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The personal log of Peter Payne, owner of JLIST.com, the home of "wacky things from Japan"

Wednesday, October 29, 2008

All About Shinto

I recently talked about Buddhism and how many of Japan's customs are tied to the religion, sometimes without people being aware of it. For example, the traditional Bon-Odori dance done at Tanabata festivals in August was originally performed to welcome the spirits of the dead who were returning home for a visit, but no one seems aware of that these days. But Buddhism isn't the only religious tradition here -- there's also the original belief system, Shinto. The word means "Way of the Kami" or "Way of the Gods" and it finds spirits (kami) in things like mountains, trees, rivers, and for people who watch too much anime, magical fox gods who transform into pretty girls. You could probably make a strong argument that Totoro, a magical spirit who lives in the forest and which only children can see, comes from this tradition of worshipping nature and is thus a kami, but Japanese people might look at you funny if you did. Another aspect of Shinto is purification, and there are many rites related to making something (land you're about to build a house on, the sumo ring you're about to wrestle in) clean and pure. Some people even pay a Shinto priest to ogamu, or purify, a new car they've just purchased, so they'll have good luck and avoid accidents. Whenever I go in our out of the J-List office my eyes pass over the glass of water and plate of salt that my wife keeps by the door. This, too, is for purification purposes, to keep bad luck out of J-List and protect all of us inside.

4 Comments:

Blogger Peter in Japan said...

Today I observed that Buddhist words usually get 'o' on the fronts of them and Shinto words do not. The Japanese staff was amazed, they'd never thought of anything like that.

12:08 AM

 
Blogger Jyuichi said...

That picture is from Fushimi Inari shrine isn't it?

I didn't have time to climb to the top when I was there and now I regret it ^^;

8:14 AM

 
Blogger John Evans said...

So Jim Butcher, somewhat-well-known author, years ago was on an email list for aspiring writers. (I heard him tell this story at a convention.) He got into an argument with someone where they claimed some ideas were so bad no author could make a good story out of them. So the guy challenged him to make a good story about an awful idea--"Pokemon".

So Jim Butcher thought about it for a while and came to the conclusion that Pokemon was all about manifestations of Shinto-esque kami from various things...trees, the ground, the air, even pollution. So, he started thinking about a world where people summoned elemental spirits, and that became his "Codex Alera" series of novels. ;)

12:30 PM

 
Blogger Peter in Japan said...

Not sure where the pic is from, it's awfully cool though. And yet confusing -- I thought the image of traveling through many lives was Buddhist, not Shinto? As usualy, it's hard to separate them here.

John, that's great. Pokemon characters as Shinto dieties, woah! My mind is quite blown.

6:59 PM

 

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