than 80,000 Shinto shrines across Japan and nearly as many Buddhist temples, and the two have generally coexisted peacefully after Buddhism’s introducti­on to Japan in the sixth century, along with Confucian thought from China.

That long history of coexistenc­e is one key reason behind Japanese attitudes toward religion.

“Each religion had a different role, and these three — Shinto, Buddhism and Confuciani­sm — shaped Japanese culture,” said Susumu Shimazono, a professor of religion at Tokyo’s Sophia University, a Jesuit school. “There was some dogma, but none of these religions stressed exclusiven­ess. This sort of combinatio­n of ideas and philosophi­es is typical of East Asia.”

Imperial family

But Shinto’s ties to the imperial family, and some religious rituals performed by the emperor, have generated controvers­y.

Last month, newly enthroned Emperor Naruhito spent the night in a makeshift shrine built (and which will later be demolished) with public funds in a ceremony called Daijosai, or the Great Thanksgivi­ng. According to authoritie­s, in this most important succession rite, he gave thanks for harvests, prayed for the peace and safety of the nation and hosted the imperial family’s ancestral gods.

All told, the event will cost $25 million in public money. A group of 200 people filed a lawsuit last year against the government over the expenditur­e.

Visitors to the Chichibu festival were divided over the issue.

“It’s a waste of money,” 27-year-old Naoko Osada said of the ritual.

Others said they believed Naruhito was fulfilling his duties as symbolic head of the country and that spending public money on such rites was acceptable so long as Shinto isn’t imposed on people.

“He’s our symbol, and it’s important to keep this tradition. So I don’t think it violates the constituti­on,” said Nobuyuki Negishi, 44.

Shinto’s two aspects

Sophia’s Shimazono said it’s helpful to view Shinto today as having two parts: state Shinto as a lingering political philosophy and the Shinto of the masses who go to shrines at New Year’s.

“State Shinto was rejected as a state religion after the war, but some of that sentiment remains today,” he said. “It has a large influence in politics.”

Right-wing groups such as Nippon Kaigi, which has ties to the ruling Liberal Democratic Party and Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, who is a special adviser to the group, would like to revise Japan’s pacifist constituti­on and see Shinto increase its prominence.

Abe drew attention to Shinto by hosting the 2016 Group of Seven summit in Ise-Shima and took fellow leaders to visit the Ise Grand Shrine, dedicated to the sun goddess. He also attended a once-every-20years event at Ise in 2013, only the second prime minister to do so.

When you combine those political undercurre­nts with the cultural traditions maintained by millions who visit shrines every year — most of whom likely embrace freedom of religion — Shinto still “has a fairly large role in Japanese society,” Shimazono said.

Such political or even religious conviction­s, however, were far from the minds of most visitors to the Chichibu Night Festival. None of the two dozen people interviewe­d wanted a return to state Shinto, and few said the festival held religious significan­ce for them, although some would say it held spiritual meaning.

“It’s so majestic!” exclaimed Tsuyoshi Koyama, a 47-year-old onlooker as all six huge floats with glowing lanterns gathered in the park at the festival’s climax and fireworks filled the sky. “Every day we have these mundane lives, and to see something this grand really stirs my heart.”

 ?? Photos by Toru Hanai / Associated Press ?? Residents perform kabuki for the Chichibu Night Festival in Japan, which has its roots in an older tradition of villagers giving thanks to the nearby mountain god.
Photos by Toru Hanai / Associated Press Residents perform kabuki for the Chichibu Night Festival in Japan, which has its roots in an older tradition of villagers giving thanks to the nearby mountain god.
 ??  ?? Participan­ts clad in traditiona­l happi coats get ready for a selfie before the Chichibu Night Festival.
Participan­ts clad in traditiona­l happi coats get ready for a selfie before the Chichibu Night Festival.

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