Water festival is held at Kufune shrine on July 7th every year.
The origin of this festival is rain-making rituals.
Now is more like for showing our gratitude to water.
The festival consists of offering tea ceremony, dancing and cooking ceremony in front of the Gods. Tea cremony, of course, cannot be done without water, so it's the symbolic ceremony of this festival. And the cooking ceremony is offered by the special cooking school called Ikuma school. (sorry, but only in Japanese.)
Ancestors of the Ikuma school used to be cookers for the Imperial family. It is said that the current master is 29th-generation of the family.
At the ceremony, he cooks a fish in front of the god without touching it by his hands at all. (The fish is altarage for Gods, so it shouldn't be touched by men.)
We know we cannot survive without water. However, we hardly thank it.Attending this festival was a good oppurnity to think about water.
Plus, kifune is a famous spot for Kawayuka (川床= on-river restaurant.) As it's in the middle of the mountain, the temprature in Kifune is about 3C (5F?) lower than that in the downtown Kyoto. Kyoto people know how to enjoy hot & humid summer!
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
5 comments:
hi
i come from hk~
i like japan very much~
can be a friend?
Thanks for your comment.
Yeah, I guess we could be a friend when we get to know each other♪
Let me know more about you!
Cheers!
nice to meet you~~
do you have msn??
then we can chat on the internet~
I have msn ID, but I don't really do chatting. Uhmmm~.
Super blog and nice to read.
Post a Comment