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Emperor’s Enthronement

October 22, 2019, was the day of the enthronement of the new emperor, Naruhito. In a moment of high magic, the curtains of the canopy throne were thrown open to reveal the emperor in striking orange and a Heian era garb. The bright colours and daring aesthetics were like something out of The Tale of Genji (c.1005), claimed as the world’s earliest novel.

What has all this to do with Shinto? Well, nominally the emperor is Shinto’s head priest (just as the English monarch is the head of the Anglican Church). It’s a throwback to the priest-king of ancient times, and accordingly the emperor pronounces himself to ascend to the throne.

In a reminder of the ‘divine origins’ of the imperial line, the two boxes to either side of the emperor in the picture above are boxed items containing the magatama jewels (left) and the sacred sword (right) supposedly handed down from Amaterasu, the sun goddess.

The building in which the canopied thrones from Kyoto were assembled for the ceremony

Here is an AP report of the event by Mari Kawaguchi…

TOKYO (AP) — Three booming cheers of “Banzai!” rang out Tuesday at the Imperial Palace in Tokyo as Naruhito formally declared his ascension to the Chrysanthemum Throne as the nation’s 126th emperor.

As a driving autumn rain briefly gave way to sunshine and 2,000 guests looked on, Naruhito pledged at an elaborate, ritual-laden ceremony to serve as a symbol of the state for his people. Prime Minister Shinzo Abe congratulated him and led the cheers of “Banzai,” which traditionally means “10,000 years.”

The enthronement ceremony is the high point of several succession rituals that began in May when Naruhito inherited the throne after the abdication of Akihito, his father. Naruhito leads the world’s oldest hereditary monarchy, which historians say goes back 1,500 years.

The short ceremony, which some critics say was largely meant to allow Abe’s ultra-conservative government to win public support, was marked by extraordinary contrasts — from the rhythmic shuffle of dozens of court dignitaries’ long, stiff, antiquated robes as they brushed over mats leading to the throne room, to the thunder of cannon salutes reverberating through the palace.

The emperor prepares to receive the text of his speech in which he swore to serve as symbol of the nation

“I hereby proclaim my enthronement to those at home and abroad,” Naruhito said. “I hereby swear that I will act according to the constitution and fulfill my responsibility as the symbol of the state and of the unity of the people of Japan, while always praying for the happiness of the people and the peace of the world as I stand with the people.”

The ceremony began with the sound of a bell. Naruhito, wearing a formal brownish-orange robe that was dyed in sappanwood and Japanese wax tree bark and a black headdress decorated with an upright tail, then stood perfectly still while a pair of black-robed chamberlains pulled aside and secured the purple curtains surrounding the throne.

The throne, called “Takamikura,” is a 6.5-meter- (21-foot-) high decorative structure resembling a gazebo. It was taken apart in 3,000 pieces and transported last year from the former Imperial Palace in Japan’s ancient capital of Kyoto, where emperors lived until 150 years ago, and reassembled and repaired with new lacquer coatings.

Outside the palace, hundreds of well-wishers gathered to celebrate the enthronement, waving flags and shouting “Banzai!” almost in sync with the ceremony that they monitored on their smartphones.

Prime minister Abe representing the nation of Japan prepares to bow to the emperor before delivering his address

Despite the time, effort and cost put into preparations, the ceremony lasted only about 30 minutes. It was originally modeled after one by the ancient Tang dynasty of China and is the second of three ceremonies that follow the May succession. Next month sees the highly religious and divisive ritual of Daijosai, or the Great Thanksgiving.

While the harvest ritual is an annual event that the emperor performs privately, the government funds the first one by a new emperor as part of the succession ceremonies. A one-off shrine for the Nov. 14-15 ritual is being constructed at the palace.

Some experts have raised questions over the government’s funding of 16 billion yen ($150 million) for ceremonies that contain religious rites like Daijosai. Most of the cost goes to a one-time shrine that will be demolished after the event.

Criticism, however, was largely eclipsed by the festive mood, in part because Naruhito’s succession came about because of abdication, not death, palace watchers said.

