Spirit and Religion in Japan
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Christmas in Japan
Not Nativity Scenes, but Christmas trees decorated with large neon dolphins, fish and hearts.
Ancient Shinto Artifacts
Shintoism is sorta like Japanese Paganism - an all encompassing high regard for the spirits in nature. The Britsh Museum hosted an exhibit of Shinto artifacts; I took photos of the oldest pieces.
Aum Shinrikyo
How did the world's most accelerated technological consumer society spawn the twentieth-century's most insidious religious attack?
Yasukuni Jinjya
A shrine in Tokyo built to honor the war dead. Leaders of Japan's efforts during WWII were buried here, as a result this shrine evokes some anger and grief from other Asians. I visited Yasukuni in the summer of 2001, and found it to be a challenge.
Subway Shrine
I was surprised to see a large family of spiritually embued porcelain badgers had taken up residence in a Tokyo subway station. I shouldn't have been surprised.
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Native Nihonjin
Band Member, Dars Gevil
Tokyo Indie Music Festival
October 2001
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Links (October 2001):
Profiles of Various Religions in Japan,
Drawn from the University of Virginia's Religious Movements site:
- Shinto
- A recasting of Japanese folk religion and the oldest native Japanese faith.
- Buddhism
- A religious import that peacefully coexists with older faith traditions in Japan.
- Christianity in Japan
- "After Christianity's great initial success, Japanese authorities began to view the Western religion as an intrusive foreign element and a threat to national stability. The Christian tradition required exclusive dedication which clashed with the traditions of Japanese religions. Even today, many Japanese people view Buddhism as a household obligation and Shintoism as a communal obligation, and they incorporate both into their lives through various festivals and ancestor rites."
- Nichiren Shoshu
- One of the largest schools of Japanese Buddhism, founded in the 13th century.
- Soka Gakkai
- Soka Gakkai is one of Nichiren Shoshu's several "infant" sects.
- Tenrikyo
- In 1837, "'God the Parent'" possessed an entranced Miki and announced his intention to use her as the "'Shrine of God'" and a median between God and humans.
- Shinreikyo
- Kanichi Otsuka was born in 1891 with Divine Power. At his wife's urging, he later created a religion to share his capacity for healing and skull/brain enlargement.
- Seicho No Ie
- "The Truth of Reality of Life," 40 volumes written in the 1930s by Masaharu Taniguchi, explains how to actualize creative spirit right now.
- Sukyo Mahikari
- Cleansing, empowering, ancestor worship, this religion emerged first in the late 1950s as Okada Yoshikazu challened The Su God, also known as Revered-Parent Origin-Lord True-Light Great God.
Backyard Nature - A personal account of Japanese spirituality by a foreigner with a camera.
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