Tag: phallus

Japan by Train 17: Matsue

Matsue is associated with the writer Lafcadio Hearn (aka Koizumi Yakumo), whose house near the castle can still be visited. It stands close to the Lafcadio Hearn Museum. (To read more of Hearn and his house, see here.)

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The taisha style of shrine, here exemplified by Yaegaki Jinja, and a contrast with the simpler Ise style

The Ou pilgrimage comprises six rural shrines near Matsue. The most popular of them is Yaegaki Shrine, at the entrance to which a noticeboard proclaims, ‘Hearn was here’. It is popular as an enmusubi shrine (love connection), which owes itself to the shrine being dedicated to Susanoo no mikoto and his bride, Inaba-hime. Also enshrined is their son, which gives the shrine a fertility focus too, and dotted around the precincts are a number of phallic objects.

Phallus worship at Yaegaki Shrine in Shimane

As noted previously, promotion of the life-force is a vital part of shamanic religions, which is why in Bhutan you can find phalluses painted on the outside of houses for protection (the vigour of the phallus wards off pestilence and evil demons). It is also why stone and wooden phallic symbols are venerated here at Yaegaki. Somehow they survive into the present, despite the widespread removal of fertility objects in modern times, all because sexual organs were seen as shameful by a religion that champions death on a cross.

At one of the subshrines stands a large erect phallus, and in a vaginal opening at the base of a nearby tree are placed a number of smaller wooden phalluses. There are too several ‘enmusubi trees’, whose split trunks symbolise the union of lovers. And in the street outside the shrine is a shop that sells phallus shaped sweets and does a lively trade in souvenirs.

Tree trunk at Yaegaki with opening in which are placed phallic objects

Yaegaki Shrine is part of a Hearn trail in Matsue connecting sixteen sites associated with the one-time resident. Most are not of much interest except for a Hearn fan, but there is one with wider appeal – a prestigious Zen temple called Gessho-ji. Hearn loved it; so did I.

The prime attraction is the atmospheric cemetery, home to imposing tombs, quirky statues and vigorous vegetation. Here lie the feudal lords of Edo times, drawn from the Matsudaira family. So enchanting is the spirit of place that the forty year old Hearn said he wanted to be buried here.

Other items of interest include a monument to thank tea whisks for their service; a rock with the giant hand print of a legendary sumo wrestler; a tea room used by the feudal lords; a gate by a celebrated sculptor with openwork of grapes; a ‘spirit house’ with memorial tablets; and in June every year a riot of hydrangea in bloom.

Pride of place is held by a giant statue of a seventeen foot long turtle (or tortoise), the head of which is over six feet from the ground. This is the Cosmic Turtle that carries the world on its back, an image that occurs across cultures in Hindu, Chinese and Native American mythology. Local lore holds that the turtle sips water at night from the temple pond and has even been seen roaming around town. If you like this kind of thing, then Hearn and Matsue are definitely for you. If not, well, you might be better off in Fukuoka.

New Folk Shinto

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Imagine my surprise when on my usual commute along the river Kamogawa in Kyoto, I happened to see the above scene.  How very odd I thought.  But then I remembered Green Shinto friend Roger Walch telling me something about his friends in an art collective in Osaka who organise an annual fertility festival in the Kamogawa.  I guessed it must be them.

There were a couple of women accompanying the group along the river bank carrying banners, so I stopped to ask them about the event. They told me it was the Tentsuku Hounen Matsuri (Tentsuku being heavenly possession and Hounen meaning fertility and the name of the famous phallic festival held at Nagoya every year).  Was it an artistic performance or a religious festival, I asked?  It’s folk religion, they answered.  A new addition to the tradition of Minzoku Shinto.

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This was the first time I’ve come across this in Japan.  Green Shinto has carried reports of similar developments in the West, so for Japan this seemed something of a breakthrough.  Japan is famously conservative, and in nearly every social movement over the past century it’s lagged something like thirty to fifty years behind the West.  Think of smoking, gay rights, drugs, feminism, anti-discrimination…. you name it, and Japan will be the last to implement it.

In this respect I can’t help thinking that the Tentsuku Hounen Matsuri is Japan’s equivalent to the first neo-pagan events in the West, before words like Wicca had become part of the national consciousness.  I recall taking part in an early Beltane festival at Glastonbury in the early 1970s that was very much on a par with the small group striding along the river in Kyoto.

I can’t speak for the intentions of the group, but the event was ‘pregnant’ with symbolism.  Red is the colour of health and well-being, the phallus the organ of seed-giving.  The impact of the red phallus is traditionally not only one of fertility, but of a way of scaring away evil spirits (in Bhutan they have them painted on their houses).  This goes along with the white clothes to denote purity, and the troupe was led, I noticed, by a fellow with a big phallic nose indicative of Sarutahito, guide and leader.

The phallus was pointing at the triangular power spot where the rivers meet

The phallus was aiming for this triangular power spot

The route of the group was from Sanjo upriver to Imadegawa and the ‘power spot’ in the junction of the two rivers, Kamogawa and Takanogawa.  Here the group enacted a very simple penetration by pushing the red phallus through a white sheet with a hole in it.  (I’ve seen this done much more graphically in traditional style in a rice field.)  I’m not sure if their intention was to bring fertility to the crops of the area, or to their own creative endeavours in the coming year.

The direction the group took towards the north is traditionally the correct way in which to approach sources of energy and authority.  Rivers are well-known energy lines, and the meeting of rivers is a convergence of energy often denoted by ancient markers such as a shrine (in this case Shimogamo Jinja).

The classic shrine in the midst of a wooded copse has been compared to the female womb which is reached through a passageway via a torii opening.  Within the womb takes place a magical ritual signifying impregnation, by which the kami descends and life is re-created. This is all the more evident in the case of Shimogamo, since the meeting point of the two rivers forms a V-shape.

It seems then that this New Age Folk Shinto has been very well conceived!  Green Shinto truly hopes this is an early indicator of what is to come in the following years as a young generation turns to the past for inspiration, in the same way that neo-paganism has done in Britain and elsewhere.

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The Osaka collective pose for a photo by Swiss video maker and Green Shinto friend, Roger Walch

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