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    Shinto

    Shinto is the native religion in Japan with its roots stretching back to

    500 B.C., and is a poly-theistic one venerating almost any natural

    objects ranging from mountains, rivers, water, rocks, trees, to dead

    notables. In other words, it is based on animism. Natural wonders

    make the Japanese believe, out of an awe or reverence, that such

    wonders are created by the mighty, super-natural powers, and the

    ghost of a deity dwells in such objects. A case in point is Kumano

    Nachi Great Shrine (a UNESCO World Heritage site) in Wakayama

    Prefecture. The main object of worship in this shrine is Nachi Falls

    with a drop of 133 meters. Ancient people believed God resides in

    this falls. Also great warriors, leaders and scholars are often

    divinized. Thus anything, even a rotten head of a sardine, can be

    deified, so goes a cynical saying. To dedicate to those diverse deities,

    shrines were erected in a sacred spots throughout Japan. Among the

    natural phenomena, the sun is most appealing to Japanese and the

    Sun Goddess is regarded as the principal deity of Shinto, particularly

    by the Imperial Family. We Japanese call our nation "Nippon" in

    Japanese. It literally denotes "the Origin of the Sun." The Japanese

    national flag is simple, one red disk in the center, and it symbolizes

    the sun. (Not the empire that the sun never sets.)

    Japanese mythology relates that there was the goddess of the sun

    and the ruler of the heaven named Amaterasu, who was believed to

    be the legendary ancestor of the current Imperial Family. It asserts

    that she was once so offended by the misdeeds of her brother that

    she came down to the earth and hid in a cave. The universe was

    plunged into pitch darkness and evil thrived. The gods and goddesses

    gathered near the cave to talk about how to get her out. They held a

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    party and a goddess began to dance in front of the cave, causing the

    crowd to roar with delight. As she whirled about, her clothes fell off,

    drawing cheers from the other gods. Curious about the fuss,

    Amaterasu peeked out from behind a jumbo rock blocking the cave's

    entrance. The dancing goddess held up a mirror and said, "We are

    dancing to celebrate for a new goddess."Amaterasu came out to see

    the new goddess, but what she saw was her own reflection. A

    powerful god grabbed her out and told never to hide again. (Picture,

    left: A mini-shrine installed at a shopping mall near Kawasaki Station,

    East Japan Railway.)

    Today's Emperor Akihito (1933-) is said to be the 125th direct

    descendant of Emperor Jinmu, Japan's legendary first emperor and a

    mythical descendent of Amaterasu. Though not often referred to

    today, the Japanese calendar year starts from 660 B.C., the year of

    her accession. The reigning emperors were considered to be the

    direct descendant of the Sun Goddess and revered as a living god at

    one time or another. When the Pacific War was imminent in 1940, the

    fascist government was boasting it was the year of 2600 to exalt the

    national prestige, and it even made a song celebrating the 2600th

    anniversary.

    With the introduction of Buddhism from China in the mid-sixth

    century, however, Shinto began to be overshadowed by Buddhism.

    Greatly affected by the new religion, Imperial Prince Shotoku (574-622) institutionalized Buddhism as a state religion and built many

    great temples such as Horyuji in Nara Prefecture and Shiten'noji in

    Osaka. Many Buddhist temples today have a hall, in which Prince

    Shotoku is enshrined in homage of his achievements. (As a matter of

    fact, his portrait had been printed on the 10,000-yen bills until 1984.)

    Since then, Buddhism had been supported by many emperors for

    quite some time, including Emperor Shomu (724-749) who founded

    World-famous Todaiji in Nara in 743.

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    Entering the medieval ages, emperors and Shinto lost the reigning

    power, and the nation was gradually controlled by the military rulers.

