The Japan that no one knows The guardian god of Japan, a disaster prone country Shoka Furusato

8 months 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/JfQU40S1r7M

Tokyo Shrines with Pictures of Japanese People 100 Years Ago

Anamori Inari Shrine
When I first visited the shrine, I was surprised at the enormity of Mt.
I thought it was a Fuji mound, but it is "Inari Mountain," and on top of it sits "Ontake Shrine.
The view from the top was interesting.

Anyway, the shrine is overwhelmed by many Inari shrines.
The pressure is incredible.

The god who grants any wish.
It seems that your life will emerge much more when you get a connection with him.

Anamori Inari Shrine Neighborhood
2 minutes on foot from Hotel Mystays Haneda
4 minutes on foot from Anamori Inari Station
4 minutes on foot to Hotel JAL City Haneda Tokyo
4 minutes on foot Keikyu EX Inn Haneda
4 minutes on foot plat hostel keikyu haneda home
5 min. walk from APA Hotel Haneda Anamoriinari Ekimae
5 min. walk Shiragoi Inari Shrine
6 min. on foot Fujisaki Inari Shrine
8 min. walk from Seagull Inari Shrine
8 minutes on foot Tamagawa Benzaiten, Suijinsha, Myokiriki Jizoson
8 minutes on foot Fukumori Inari Shrine
8 minutes on foot Gojukanbana Mukonobutsu Hall
9 minutes on foot Haneda First Water Gate
15 minutes on foot Haneda Shrine
18 minutes on foot Hamatake Tenso Shrine
20 minutes on foot Nakamura Tenso Shrine
20 minutes on foot Takayama Inari Shrine
20 minutes on foot Santoku Inari Shrine
26 minutes on foot Kojiya Shrine
27 minutes on foot Haginaka Shrine
29 minutes on foot Shigeyuki Inari Shrine

When I visit shrines in Tokyo, I am 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 people from the past!

Source
Inari Worship in Suburban Tokyo: The Establishment and Development of Anamori Inari, by Mitsugu Taniguchi.
Rice Field.1914-1918.Elstner Hilton
https://flic.kr/p/8pfs4c
Osaka City Library website Collapsed five-story pagoda of Shitennoji Temple Photo postcard of actual typhoon Muroto c1623001
http://image.oml.city.osaka.lg.jp/archive/detail?cls=ancient&pkey=c1623001
Tuna boat sunk by Typhoon No. 11. No.8 Seitoku Maru (49 tons). 23 August 1979 (Photo Sesoko Masatoshi) Najo Digital Archive
https://nanjo-archive.jp/document/?detail=77708&genre=6
Great Kanto Earthquake. The great earthquake of Japan in 1891, by John Milne and V.K. Burton. Plates by K. Ogawa. Yokohama, Lane, Crawford and Co. s.d. (1892)
https://gallica.bnf.fr/ark:/12148/btv1b105241241/f27.item.r=Kazuma%20Ogawa
Osaka City Library website Poole Girls' School Wreckage c1643001
http://image.oml.city.osaka.lg.jp/archive/detail?cls=ancient&pkey=c1643001
TWO BOYS AND A BULL -- Plowing a Field Near the Slopes of Mt.
https://flic.kr/p/4ErEmH
Library of Congress,The fox temple at Haneda, Japan.2020684893

BGM
Traveling Melancholy

A translation of a Japanese poem written by Inudo Kukei in 1907.
The original song is "Dreaming of Home and Mother" by John P. Ordway.

(1)
"Late Autumnal Night, Traveling Skies"
"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"
Harukakeki kikinokawa ni kokoro wo mazeru" ("Far off in the distance, here I am, lost in heart")

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

Furusato (Hometown)
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 of Elementary Schools in Japan".

Rabbit Oshikishi Kano-no Yama (The Rabbit Chases the Mountain)
Fishing for crucian carp, the river of Kano
Yume ha mondemo megurite
"I'll 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.

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

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