Sorry for the delay in posting more of this. I'm at least a week behind the schedule I was hoping to keep. But the semester is winding down and I'm really working hard to bring my language grades up to ensure I get to stay a second semester. Have to keep priorities and all of that, right?
Anyway, day four of the vacation was probably my favorite day! Sara and I started things off by going to the Shosoin Exhibition, which is an annual event held at the Nara National Museum. During the Shosoin, national historians make a selection of Japan's national treasures and prepares them for a public viewing. It was an amazing exhibit, and there were items that predated what we think of as Western civilization by centuries! It was also kind of funny to notice that Sara and I were the only foreigners in the museum that day, and it seemed like we surprised anyone that bumped into us.
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The one pic I was able to take from the Shosoin. I was very disappointed I couldn't take more, so I bought the picture book at the shop. |
Sadly, we weren't allowed to take pictures of any of it. I think my favorite items were a set of three lacquered birds though. They were very small, and very colorful. The detailing on such small items was inspiring! There was also a tool that I liked that's called a bukoto. It's basically the same kind of a tool as a chalk line, used for marking long straight lines to use as guides. The biggest difference is that it used black ink instead of chalk. This one was interesting because it was very ornamental and stylized into a dragon's head.
There was also an interesting look into daily life of a middle management person at a monastery where Buddhist translations were done. It was a complaint/request letter that the supervisor of a group of translators wrote requesting more time off and a sake ration for his workers. It was pretty entertaining.
After leaving the Shosoin, we went to Todaiji Temple. It is home to the largest statue of Buddha in the country, and is considered an international heritage site. The Temple is in Nara park, and has some of the oldest Buddhist statues in Japan. It was a really pretty place and the statues are amazing.
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The outer gates of Todaiji Temple. Home to a pair of guardian god statues that are world renowned called the Nio guardians. |
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Sadly, thanks to the lighting and the protective cages around them, I wasn't able to get very good pictures of the Nio statues. They're pretty interesting from a craftsmanship perspective, too. They're actually made from dozens of pieces of wood, each individually carved and then fitted into place with metal pins to make the whole statue. |
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Some of the sights on the walk up to the inner gate at the temple. It was very pretty, and featured is a perfect example of Buddhist architecture in Japan. |
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The view from the front of the temple and the walkway up to it. There's the traditional hand washing spot on the right in the picture, and a stone lantern in the middle of the walkway, as well. |
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This is the Great Buddha of Todaiji. The statue is huge. The statue itself is almost 50 feet tall and is the largest bronze Buddha in the world. The Temple itself is around 150 feet tall, and until around 2000, was the world's largest wooden building. The picture on the left is one of the lotus petals from the Buddha's pedestal. It's inlaid with intricate Buddhist script and imagery in gold. |
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The great Buddha is flanked on either side by two other statues of Buddhist disciples. The other statues seemed a lot more detailed, but were also not as old. Each statue had its own prayer shrine, as well, since each one is supposed to be used as the focus for a different kind of prayer. |
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The two guardian statues of the Temple. I love the influences of Shinto that these kinds of statues show, or maybe its the other way around and you can see the influence of Buddhism on Shinto through these kinds of things. Either way, it is an interesting variation of Buddhism, which traditionally doesn't worship or revere any gods. |
Once we left Todaiji, we headed for the next shrine I really wanted to visit. This is the shrine where the storm god, whom I've written about in a previous post, is enshrined. It was a little bit out of the way, and we had to take a train ride to the town of Tenri, then catch a cab from that station to the shrine. This was a much more rural shrine, and it was very powerful feeling, while the others had felt sterile as I put it recently.
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The gate way into the Iso no Kami shrine. This is where I opened up and felt the life of this shrine. I haven't felt anything like that in a very long time. It was moving. |
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As mentioned, the Iso no Kami shrine was much more rural than the others we saw. We were greeted at the gate's stamp station by this rooster that was just hanging out. There were other roosters and ducks hanging around the entry area into the shrines as well. |
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For being the shrine of the God of Storms, this is a pretty modest place! The shrine itself was beautiful, as was the building around it. However, it was much smaller, and much less opulent than some of the others that we visited during the trip. I think that's part of what added to the power and feeling of the place though. it didn't need all of that to give it the spiritual weight that it had. |
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Supposedly, in the middle of the shrine there in the heart of the building, is the broken sword and soul of O-Sasunoo, the God of Storms, Brother to Amaterasu the Sun Goddess. I prayed at the altar, and couldn't have felt better doing it. |
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The inner gate that led into the Shrine's grounds. The second picture is where the remains of other people's fortunes and prayers from last year hang. I'm looking forward to taking part in this ritual more than I probably should be! |
This was the first place I've actually prayed in a very long time, and I'm planning to go back for the traditionally Shinto New Year's ritual. The ritual consists of visiting a Shinto shrine such as this one and praying, then writing a script on paper that's basically a listing of all of the things from the previous year you wish you could let go of or move on with. You tie the slip of paper up to a tree, or special place on the Shrine's grounds, and the weather destroys it, destroying the worries as well. Leaving the stains of the last year in the hands of the kami and the world to wash away will feel good.
As we were leaving the shrine, we noticed that there was a waterfall on the map of some local hiking paths. After a little discussion, we decided to try to make it there before sundown. It turned into an adventure that was well worth it!
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The hike led us past some Japanese fields, into a much more rural hillside village area. It was a huge change from the heavily populated urban areas where I've spent most of my time here in Japan. I kind of liked it. |
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This Momoo Falls, near Tenri. It was about 45 minutes or so on foot to get to the falls. We found out afterwards that we probably could've taken a bus up the mountain, which thankfully we were able to take back down to town instead of walking after dark. |
After walking around the falls and taking pictures for a while, we were lucky enough to find a bus stop and catch a bus back to Tenri, then the train back to Nara for the last night there. We ended up having another non-Japanese meal, this time burgers at a little touristy place right off of the main shopping area around Nara station.
It was a very busy, long, but exciting and fulfilling day! I have two more days to write about, and hopefully I'll be able to get them down sooner than later. Sorry to everyone that's reading that it's taken me this long to get the entirety of my vacation posted, but I hope you're enjoying the detailed accounts more than just a random picture dump!
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