Much of the Okinawan World Heritage registration has to do with castles dating from the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries. Visiting them reveals how important a role the so-called ‘Ryukyu religion’ played, for sacred sites and altars abound. These were clearly a religious people, and as elsewhere in East Asia their religion combined ancestral worship with animism.
Spiritual authority was delegated to females, who were responsible in a literal as well as symbolic way for keeping the home fires burning. Traditionally it was the woman’s job to look after the household gods and ancestral spirits, as well as to pray for the well-being of the family’s males when they were away at sea or at war. During the time of the Ryukyu kingdom, the arrangement was systematised with a hierarchy of female priests to pray for the well-being of the nation and the king.
At Shuri Castle the outer courtyard features a utaki (sacred site) housing a sacred tree, while inside the palace is a space reserved for religious rites. Outside the palace is a gate which was never opened, for behind it stood a grove inhabited by spirits. Before departing, the king would stop and pray before it, while on his return he would give thanks for his safety.
Other castles too had their sacred sites, and I was lucky enough to catch a brief ceremony at one carried out by a local noro (priestess). It was at Nakijin Castle, a ruined castle in the north of the main island. First the group of four women honoured the Hinukan, fire god or god of the hearth. In terms of the wider community, the Hinukan was responsible for the social well-being. “Worship of the fire god [in Okinawa] is very old and predates worship of ancestral spirits (sorei) at the Buddhist altar, now the center of family ritual,” says the Kokugakuin encyclopedia.
As well as prayers, there were offerings of rice and incense – with one big surprise: the bunch of incense was lit with a blow-torch. Afterwards a similar ceremony was carried out at the ruins of a utaki (sacred site). Casual and done in squatting style, the ceremony reminded me of Korean shamanism, also carried out by females. It’s a reminder of how Okinawa lay at the maritime cross-roads of China, Korea, Japan and southern trade routes in times past. The resulting cultural mix produced the distinctive flowering of the Ryukyu kingdom, which was one of the chief criterion in the island’s World Heritage citation.
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