    The process of blending Buddhism with Shinto progressed, and in theHeian Period (794-1185) Shinto deities came to be recognized as

    incarnation of the Lord Buddha. A case in point was emerging of the

    syncretic school that combined Shinto with the teachings of the

    Shingon sect Buddhism. The basis of the school's belief was that

    Shinto deities were manifestation of Buddha divinities. Most

    important was the identification of the Sun Goddess Amaterasu with

    Buddha Mahavairocana or Dainichi Nyorai in Japanese (the Great Sun

    Buddha). The well-known Japanese eclecticism in religion was already

    extant at this stage.

    In the Kamakura Period (1185-1333), however, Shinto was

    emancipated from the Buddhism domination by the military dictators,

    and Shintoist claimed that Shinto divinities were not incarnation of

    the Buddha but that Buddha himself was rather manifestation ofShinto deities. Tsurugaoka Hachimangu Shrine used to be a typical

    mixture of Shinto and Buddhism elements and a prime example of

    syncretism as Yoritomo Minamoto (1147-1199), the founder of the

    Shrine, was in the lineage of the Imperial Family.

    After the Meiji Imperial Restoration of 1868, the Emperor restored

    the sovereignty, and the new government institutionalized Shinto as

    the official state religion while implementing restrictive policies

    against Buddhism and other religions including Christianity.

    Tsurugaoka Hachimangu Shrine had to remove or thrown away all of

    its structures and objects associated with Buddhism. The Emperor

    turned living god, and those who dared to gaze directly at the divine

    Emperor were subject to arrest. Some critics say it was more fascistic

    than today's North Korea since Kim Jong Il is not divinized yet.Today's emperor is no longer a god, of course, but a symb ol of the

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    state and of the unity of the people, according to the Constitution.

    Shinto, however, continues to be the Imperial Family's religion, and

    traditional Shinto rituals are taking place in the Imperial Palace

    regularly. Its influences can be seen on the Japanese national

    holidays, many of which originate in Shinto rituals.

    In general, Shinto has no canon of written scriptures like the Bible or

    the Koran, though ceremonial prayer called norito (a formulary

    statement addressed to the deity) is chanted by shrine priests. Nor is

    it an iconolatry. Most of Shinto shrines house sacred objects such as

    mirrors (the symbol of the Sun Goddess), swords and jewel (thosethree objects are the imperial regalia) on the altar, where the gods

    are believed to reside, and the objects serve as spirit substitutes for

    the gods.

    Shinto can also be said the religion of rituals or ceremonies mostly for

    purifications or exorcism, which can often be observed even at the

    corporate society. Whenever a new factory manager was appointed,

    for example, he traditionally has to visit three places first thing he

    arrived at the assigned factory: A mini-shrine installed at a cozy

    corner of the factory grounds, where he says a prayer for the safety

    during his tenure at the factory; leaders of the factory's labor union

    to say hello and; chief of the local fishermen's association as the

    factories are usually located near the seacoast and likely to pollute

    the seawater with effluent. (Picture, right: Shinto priests performingrituals at Samukawa Jinja.)

    At the ground-breaking ceremony or at the start-up of new facility, be

    it a high-tech or a smoke-stack industry, a Shinto priest is always

    invited to perform the purification and exorcism rituals. Those are

    common Shinto-related customs practiced at any manufacturing

    plants in Japan. In case of Toyota Motor, just one example out of

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    many, top executives play out corporate ritual every autumn at the

    Ise (e-seh) Grand Shrine in Mie (me-eh)Prefecture, the spiritual home

    of Sun Goddess Amaterasu, with their newest models, making three-

    hour driving from their headquarters near Nagoya. Shinto is thus

    firmly embedded in today's corporate society.

    The Yomiuri, a leading daily newspaper in Japan (with a circulation of

    10 million), once reported that a bogus organization billing itself as

    an association of Shinto priests has made a lucrative business out of

    sending retired workers disguised as priests to new building sites in

    Tokyo to conduct ground-breaking ceremonies. The fake priests havebeen dispatched on hundreds of occasions over three years, charging

    40,000 yen per visit, which lasts only an hour or so. Of a customer's

    40,000-yen payment, the 'priest' earns 10,000 yen and the group

    receives the remainder. To perform rituals officially as a priest, an

    individual have to be authorized by the association of Shinto Shrines,

    and yet there is no certification or qualification system.