To mark the occasion, Abe’s ultra-conservative government granted pardons to about 550,000 eligible applicants. The decision was not publicly debated.

The emperor’s wife, Masako, in the Heian court’s formal twelve layered kimono known as junihitoe weighing some fifteen kilos

The pre-war custom of clemency by the emperor, who was revered as a god in those days, has triggered criticism as being undemocratic and politically motivated. At the time of former Emperor Akihito’s enthronement, 2.5 million people were given amnesty.

Earlier Tuesday, the 59-year-old Naruhito put on a white robe and prayed at Kashikodokoro and two other shrines, to report to gods ahead of the ceremony. Enshrined at Kashikodokoro is the sun goddess Amaterasu, the mythological ancestress of Japan’s emperors.

Recent changes to the enthronement ceremony included a slightly smaller structure for the empress — called “Michodai,” or “The August Seat of the Empress” — where Naruhito’s wife, Masako, stood, dressed in traditional costume. It was first used by Naruhito’s grandmother.

Naruhito and Masako, a Harvard-educated former diplomat, hosted a court banquet Tuesday evening for about 400 guests, including foreign dignitaries and heads of Japan’s administrative, legislative and judicial branches and their spouses.

A parade originally planned for Tuesday afternoon had been postponed until Nov. 10 because of a recent typhoon that caused flooding and other damage in central and northern Japan.

The heir apparent’s family in attendance at the ceremony

Naruhito and Masako have been warmly welcomed by the Japanese public. They made positive impressions by freely conversing with President Donald Trump and first lady Melania Trump during their visit weeks after Naruhito’s succession in May, palace watchers say.

“I think people have high expectations for the emperor, who is fluent in foreign languages and internationalized,” said historian and monarchy expert Eiichi Miyashiro, who is also a journalist.

Naruhito, who studied at Oxford, is a historian, a viola player and an expert on water transport. Masako has struggled for more than a decade since developing “adjustment disorder” after giving birth to the couple’s only child, Princess Aiko, and facing pressure to produce a boy in Japan’s monarchy, which allows only male heirs.

A shortage of males in the royal family has raised succession concerns and prompted calls for a debate, possibly to allow female emperors. Naruhito has an 83-year-old uncle and two potential heirs — his younger brother Crown Prince Akishino and a 13-year-old nephew.

Abe and his ultra-conservative supporters insist on male-only succession, while a majority of the general public supports allowing female emperors.

The emperor departs with the sacred sword preceding him and the magatama necklace carried behind

Daijosai issues (Nov 14)

Over the next month there will be two major events marking the enthronement of Emperor Naruhito. One is clearly state oriented, but the other is very much a Shinto rite. The Daijosai on Nov14 can be seen indeed as the ultimate Shinto rite, taking place in secret and bonding the new emperor with Amaterasu omikami and the ancestral line. Hirohito may have renounced his divinity at the end of World War Two, but the imperial line continues to assert descent from the Sun Goddess, who is definitely divine. So what does that make the present emperor? And how does that square with Japan’s Constitution mandating the separation of religion and state?  Here’s what Japan Today has to say on the subject….

Q: Is it appropriate for the state to fund ceremonies related to the succession?
A: Some critics said that public funding of certain rituals violates the constitutional principle of the separation of religion and state, as many are related to Shinto in which the emperor is venerated as a descendant of a sun goddess. In relation to the enthronement ceremonies for Emperor Akihito in 1990, a number of lawsuits contesting the constitutionality of the rites were filed across Japan, but they were all dismissed. However, the Osaka High Court said in a 1995 ruling that doubts remain whether government financing of Shinto-linked rituals breaches the Constitution.

In an article for The Asia-Pacific Journal, Shinto scholar John Breen looks in greater detail at the constitutional question. It’s very much a topical issue, for under Shinzo Abe there has been evident a desire for greater incorporation of Shinto into state affairs, with help from a compliant legal system. Abe belongs to the nationalist Nippon Kaigi, an influential political group that makes little pretense of its wish to reintroduce aspects of State Shinto.

The piece that follows by John Breen is extracted from a long article entitled ‘Abdication, Succession and Japan’s Imperial Future: An Emperor’s Dilemma’. The original article, dated May 1, 2019, is annotated, referenced and contains the Japanese kanji for names, so please click here should you wish to see it.

