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Tag: Hirakata

A Time and a Place – Festivals

I feel like a common stereotype of Japanese society is that pretty much everyone is polite, quiet, and reserved.  While this is, of course, just a stereotype, it’s incredibly easy to see where foreigners get this impression.  During foreign student orientation week back when we first arrived, we were all warned multiple times that what we consider quiet is not what is considered quiet in Japan.  Walls are thinner here and people live in close quarters, so average talking volume is actually really loud at night here.  Even during the day, people tend to talk quietly as they walk together.  Naturally, the trains are also pretty quiet, as it’s a public place and to speak loudly would be disrespectful to other passengers.  It can be a difficult adjustment at first, but eventually we’ve gotten used to turning our volume down.

However, that is not to say that Japan is always this way.  During orientation, we were told that bars and karaoke were a couple of places where noise was allowed.  If you pass by a karaoke bar on the way home from the train station, you’ll almost certainly be able to hear the music from inside.  Noise levels that surpass normal levels are just fine within these spaces.

More interestingly, I’ve found that festivals are where the Japanese tend to dispense with cultural and societal conventions on noise and behavior.  Recently one of my professors invited our class to an Autumn Festival in a small district in Osaka where he did research a few years ago.  This Shinto festival’s main event was the danjiri, large man-propelled and carried floats with people on top.  There are two shrines only a couple streets apart from each other, which is unusual.  Where the main road is a river used to be, until it was moved a few kilometers over as Osaka grew.  Now the two shrines have a something like battle with the danjiri where the river used to run.  Those involved with the danjiri practice all year.

Before arriving at the shrine our professor did research near, we stopped at the shrine for the other side of the street, where the miko, or shrine maidens, happened to be performing a kagura dance.  After they were finished with the dance, they passed the blessing of the kami on to us.  I was again struck by how much of traditional Japan is woven into modern Japan; this shrine and traditional dance were only one transfer and a few minutes’ walk from the main train line between Osaka and Kyoto.

The miko during the Kagura dance.  (I apologize for the poor quality of the photo.  Nighttime is not a good time for photography and most of Japan's streets are not lit well, if at all.)

The miko during the Kagura dance. (I apologize for the poor quality of the photo. Nighttime is not a good time for photography and most of Japan’s streets are not lit well, if at all.)

After that, we went to the other shrine, where the pre-danjiri festivities were taking place.  It looked something like local carnivals back home.  There were scores of little stalls on shrine grounds and on the streets nearby with games and prizes for children and fried food.  Though the food was different that at home; here there is fried squid, fried manjuu (something like a donut with sweet bean paste inside), and karaage among other things.  Festivals are also the only place where eating and drinking while walking is okay.

The danjiri gathered on the street at about nine thirty and continued moving around until ten, those carrying the floats reaching a solid jogging speed at times.  The girls following the danjiri shouted after it and formed what I can only compare to a mosh pit when the they were not moving.  A few times the danjiri would face off, only feet from each other while they tried out outdo each other with noise and the dancers on top competed as well.  Words are not sufficient for what happened, so I uploaded some raw clips to YouTube.

Honestly, things got pretty chaotic after the danjiri started moving around for real.  The spirit of “festival” infected the entire crowd until the cheering was deafening and I found it hard to get anywhere close to the danjiri.  I did talk with some luckier foreign students that managed to get closer and were invited to help carry the danjiri for a while.

So, essentially, noise and partying don’t really happen on a large scale in Japan.  But when when festivals come around, all restrictions are off because that is the time and place.

History’s Place in Modern Japan

Recently I’ve traveled to Tokyo and Nara.  One is the new capital, famous for its sprawling metropolitan landscape and population density while the other is the historical capital, perhaps now best known for cultural assets and (mostly) friendly deer.

In Tokyo I constantly noticed traditional culture jammed in between the concrete and railways, which I thought was fascinating.  The most interesting to me was Meiji Jingu, or Meiji Shrine, located just a few hundred steps from Harajuku Station on the Yamanote Line that circles around central Tokyo.  As I stepped out of the station, it was obvious that I was in Tokyo.  There were tall buildings, little restaurants jammed together in a line, and dozens of people waiting for the pedestrian green light (since people hardly ever cross streets when the pedestrian light is red in Japan).  But after going down the street a little ways and turning right, I was already on shrine grounds.