    We sometimes see the raging controversy over the governments'

    attitude toward Shinto when they donate money to shrines as

    offerings. A local prefectural government once paid 166,000 yen of

    taxpayers' money on 22 occasions between 1981 and 1986 to

    Yasukuni Shrine in Tokyo, which enshrines Japan's 2.6 million war-

    dead including World War II Class-A criminals such as the wartime

    Prime Minister. The payment was made to cover Tamagushi fee.Tamagushi is a sprig of Cleyera orchnacca with white paper-strips

    called shide {she-deh} attached and used by Shinto priests at

    ceremonies. A citizen's group filed a lawsuit in 1982 against the

    governor charging that paying public money to the Shinto shrine is

    unconstitutional. Article Twenty of the Constitution reads that the

    state and its organs shall refrain from religious education or any

    other religious activity. A lawyer for the defendants had said that the

    small cash offerings to the shrine represented condolences and were

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    humanitarian courtesy to the 2.6 million war-dead. In April 1997, the

    Supreme Court ruled that the donation violated the Constitution. The

    ruling was supported by 13 judges of the 15-member Grand Bench of

    the Supreme Court.

    Shinto ceremony sometimes marks life stages of Japanese. One month

    after birth (31st day for boys and 32 days for girls, to be exact),

    parents and grand-parents bring the baby to a shrine, where they

    express gratitude to the Shinto deities for being given the baby and

    have shrine priest pray for his or her good health and happiness. This

    is called Miyamairi {me-yah-my-re}, or Visit to Shinto Shrine, aJapanese version of infant Baptism. Today, most of Miyamairi is

    practiced between one month or 100 days after birth. In famous and

    popular shrines, the ceremony is held every hour in turn. Naturally,

    weekends are busy. A group of a dozen or so babies and their families

    are usually brought in the hall, one group after another. There is no

    price list for the service. We usually pay 10,000 yen per baby. The

    group is led in by turn and sit in front of and facing the alter. A Shinto

    priest wearing unique Shinto costume and headgear appear between

    the group and the altar, and start to recite prayer or norito, swinging

    Tamagushi right and left. We don't understand what he is saying

    except that somewhere in the middle of the prayer, the priest cites

    the name of the baby and his or her birthday. The prayer continue for

    about ten minutes. And then, parents carrying the baby go forward

    one by one and bow to the altar. In the end, sake, or rice wine, in a

    red wooden cup is given to each of them.

    Next chance he or she may visit a shrine to mark the specific life

    stage is Shichigosan (seven-five-three) festival of November 15, when

    three-year-old boys and girls, five-year-old boys and seven-year-old

    girls (nominal age based on the calendar. In an extreme case, a baby

    born on December 31 will be two years old the next day) call on

    shrine to pray for good health and have blessing by the priest. In

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    November 15, particularly on weekends near the day, you may see

    lots of children and their parents wearing colorful clothes or kimono

    in the precinct of famous shrines. They are visiting the shrines for the

    Shichigosan ceremony.

    The third time they are taken care of by Shinto priests will probably

    be wedding. Ceremony usually takes place at hotels or gorgeous

    ceremony halls specifically designed for wedding with makeshift

    shrine altars. Here again, a Shinto priest with whom the hotel or hall

    has contract presides the wedding rituals reciting prayer or norito.

    Unique in wedding ceremony under Shinto is the practice called san-san-kudo (three-three and nine times) or three-time exchange of

    nuptial cups. Three flat cups, almost like dishes with small, medium

    and large size, in which sake is powered and the gloom first sips it

    three times. Then, the bride follows suit. The moment the ritual is

    finished, the couple officially become wedded under Shinto.

