Shrines and Temples

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"Tsurugi, where are you, Tsurugi!"

Day three of the Japan trip.

We were staying near Senso-ji but didn’t visit until day three—morning crowd discipline, I suppose. I drew an omikuji slip: Daikichi—the best fortune. The temple itself is magnificent in that particular way of ancient spaces that have been polished by ten million hands.

Senso-ji Temple main hall
Senso-ji Temple main hall

Nakamise shopping street leading to Senso-ji
Nakamise shopping street leading to Senso-ji

Senso-ji five-story pagoda
Senso-ji five-story pagoda

Senso-ji incense burner
Senso-ji incense burner

From Senso-ji we walked to Tokyo Skytree. “Walked” is not quite right—it was more of an endurance exercise. The view from the base is of an extraordinary density: low wooden houses extending to the horizon, punctuated by high-rises in no discernible pattern.

Tokyo Skytree from below
Tokyo Skytree from below

Tokyo low-rise residential area from Skytree
Tokyo low-rise residential area from Skytree

Lunch at the mall under Skytree: tonkotsu ramen, extremely comforting. Then in the afternoon: Kanda Myojin Shrine. I had come specifically looking for a particular sword called Tsurugi, from an anime set in this shrine. The shrine itself is lively and not particularly old-feeling—it was rebuilt in ferro-concrete in 1934 after the earthquake. But the presence of old ritual in a new building is its own kind of interesting.

Kanda Myojin Shrine gate
Kanda Myojin Shrine gate

Kanda Myojin Shrine main hall
Kanda Myojin Shrine main hall

Kanda Myojin ema votive plaques
Kanda Myojin ema votive plaques

Adjacent to Kanda Myojin is Yushima Seido, a Confucian shrine—one of the few surviving in Japan. The main hall houses a massive statue of Confucius and smells of aged wood. A very quiet place; almost no tourists.

Yushima Seido entrance gate
Yushima Seido entrance gate

Yushima Seido main hall
Yushima Seido main hall

Evening: long train ride to the Fuji area. The hotel was called the “International Tourist Hotel” but the front desk could not speak English. A Chinese woman guest stepped in to translate. We were grateful.

View from hotel window toward Mt Fuji area
View from hotel window toward Mt Fuji area