Dad came to visit me in Japan!  This is the torii, or gate specific to Shinto shrines, beyond which everything is considered ritually pure.

Dad came to visit me in Japan! This is the torii, or gate specific to Shinto shrines, beyond which everything is considered ritually pure.

Most of the shrine complex is a dense, towering forest that is somewhat reminiscent of the forest in the Ghibli movie, Princess Mononoke.  Visitors are not allowed to freely wander beneath the trees, making it even more mysterious.  Moreover, the trees dampen the sound of the city to the point where you can sometimes forget that you’re right in the middle of the most densely populated city in the world.  There’s also a lovely inner garden where Emperor Meiji and his wife, Empress Shoken, used to go.  It was really incredible to be where they were, since they were so incredibly important to Japanese history.

Entrance to the actual shrine where Emperor Meiji and Empress Shoken are deified

Entrance to the actual shrine where Emperor Meiji and Empress Shoken are deified

Dad and I also went to Rikugien, or “Six Principles of Poetry Garden,” and Edo Period garden originally built by a samurai and official of the Tokugawa Shogunate under the fifth shogun.  It features scenes recreated from eighty-eight famous poems, besides being a gorgeous garden.  Rikugien is also in the middle of Tokyo, only two stops away from the Yamanote Line, and though you can sometimes see skyscrapers over the tops of the trees, it is still quiet and peaceful.

A recreation of Horaijima, which my Japanese friends recognized immediately when I showed them this photo

A recreation of Horaijima, which my Japanese friends recognized immediately when I showed them this photo

There is also a tea house where you can sit outside and enjoy traditional Japanese tea and sweets.

There is also a tea house where you can sit outside and enjoy traditional Japanese tea and sweets.

These delicate and detailed okashi were filled with sweet red bean paste.

These delicate and detailed okashi were filled with sweet red bean paste.

On the other hand, Tokyo also has much to offer for people interested in its urban side.  There are more restaurants and stores than I cared to count near Shinjuku and Shibuya Stations.

Shibuya's famous Scramble Crossing and 109 department store.

Shibuya’s famous Scramble Crossing and 109 department store.

Famous shopping district in Akihabara where most places sell pop culture items

Famous shopping district in Akihabara where most places sell pop culture items

We also went to the top of Tokyo Tower, where all we could see was city from the base of the tower to the horizon.  If I hadn’t been to the little forest of Meiji Jingu and quiet Rikugien myself, I probably would have found it hard to believe that they coexisted with the cityscape in front of me.

 

Sunset from the lower observation deck at Tokyo Tower

Sunset from the lower observation deck at Tokyo Tower

The week after I went to Nara with some friends.  Nara was the ancient capital of Japan over a millennia ago and is now famous for its temples and deer that, as a result of their revered status as servants of the gods, have become comfortable around people.

Five storey pagoda at Kofukuji, the second tallest pagoda in Japan and originally placed in Nara in 710

Five storey pagoda at Kofukuji, the second tallest pagoda in Japan and originally placed in Nara in 710

The 15 meter tall statue of the Buddha Vairocana, the largest in the world, located at Todaiji in Nara

The 15 meter tall statue of the Buddha Vairocana, the largest in the world, located at Todaiji in Nara

The deer are always looking for special deer biscuits, called shika senbei, and will approach people.

The deer are always looking for special deer biscuits, called shika senbei, and will approach people.

I think it's so cool that the deer don't run away.  Some even bow.

I think it’s so cool that the deer don’t run away. Some even bow.

A Lifestyle Change- Day to Day Differences

Lately I’ve been adjusting to a new rhythm as Japan has forced me into a completely new lifestyle.  At home, like many American college students, I drive or take the (somewhat inconvenient) bus everywhere.  Walking all the way across campus at Valpo seems like a long hike, and though I don’t own a bicycle, I don’t think a lot of students ever go very far on their bicycles.  I spend many hours a day doing homework around my classes, which occur at the same time throughout the week.  I almost never bother cooking since the meal plan is sufficient.