    There are as many as 80,000 Shinto shrines in this country

    consecrating to one of the Shinto pantheon, but four are

    predominant: Hachiman, Tenjin (also called Tenmangu), Inari {e-nah-

    re} and Jingu.

    Hachimangu enshrines 15th Emperor Ojin, the de facto first emperor

    since all emperors before him are legendary. It is worshipped as the

    god of archery or war and later became a tutelary deity of the

    Minamoto Clan. Tsurugaoka Hachimangu ranks among the most

    prestigious ones, and offers a wide array of Shinto rituals and

    ceremonies.

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    Tenjin literally means the heaven's god, but is dedicated to the

    memory of Michizane Sugawara (845-903), the patron deity of

    scholarship or learning. Egara Tenjin in Kamakura is one of the three

    greatest Tenjin in Japan.

    Inari is the shrine for the god of harvest and is popularly called fox

    deity since the fox is believed to be messengers of this god.

    Characteristic of this shrine is it multiple, vermilion torii gates and a

    pair of fox statues are placed in front of the shrine.

    Added to those are shrines called Jingu, which are associated with the

    Imperial Family. Most notable are: Meiji Jingu in Tokyo, Ise Jingu,

    Heian Jingu in Kyoto, Atsuta Jingu in Nagoya.

    * Shrine architecture

    A full-fledged Shinto shrine is made of two-part structure as

    represented by the famous Nikko Toshogu Shrine in Tochigi

    Prefecture: one is the oratory called Haiden, before which worshipers

    say a prayer, and the other is the inner sanctum called Honden, the

    main dwelling of the deity built behind the Haiden. In contrast to

    Buddhist temples, Honden contains no statues but houses symbolical

    and sacred objects of worship such as mirrors and swords, in which

    the spirit of the deity is believed to reside. As its nature of sanctuary

    shows, the laity can never get access to the sacred Honden. Haiden is

    more spacious than Honden as it is used for rituals and ceremonies.

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    * Torii gate

    Shrines always have symbolic gates called torii Worshipers will pass

    under this sacred gate, which demarcates the sacred area of the

    shrine. Because of its sacredness, it is difficult to deal with it. In theHaneda Airport in Tokyo, there once was a 7.2-meter-high torii gate

    on a planned new runway. It was erected at the entrance of Anamori

    Inari Shrine before World War II. After the war, American Forces

    requisitioned the area and the shrine was moved. Fortunately, the

    torii was allowed to remain there in light of the local people's fear of

    punishment by Shinto deities. To construct a new runway later, it had

    to be dismantled. Again, locals protested in fear that it might incur

    divine wrath. Government authority compromised, and decided,

    instead of dismantling, to relocate it to a bank of the Tama River

    about 800 meters away from the former site. However, it is

    unconstitutional for the government to cover the total cost for

    removing religious structures of a specific religion. After a long

    discussion, it was agreed that part of the total cost would be paid by

    private sectors, and the torii was finally relocated in February 1999.

    (Picture, left: Torii gate at Tsurugaoka Hachimangu.)

    * Purification

    For a Shinto worshiper, purification is essential before offering a

    prayer and it is performed through exorcism called Harai, cleaning

    one's body with water. It is called Misogi {me-soh-ghe}, and

    abstention from defilement or Imi {e-me}. In a large shrine, there is astone wash-basin and visitors are required to rinse their mouth and

    hands for Misogi before approaching the deity.

    * Komainu, or guard dogs

    In front of shrines, there are a pair of dog-statues facing each other.

    They are guardian dogs and identical to Deva of Buddhist temples,

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    one on the right always has its mouth open and as if to say "ah" while

    the other has its mouth closed and looks like saying "um".

    * Method of prayer

    The method of prayer before the alter at shrines is quite distinct from

    that of Buddhist temples. As part of prayer ritual, worshipers bow

    twice, clap their hands twice (to make sure the god is listening?), bow

    once more and then (or before the prayer) throw coins into a

    offertory box.