On 22 October, the emperor and empress will ascend their respective thrones before an assembly of dignitaries, Japanese and foreign, in the sokui enthronement rite. They will then parade through the streets of Tokyo, before hosting a banquet in the evening. [The rites] are held as “acts in matters of state.” It is worth pointing out that, although they are broadly secular in nature, they are not entirely so. At the very least, the sword and the jewel that feature in all three rites are sacred objects, and treated as such. According to Japan’s seventh century state foundation myths, these objects, along with a sacred mirror, were handed by the Sun Goddess to her grandson before he descended to earth. These objects are testament, in other words, to the sacred nature of Japanese emperorship.

The climax of the enthronement sequence is indisputably sacred in character. This is the daijōsai or “rite of great feasting,” which will take place on the night of 14-15 November. A complex of wooden buildings, featuring two main pavilions (the Yukiden and Sukiden), will be erected on the palace grounds. Both pavilions are furnished with bed and shroud to welcome the Sun Goddess. Two different districts of Japan – the Yuki field to the west of Tokyo and the Suki field to the east – supply the rice for feasting. In each pavilion, the emperor will offer the Sun Goddess meals of rice, before partaking of it himself. He will emerge at dawn, transformed by his mystical communion with his ancestress.

This enthronement sequence is of great vintage. In some form or other, the rites can be traced back to the 7th Century. They have played a vital role in producing and reaffirming Japan’s emperor-centered order for over a millennium. The daijōsai, in particular, has undergone multiple interpretations over time, and its mise-en-scène has changed drastically, too. Only in modern times has it been it regarded as the most important of the three enthronement rites, and this is because it was interpreted now as the ultimate act of imperial piety. It served, by the same token, as dramatic proof that the emperor was indeed descended from the Sun Goddess. It was for this reason that the modern daijōsai as performed by the Meiji, Taishō and Shōwa emperors were staged as truly national events; they sought to engage the whole of Japan and, indeed, the empire with the imperial myth.

Emperor Akihito’s daijōsai, the first in the postwar era, took place on the night of 22-23 November 1990. It had the distinction of being the first ever to cause legal controversy. The controversy and its resolution deserve to be more widely known. Articles 20 and 89 of the Constitution provide for the separation of state and religion. And yet, the state funded the daijōsai, which is “religious” to the extent that it features the Sun Goddess. The government fended off accusations of unconstitutionality by citing the “object and effect” principle established in a landmark Supreme Court ruling in 1977. The essence of the ruling was that the state may engage with religion, so long as neither the “object” nor the “effect” of its engagement amounts to the promotion of any specific religion. The government’s position was that public funding of the daijōsai contravened neither criteria. Many citizens’ groups disagreed, and took legal action, but their suits all foundered on the “object and effect” principle.

Prince Akishino, younger brother of the emperor, and heir apparent, with his wife in 2018

Controversy surrounds the 2019 daijōsai, too. Citizens’ groups are poised once more to take legal action against the government, even though they stand little chance of success. This time, however, they appear to have the moral support of Prince Akishino no Miya Fumihito, the new emperor’s younger brother and next in line to the throne. At his birthday meeting with the press on 11 November 2018, the prince queried the wisdom of the government underwriting the daijōsai as it had in 1990. He confessed it left him feeling “uneasy.” The cause of his uneasiness was this: the government sets aside two funds for imperial family use. There is the “court fund” (kyūteihi), totaling some $83 million, which covers all of the emperor’s public activities – his “acts in matters of state.” There is also a much more modest “imperial family fund” (naiteihi) of some $2.7 million, which is for the private use of the emperor and his family.

Both funds are, of course, tax payers’ money, but the prince is uneasy at the government’s insistence on using the “court fund” to underwrite the “religious” daijōsai. This implies that the daijōsai is, after all, a public not private act. The prince’s radical idea, intended to preserve the constitutional separation of state and religion, was that the daijōsai be scaled back to a point where it might be covered entirely by the “imperial family fund.” The prince had raised this matter time and again with Imperial Household officials, but, he lamented, they had “refused to pay him heed.” He was, indeed, ignored by both the Imperial Household and the Abe administration. No one doubts that the prince was articulating views shared by his older brother and father.