Here my routine is completely different.  My classes aren’t usually at the same time and all of my homework for all my classes can be finished in three hours or less.  Usually it’s a lot less.  Driving isn’t really an option here, so that leaves walking, cycling, and public transportation.  Walking is actually a bit inconvenient in Hirakata, at least with the weather still as hot as it’s ever been.  Any supermarket, store, restaurant, or train station is usually a twenty minute walk or more.  So instead of paying bus fares, I bike all over town.  I’m pretty sure I’ve never biked this much in my life.  Going up the plentiful (and often fairly steep, compared to my home terrain of plains as far as the eye can see) hills was definitely hard on my legs the first week or so, but I’m getting used to it now.

At Kiyomizudera, Kyoto

I take the trains EVERYWHERE, and they’re incredibly convenient.  Back near Chicago, if you miss your train, you could end up waiting thirty to sixty minutes for the next one.  Here, you’ll wait a maximum of ten minutes, and the trains are always on time.  My speaking partner, Mizuho, and I were talking about trains once and she mentioned how people here start getting irritated if trains are one, two, or three minutes late.  She was rather surprised when I mentioned how people near chicago expect the trains to be running at least ten minutes late.  Often more.  Once I get off the train in the city, it’s all walking from there.  It’s exhausting, but it’s nice to be able to go slowly through the city and actually notice the little things instead of driving right past.

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Purikura with Katrina and Mizuho!

Moreover, my diet is completely different.  A lot of the easily accessible junk food back home isn’t available here, and if they have Japanese equivalents, they’re hard to find.  Even grocery shopping is different.  It’s actually more of an adventure now; I can’t read a lot of food-specific kanji, so mostly I buy things based on price and looks.  The other international students do the same.  It’s not uncommon to hear, “That looks good.  What is it?” followed by, “I have no idea,” at dinner in the Seminar House.  It may not be that I don’t know the words that are printed on things, but speaking and reading Japanese are two completely different things, unlike Spanish, my other foreign language.  Spanish is spelled exactly as it sounds, but the complexity of the Japanese language makes shopping quite a bit harder than at home.  But honestly, it’s kind of fun sometimes, buying mystery food.

The most striking difference for me is that I’m always on the move and always planning my next outing.  Hirakata is conveniently situated very near both Kyoto and Osaka.  It’s also not too far from Nara.  Shinkansen trips to Tokyo are expensive, but not out of the question.  Dinner discussions usually revolve around either trips people have just returned from or the next trip they’re planning.  Hirakata itself has a little of the small town feeling, but is also near huge bustling Osaka and the cultural bastion of Kyoto.  We’re never short of things to do around here, only the time necessary to do everything!

One Hour Until Departure- Kansai Gaidai University, Japan

In a few short hours I’ll be heading for the airport.  In just about twenty four hours, I’ll fly from Chicago to Hong Kong to Osaka.  It’s hard to believe that it’s already time to leave; the summer has really flown by.  After packing, repacking, and shoving my clothes here and there, my belongings are finally ready to go.  I am somewhat anxious, in both the good way and the bad way.

On one hand, I have travelled internationally a few times in the past, including a long flight to China when I was very young.  I’m fairly confident in my Japanese and the staff from Kansai Gaidai will even meet us at the airport to help us get from Osaka to Hirakata, where the university is located.  On the other hand, this is the first time I’m completely responsible for my own travel and the first time I’m travelling internationally without a parent or guardian.  Most troubling for me is that my family will be more than the usual two hours away.  If I run into a problem, I’m mostly on my own to deal with it.  But that’s what being an adult is about, and while I’m worried, I’m also excited to see what I can do.  I’ve been wanting to test my Japanese language skills for some time and sometimes problems are a good (if stressful) test.

My lovely family!  It's hard to believe that I won't seem them again until Christmas time!

My lovely family! It’s hard to believe that I won’t seem them again until Christmas time!

All things considered, I’m extremely excited to be studying in Japan this semester.  I have wanted to go to Japan since I was a child eating sushi and teriyaki.  I’ve studied Japan’s history and culture in class and now I will experience it firsthand.  My language partner at the university and I have been messaging for a couple of weeks now and we’ve already made plans to go places and do things together.  I absolutely can’t wait!  If only the travel time was shorter…

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