    * Kagura, or Shinto music and dancing

    Kagura is a ritual dances accompanied by music called Gagaku {gah-

    gah-koo}. Gagaku is the traditional music of the Japanese Imperial

    Court, and standard instruments include sho (a reed-free mouth

    organ made of 17 bamboo), biwa {be-wah} (a short-necked lute),

    hichiriki (a double-reed pipe like a small oboe) and taiko (drums). The

    Imperial Household Agency has the Imperial Ensemble and its

    musicians are hereditary dating from the ninth century. One of them

    is the Togi family and they are now employees of the Imperial

    Household Agency. Kagura and Gagaku are thought to help provide

    communications between the god and worshipers. For further details

    on Gagaku, refer to the Agency's site.

    * What can religion and religious organizations do in a natural

    catastrophe?

    At 5:46 a.m. on Tuesday, January 17, 1995, a devastating earthquake

    hit Kobe and its neighboring areas. More than 6,400 people were

    killed. Many of them were crushed to death while sleeping in wooden

    houses. Ruptured gas lines ignited, fueled by the wooden

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    construction material, and broken water mains kept firefighters from

    combating. The elevated expressway spanning Osaka and Kobe, which

    was supposed to be quake-proof under seismic technology collapsed

    for one kilo-meter long. Almost all of main roads were unusable

    blocked by collapsed buildings. With nowhere to live in, no water and

    no electricity, survivors had to get by anyhow.

    Yasuo Tanaka (1956-), Akutagawa-Prize winning novelist, TV

    personality and politician, watched the news on TV, and thought what

    he could do for the victims as an individual. He flew to Osaka

    immediately and bought a mini motorcycle, following suggestions ofNishinomiya Catholic church (his parents were baptized Christians).

    The motorcycle was a best vehicle not only to commute between

    Osaka and Kobe, but also to run around wrecked areas in Kobe. What

    he carried in the beginning were bottled water, tissue paper etc., and

    gave them out in person to those who barely survived in the area

    where no cars or truck were able to reach. He shuttled between

    Tokyo and Osaka by air two or three times a week and commuted to

    Kobe by motorcycle like a newspaper delivery boy from early in the

    morning till late at night, dealing with many tasks he had with TV and

    radio stations and magazine publishers in Tokyo. He called for

    whomever he had connections with to help afflicted people in Kobe.

    Within two weeks, Volkswagen donated a Vanagon, Beneton offered

    thousands of underwear, Cathay Pacific promised to provide 2,000

    overnight kits for passengers. Foreign companies were more

    supportive than domestic ones. Tanaka carried those products drivingVanagon himself and delivered them to the sufferers. His work as an

    individual volunteer continued for more than half a year. Through

    charities, he witnessed what human behaviors were like when a

    catastrophe attacked urban cities.

    Temples and shrines usually have halls, which are usable as shelters,

    and grounds where temporary tent villages can be built. According to

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    Tanaka, not only did few offered such services, but they declined

    Tanaka's request to do so, saying they were also victims and busy

    taking care of themselves.

    Tanaka first contacted Catholic churches in Nishinomiya and Kobe,

    and joined their relief operation, but later he began his activities in

    his own way. Before long, he found a Buddhist temple priest was

    engaged in rescuing people. As the priest alone couldn't do much, he

    asked the sect's headquarters, which hosts hundreds of young

    trainees in the mountain, to come down to Kobe and help the victims

    as a practical training. The headquarters rejected the request, sayingthey are orientated to spiritual training, not for secular affairs.

