The Japan No One Knows. Watching over the market. The joy of tax-free

1 year ago
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#Japan
#Tokyo
#Japanese
Healing Japan Travel
日本語バージョンはこちら Click here for the Japanese version
https://youtu.be/D_YIrNmm2Nk

Tokyo Shrines with Pictures of Japanese People 100 Years Ago

Uemachi Tenzo Shrine

A very quiet god
The shrine sits in the back of a quiet space with a park adjacent to it.

The doors are closed, but the atmosphere makes you want to join hands with the deity.
This neighborhood is very crowded during the rag market.
It is nice that there is no tax.

The bustle of people and their happy faces. God is watching over us.

Neighborhood of Uemachi Tenzo Shrine
1 min. walk from Setagaya Daikan Yashiki
1 minute on foot Setagaya Municipal Museum of History
1 minute on foot Uemachi Station
7 minutes on foot Katsukoin Temple
9 minutes on foot Setagaya Castle Ruins
9 minutes on foot Setagaya Ward Office
9 minutes on foot Setagaya Central Library
11 min. walk from Gotokuji Temple Gate
11 minutes on foot Setagaya Hachimangu Shrine
11 minutes on foot Kokushikan University
13 minutes on foot Shoin Shrine
16 minutes on foot Sakura Jingu Shrine
16 minutes on foot Komadome Hachiman Shrine
18 minutes on foot Shakushi Inari Shrine
21 minutes on foot Hisatomi Inari Shrine
22 minutes on foot Wakabayashi Inari Shrine
25 minutes on foot Taishido Hachiman Shrine
36 minutes on foot Fukazawa Shrine

Forgotten Japan From a small Kannon temple... Haseji Temple, a branch of Eiheiji Temple (Azabu Grand Kannon)
https://youtu.be/N7lDVfVZH44

Forgotten Japan Fear or awe or the god of fertility To the bottom of a deep swamp with a beautiful daughter High Inari Shrine
https://youtu.be/2ZImXXTcG88

When we visit shrines in Tokyo, we are often amazed at the sanctuaries that have been protected by the people.
Flood, fire, earthquake, war, and worship.
Small shrines, shrines perched on the rooftops of buildings, and shrines directly under expressways.
Sanctuaries that are close to people in any form, and the guardians who protect them.
I made this video to share these beautiful images with you!
The Japanese landscape and the Japanese people of the past remain in old photographs.
Some of the photos are around 100 years old, some are about 150 years old, and some are 85 years old.
Please feel the connection with the people of the past!

Source
Naha Antipu Market. Naha City Museum of History Courtesy of Naha City Museum of History.02000219.001-03
http://www.rekishi-archive.city.naha.okinawa.jp/archives/item3/15450
Naha Higashi Market. Naha City Museum of History, courtesy of Naha City Museum of History.02000220.001-03
http://www.rekishi-archive.city.naha.okinawa.jp/archives/item3/15460
Tokyo City Kanda Vegitable Market, Kanda-Tachō - Scenes in the Eastern Capital of Tokyo (1911), K.Ogawa F.R.P.S.
https://smtrc.jp/town-archives/city/kanda/images/original/01-03-01.jpg
Tottori Aomori Market (Part 2), Tottori Prefectural Museum
https://cultural.jp/item/tdc_muse-14
0249.i.0123.1902.Kioto.Europana
https://www.europeana.eu/en/item/91627/SMVK_EM_fotografi_2724154
Setagaya rag market (2012) December 16, 2012
https://ja.wikipedia.org/wiki/%E3%83%95%E3%82%A1%E3%82%A4%E3%83%AB:2012_Setagaya_Boro-Ichi_02.JPG
Setagaya rag market.
https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Boro-ichi_Market.JPG

BGM
Japanese Shoka "Furusato" Touching Koto and Chorus Free BGM Discovery Site - Tono's Precious Treasure House

Japanese children's song "Furusato
A Japanese children's song and shoka with music by Teiichi Okano and lyrics by Tatsuyuki Takano.
It is a shoka published by the Ministry of Education in 1914 for the sixth grade of "Shoka for Elementary School Children".

Rabbit Oshikishi Kano-no Yama (The Rabbit Chases the Mountain)
Fishing for crucian carp, the river of Kano
Yume ha mondemo megurite
I will never forget my hometown.

How are your parents?
Tsutsugami-no-shinai ya tomogaki (Tsutsugami-no-shinashi, Tomogaki)
"Even in the rain and wind..."
I remember my hometown.

"I will follow my heart."
Someday I will return home.
Mountains are blue, my hometown.
The water is clear.

Traveling Home
A translation of the original lyrics by Inudo Kukei in 1907.
The original song is "Dreaming of Home and Mother" by John P. Ordway.

(1)
"Late Autumn Night, Traveling Sky
"Wistful thoughts haunt me alone"
"I miss my hometown, my nostalgic father and mother"
"I follow the road of dreams to my hometown."
"Late autumn night, the sky of travel."
"Wistful thoughts haunt me alone."

(II)
"The window is stormy and the dream is broken."
"Far off in the distance, my heart is lost"
I miss my hometown, my nostalgic mother and father.
"In my heart, I see the forest's treetops."
"In the storm that fills the window, my dream is broken"
"Far Away, Far Away, Heart Lost in Heart"

My name is Mayu Noda.
I will introduce the charm of shrines around Tokyo, which I love.
Sometimes temples too.

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