In any case, the daijōsai rite remains essential to emperor-making in Japan. In its postwar manifestation, it merits attention as one further piece of evidence of the sacred encroaching into Japan’s public sphere. By “the sacred,” I refer specifically to ritual performances involving the Sun Goddess, and to the myth of the emperor’s descent from the Sun Goddess, which the rites serve to animate. The postwar Constitution sought to confine the sacred to the private sphere of the imperial court, and yet, in the seven decades since its promulgation – and especially during Abe Shinzō’s premiership – the sacred has become ever more public. Abe’s active association with the Ise Shrines is a case in point. In 2013, when the Ise Shrines underwent their vicennial rebuild, he played a key ritual role, escorting the Sun Goddess on her solemn progress through the night from old shrine to new.35 In 2016, he hosted the G7 summit in Ise, and took heads of the G7 states to the shrines as though they were a national site. In law, of course, they are a private religious juridical entity. In both 2017 and 2018, Abe participated in the niinamesai court rite, which also celebrates the Sun Goddess. The rite is held within the palace’s shrine complex annually on 23 November. It is in this broader context that the Abe administration will fund Emperor Naruhito’s daijōsai in November 2019.

 

 

Jidai Matsuri, Kyoto

A reminder that the Jidai Matsuri (Festival of Ages) will take place on Oct 22. Those in Kyoto at the time are advised to go early to Gosho (Former Imperial Park), where people mingle with participants before the procession begins. It’s a chance to see the stunning robes and costumes up close, with a display of clothing that highlights each of the ages in which Kyoto was imperial capital. Beginning with the Meiji Restoration (1868), the procession of over 2000 people goes all the way back to the foundation of Heian-kyo (794). From samurai warriors to court ladies, the costumes displayed are as authentic as possible and some are museum pieces. The result is an impressive historical roll-call, as can be seen in these photos kindly sent in by Green Shinto supporter, Nick Jones.

To read all about Jidai Matsuri, please see this link, or this link, or this one, .

Inari origins

The main approach to Fushimi Inari leads to the magnificent romon gate
(photos on this page by John Dougill)

The following is excerpted from a translation of the sixth chapter of Bruno Lewin s Aya und Hata Bevolkerungsgruppen Altjapans kontinentaler Herkunft Wiesbaden: Otto Harrassowitz, 1962 Studien zur Japanologie, vol. 3, translation by Richard Payne with Ellen Rozett (Pacific World, New Series, No. 10, 1994)

One of the most wide-sweeping impacts on folk Shinto was the Inari cult initiated by the Hata, which consists of the worship of the deities of the crops. The point of origin of the cult was the Inari Shrine, in the District of Yamashiro and situated in the territory of the old royal domain of Fukakusa. Concerning the establishment of this shrine, the Yamashiro-fudoki reports:

Hata no Kimi Irogu, a distant ancestor of Hata-no-Nakatsue no Imiki, had amassed rice and possessed overflowing wealth. When he made a target (for archery) from pounded rice, this transformed itself into a white bird, which flew up and alighted atop a mountain. There it again became rice and grew upward. Inenari (“becoming rice”) is given therefore as the shrine’s name.

In addition the Jingi-shiryo clarifies this, saying that Irogu, moved by this wonder, in the fourth year of Wado (711) erected a shrine there and worshipped the transformed rice plant, on account of which the shrine was called Inari « inenari. Accordingly, the shrine is of a comparatively late date, though there can be no doubt that the Hata as long-standing cultivators of rice had long possessed the cultic worship of the rice gods, but now mixed with the cult of Inari shrine worship of the Japanese food deity Ukemochi-no-kami. In the Inari shrine the deities Uka-no-mitama-no-kami, Saruka-biko-no-kami and Omiya-nome-no-mikoto are worshipped. Uka-no-mitama is the main deity of the shrine, identical with Ukemochi.