    Tanaka also sharply rebuked the mass media. A host of reporters,

    journalists, TV personali ties, anchor-person or whatever you may cal l

    them, rushed to Kobe for coverage. Many chauffeured limousine for

    them and their crews were parked on main streets of central Kobe,

    making traffic jam even worse. They gave no hand whatsoever to the

    victims. Tanaka wrote in his Kobe Quake Diary a case covered by a

    widely known journalist, who dubbed himself as "Japanese Walter

    Cronkite". He and his crew flew to Kobe shortly after the quake and

    videotaped without getting a permission a young man desperately

    looking for his parents trapped under the wreckage. As they

    continued taping, the young man said to them crying "Stop it!", but

    they didn't. Instead, the Japanese Cronkite ended the coverage on TVsaying "The victim's anger seems to have turned to the mass media".

    At least, he had to get the young man's permission before coverage.

    All he had in mind at the time was how to improve TV ratings. Tanaka

    pointed out the mass media didn't have even a sense of ethics. While

    biking around devastated area, Tanaka often witnessed groups of the

    biggest yakuza, of which headquarters are located in Kobe, offering

    people with hot drinks and foods at street corners. They were far

    more helpful than religious organizations.

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    Tanaka also criticized officials of the local government including

    Governor of Hyogo Prefecture, who must have witnessed how badly

    Kobe was damaged through the windows of his official residence themoment the tremor hit, but went to the office at 9 o'clock with a

    chauffeured car as usual as if nothing has happened. They had, says

    Tanaka, no sense of crisis management at all.

    In conclusion, religion and religious organizations can do little in a

    natural catastrophe.

    The two fundamental Shinto doctrines are that Japan is the country of the gods

    and her people are the descendants of gods. This concept of the divine descent

    of the Japanese people, as well as the divine origin of the land, has given rise to

    a conviction of superiority over other countries and peoples. With the

    exception of a few designated sects of Shinto, the religion has no founder, no

    sacred writings, and no authoritative set of beliefs. Worship takes place at one

    of the numerous shrines in the country of Japan, although many Japanese have

    altars in their home to one or more of the large number of deities.

    The word Shinto comes from the Chinese word Shen-tao, which means the

    way of the gods. A major feature of Shinto is the notion ofkami, the concept

    of sacred power in both animate and inanimate objects. There is in Shinto a

    powerful sense of the presence of gods and spirits in nature. The gods of

    Shinto are too numerous to be grouped into a hierarchy, but the sun goddess

    Amaterasu is highly revered, and her grand imperial temple is located 200miles southwest of Tokyo. Shinto teaches that the Japanese people are

    themselves descended from the kami.

    The religion of Shinto is entirely incompatible with biblical Christianity. First,

    the idea that the Japanese people and their land are favored above all others

    contradicts the Bibles teaching that the Jews are the chosen people of God:

    For you are a holy people to Jehovah your God. Jehovah your God has chosen

    you to be a special people to Himself above all people that are upon the face of

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    the earth. However, though the Jews are Gods chosen people, they have

    never been designated as better than any other people, and the Bible does not

    teach that they were directly descended from gods.

    Second, the Bible is clear that there are not many gods, but one God: I am

    Jehovah, and there is none else, no god beside Me. The Bible also teaches

    that God is not an impersonal force but a loving and caring Father to those

    who fear Him. He alone created the universe, and He alone reigns sovereignly

    over it. The idea of gods that inhabit rocks, trees, and animals combines two

    different falsehoods: polytheism (the belief in many gods) and animism (the

    belief that gods are present in objects). These are lies from the father of lies,

    Satan, who walks about like a roaring lion, seeking whom he may devour.

    Third, Shintoism fosters pride and feelings of superiority in the Japanese

    people; such elitism is condemned in Scripture. God hates pride because it is

    the very thing that keeps people from seeking Him with their whole hearts. In

    addition, the teachings of the basic goodness and divine origin of the Japanese

    people preclude their need for a Savior. This is the natural consequence of

    assuming ones race is of divine origin. The Bible states unequivocally that all

    have sinned and fallen short of the glory of God, that we all need a Savior, the

    Lord Jesus Christ, and that there is no other name under heaven given among

    men by which we must be saved.

    Shinto teaches that the kami might commune with those who have made

    themselves worthy through ritual purification, but the God of the Bible

    promises to be present to anyone who calls upon Him for forgiveness. No

    amount of personal purification (a form of salvation by works) will make aperson worthy of the presence of God. Only faith in the shed blood of Jesus

    Christ on the cross can accomplish cleansing from sin and make us acceptable

    to a holy God. For He made Him who knew no sin to be sin for us, that we

    might become the righteousness of God in Him

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    The Credo begins with a sense of gratitude. This sense of gratitude is, perhaps,

    the key to understanding Shintoism. One is grateful to Ones parents for life,

    food, clothingand grateful to village gods and ones ancestors for land,

    possessions, and employment. It is this sense of givenness that generates the

    famous sense of Japanese Obligation.

    As with most religions, generalizations are difficult. It is often said that

    Shintoism represents the values and dispositions of Japanese culture. Although

    this is true to an extent, it is important to remember that most nations are

    made up of many cultures. As with all the traditions examined in this book,

    Shintoism embraces considerable diversity. In particular it is not at all clear

    where Shintoism ends and Buddhism starts. This partly due to the lack of the

    organization. As we shall see, one had to wait until 1900 for a comprehensive,

    national organization. Yet it is right to describe Shintoism as Indigenous

    religion of Japan, which for centuries did not need a name. The name Shinto

    (taken from shen do(dao, tao)) arose in the sixth century CE precisely to

    distinguish itself from Buddhism. As Buddhism was the Way of the Buddha

    so Shintoism described itself as the old way, The Way of the Gods or a better

    translation The way of the Kami. Kami is adifficult term to describe.

    In Brief Kami are the forces and powers that pervade everything; they are seen

    best in extraordinary things of life the sun, thunder, great people (such as

    Emperors) and animals. As this idea is very important, more shall be said about

    the kami later on.

    Shintoism distinguishes itself from the other faith traditions in a number of

    ways. Although it has books that are revered, it does not really have ascripture. Although it does make ethical demands, it does not really have a

    strong code of ethical behavior. It is also extremely significant historically. After

    World War II, the postwar surrender treaty built in requirement that the Shinto

    religion must be disestablished. This chapter will explore all the elements.

    However, to begin with we shall start with a brief historical survey, which will

    be followed by a systematic account of Shintoism.

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    Shintoism In the Past

    The Early Period

    The first Japanese histories were written down in the eighth century BCE. Prior

    to this, we have a small number of clues. There are Chinese documents from

    the third century, which describe visits of people to japan, and a significant

    archeological record. Everything seems to suggests that the Japanese had a

    appreciation of the beauty of the natural world. They loved their island home.

    The power of nature and the miracle of fertility preoccupied them greatly.

    They wanted to merge with nature rather than fight or resist it. Anything

    provoking awe, either in nature, amongst people, or beyond, provoked

    worship. This is where the idea of kami comes from. In early Japanese history,considerable prominence is given to the story of the descent of the Imperial

    family from the supreme Sun Goddess.

    It also seems that from the start (whenever that was) government and

    religion were closely linked together. Scared leaders, who in early times were

    female Shamans, were responsible both for organizing and worship of the kami

    and for the organization of human affairs. There was no clear philosophy or

    ethics. Instead the focus was a sense of gratitude and joy for life and a realintimacy with nature. This intimacy partly depended on Ritual Purity. One

    had to be clean to be close to the kami. The theme of purity has continued to

    be a major part of Shintoism right up to the present day.

    A link between the political and the religious realms can be found in the very

    earliest Japanese clans. The government of eighth-century japan saw it as their

    responsibility to organize the major religious festivals and to maintain the

    shrines. The Emperors functions combined administrative duties with hisreligious ones. The stability of the cosmic order depended on this

    combinations. It is not surprising that it was written in 712 and Nihong in 720.