Torii tunnel at Fushimi Inari, signifying passage into the spiritual realm

During the middle ages, the worship of the rice and food deities in the Inari cult spread over the whole of Japan. One can still count about 1,500 Inari shrines, most of them small field and village shrines, in which the fox whom one frequently comes across in the fields, is also worshipped, either as messenger of the deity or even as an incarnation of the deity itself.

The Inari shrine of Fukakusa is considered to be the mother shrine of all of these cultic sites. Its priesthood descended without exception from the prosperous Hata families of the surrounding area. From the Heian era the priests have borne the status name of Hata no Sukune . Gradually there separated out from amongst them more branch families: the Nakatsue, Nakatsuse , Onshi, Matsumoto, Haraigawa, Yasuda, Toriiminami and Mori.

The Inari shrine forms a triangle with the shrines of Kamo and Matsuno’o, in the middle of which was placed the final capital, Heian kyo. All three cultic sites enjoyed the support of the Imperial palaces and were visited in the course of history again and again by individual emperors to venerate the divinities there. The integration of the Hata with the history of these powerful shrines shows what a prominent position they possessed in the territory around Heian kyo. We can well assume that Kammu-tenno, in shifting the capital, allowed himself to be guided by the effort to remove himself from the immediate of the Yamato aristocracy and to lean instead on the rich and loyal, though politically unambitious, Hata clans.

One of the countless fox guardians found on the hill behind the Fushimi Inari shrine

Shinto and Rugby

World attention has been focussed on Japan these days for the rugby world cup, and in particular the stunning victory of underdogs Japan against the hapless world champions Ireland. The sport has awoken a sense of excitement in the country, and television programmes have replayed Japan’s winning tries over and over again. But what does this all have to do with Shinto?

The game of kemari (courtesy of stephansblog.com)

Kemari
It just so happens my local shrine of Shimogamo Jinja, a World Heritage site, claims to be the home of Japanese rugby. It has ancient roots, and among the practices in times long past was kemari, the Heian art of kickball. The purpose was not to score a win, but for the group of players to cooperate by keeping a ball in the air as long as possible.

As befits a game created by aristocratic aesthetes, participants were expected to display skill and elegance rather than pure athleticism. Indicative of this were the beautiful kimono worn for the game. At the beginning of each year a display of the game is put on to provide an auspicious start, though the event is so popular it is difficult to observe.

The Sawata-sha was moved to Shimogamo after the Onin War devastation, then in 1910, in the words of the shrine, ‘the deity communed through the medium of the ball’ and the first rugby match in Japan took place on the grounds in front of where it now stands.

First rugby game
Appropriately enough given its connection with kemari, Shimogamo became the first place in Japan where a game of rugby took place. This was in the midst of its woodland of Tadasu no mori, within the large clearing which is used for such festival activities as the Yabusame horse archery. (To read more about this historic occasion, click here.)

Today a monument marks the place where the first rugby game took place, and a subshrine sanctifies the spot. There are rugby shaped ema, for votive wishes. It’s not always recognised by commentators on Shinto how one of the religion’s prime features is the sanctification of national history. This is a direct result of its shamanic origins, for the role of the shaman was the preservation of tribal identity through memorialisation of its past. In this way Japanese not only honour their past; they worship it.

For the Rugby World Cup final on Nov 2, the Shimogamo shrine is erecting a huge screen and inviting 500 guests to attend. I’m sure there will be a Shinto ritual of purification prior to the event and that there will be a special sense of watching a historic moment in hallowed grounds. I hope to be part of the occasion too.

Yasukuni controversy

British military rugby team at the Yasukuni Shrine

Memorialisation of the past can be controversial in some instances, as is evidenced above all by Yasukuni where the spirits of those who died in defense of the emperor since the Boshin War in 1868 are honoured. These include WW2 criminals.

Yasukuni played a vital role in the promotion of State Shinto, the ruling ideology during WW2. As such it remains a symbolic space used as a rallying point by far right nationalists. It thus prompted an outcry when it was revealed that a British military rugby team had visited the shrine prior to their match (the military rugby competition is a separate event from the World Cup).

It is customary in Japan for people to pray at shrines for good luck prior to exams, sports events and other endeavours. (On one of my book projects, I thought it would make an auspicious start to get it blessed at Fushimi Inari.) However, in this case it appears the British military rugby team were unaware of the political implications of Yasukuni, as the British ambassador was quick to point out to them.

“It was very, very naive,” Commander Arty Shaw, who organized the visit, told the Times. “The ambassador had a word or two, so we’ve been told not to visit any more shrines, just in case.” It seems the team had gone on a “cultural visit” to Tokyo Tower and the Yasukuni shrine, on Sept. 13. For a full report on the issue, see this ABC report from the USA.

Yasukuni remans a symbolic gathering spot for Japanese nationalists and even the Japanese emperor has refrained from visiting

Sacred trees

Trees become sacred through their distinctiveness, whether age, size, peculiarity or through being struck by lightning
Sacred tree on the island of Shiraishi

The following is taken from Brainpickings by Mary Popova…

“Aside from the appearance of a tree by day or night, is it not kin of the human family with its roots in the earth and its arms stretching toward the sky as if to seek and to know the great mystery?” the artist Art Young wondered in the 1920s in the brief preface to his stunning Rorschach silhouettes of trees at night. Artists, poets, and philosophers have long turned to trees as a clarifying and consolatory force for our human struggles, from William Blake’s most beautiful metaphor to Walt Whitman’s reverence for their wisdom to Martin Buber’s arboreal existentialism.


Still, I have encountered no lovelier celebration of trees than the one Mary Oliver (September 10, 1935–January 17, 2019) offers in her poem “When I Am Among the Trees,” originally published in 2006, later included in her farewell gift to the world, Devotions: The Selected Poems of Mary Oliver (public library):

WHEN I AM AMONG THE TREES 
by Mary Oliver

When I am among the trees,
especially the willows and the honey locust,
equally the beech, the oaks and the pines,
they give off such hints of gladness.
I would almost say that they save me, and daily.
I am so distant from the hope of myself,
in which I have goodness, and discernment,
and never hurry through the world
but walk slowly, and bow often.
Around me the trees stir in their leaves
and call out, “Stay awhile.”
The light flows from their branches.
And they call again, “It’s simple,” they say,
“and you too have come
into the world to do this, to go easy, to be filled
with light, and to shine.”

Tanabata decorations and a sacred tree

Daijosai succession rites

Ceremony held to kick off construction of halls for Daijosai imperial succession rite

A ceremony was held Friday on the Imperial Palace grounds to mark the start of construction of the temporary halls to be used in a key imperial succession rite this fall.

Emperor Naruhito, who acceded the throne on May 1, must take part in a series of rituals accompanying the succession, including the Great Thanksgiving Ceremony, known as Daijosai, on Nov. 14 and 15.

In Friday’s ceremony in the palace’s East Gardens, palace attendants in traditional attire offered rice and sake to wish for the smooth completion of the Daijokyu Halls, where the ceremony will take place. The halls are expected to be completed in October.

The Daijosai is performed by a new emperor once during his reign. The emperor will offer newly harvested rice to his imperial ancestors and the deities of heaven and earth, while also consuming the rice himself, and pray for peace and abundant harvests for the country and its people.

Given the Daijosai’s religious nature, there has been criticism that it is publicly funded given the Constitution’s stipulation on the separation of state and religion.

But the government has decided to follow the example of the previous imperial succession and pay for the expenses out of state coffers, determining that it is a public ceremony.

A total of about ¥2.7 billion is expected to be spent for activities related to this year’s ceremony, according to the government.

The Imperial Household Agency has made efforts to slash the cost of the construction of the halls, including reducing the size of the ground they occupy by more than 20 percent compared with the last time the ceremony was held.

Major construction company Shimizu Corp. won the bid for the project, costing it at ¥957 million, or some 60 percent of the projected price of ¥1.54 billion.

**************

See here for a report on a symposium about the enthronement rites

A ceremony is held in Nantan, Kyoto Prefecture, on Friday [Sept27], to bless rice for use in the Daijosai, a key imperial succession rite to be performed by Emperor Naruhito in mid-November.(courtesy Japan Today)

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