    These two texts outline two central themes of Shintoism: the existence of kami

    throughout Japan and the semi-divine descent of japan and her people.

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    Period 2 : Heian period

    Shintoism has shown itself remarkable in its capacity to assimilate different

    influences. Two centuries before the Heian period (794-1185), the

    sophisticated Chinese had arrived. The Japanese welcomed the highlydeveloped and complex system of Confucian political life. They worked hard to

    impose order on their informal tribal systems. Although the Chinese political

    system dissipated over time, the Confucian ethic became a significant part of

    Japanese life that continues to this very day. However, in Heian period,

    Buddhism emerged as a major influence. Although Buddhism had already

    arrived and taken root with Nara Buddhism , the Heian period saw the

    emergence of two further Buddhist sects. As in many other countries in Asia,

    Buddhists were good at accommodating local religions. A popular Buddhist

    strategy was to suggest that the local deities were simply the local expression

    of Buddhist experience. So, for example the Buddhist monks of the Shingon

    sect described the local kami as expressions of bodhisattvas(enlightened

    being). Kobo Daishi was the founder of Shingon: he introduced the highly

    esoteric Buddhism that had its roots in the Tantric tradition of India. The

    second sect emerging in this period was the Tendai, founded by Dengyo Daishi.

    The famous Chinese text the Lotus Sutrawas its central scripture and itsJapanese headquarters was the Hieizan mountain. It was also during this

    period that Taoism became important Japanese religion was a hybrid of

    Shintoism, Buddhism and religious Taoism, which took distinctive Japanese

    expression. Shugendo, for example, was a highly organized pilgrimage

    movement of this period: it stressed the need to make pilgrimage to sacred

    mountains, which and acknowledge the power of the local Kami on these

    mountains, which were linked to the local bodhisattvas of Buddhism.

    Shintoism was now inescapably linked with other religious traditions. Scholars

    disagree as to the extent of this linkage. Helen Hardacre insists that the

    practice of Shinto was for centuries a mere appendage to Buddhist

    institutions. Brian Bocking insists that For most of its history what we call in

    retrospect Shinto was mainly Buddhism, with generous helpings of Taoism, Yin-

    Yang philosophy, Confucianism, folk religion and more recently European-style

    nationalism. Edwin O. Reischauer is more nuanced and more accurate when

    he writes, The two religions became institutionally very much intertwined.....And yet, throughout, Shinto retained its distinctiveness and strength.

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    Although it is true that we have to wait until 1900 for the basics of a national

    Shinto organization, it is wrong to deny the existence of distinctive Shinto

    beliefs nad dispositions before this. It is true, however, that Buddhism and

    Shintoism were both operating together in Japanese culture up until 1868.

    Period 3: Kamakura Period

    The Heian period was marked by political and social stability. The Kamakura

    period (1185-1333) was much more troubled. Political power shifted from the

    court to the shoguns (the feudal powers). Struggles between these feudal

    powers, which had their roots in the Heian period, now dominated the political

    scene. Religiously, many of the syncretistic tendencies of the Heian period

    continued. However, as is common in troubled times, a widespread belief

    arose that the people were living in the third and final age of the world. (The

    first age was the period when people practiced the Buddhas teaching and

    obtained enlightenment; the second age was a period of practice but few

    expected to obtain enlightenment; and the third was the period of indifference

    to the teaching and virtually no observation.) Given that this was the final age,

    an expectation developed that the world would end soon, probably through agreat catastrophe. The forms of Buddhism that emerged in this period

    reflected these expectations. It is not surprising that the Pure Land Sects and

    the Zen Sects emerged during this period.

    Period 4: Tokugawa period

    Perhaps partly in reaction to the unsettled nature of the preceding period, theTokugawa period was marked by strong central government, peace, and order.

    Its attitude to religions was strongly conservative. Helen Hardacre suggests

    that Shintoism in the period operated differently within the three different

    layers of Japanese society. The first layer was the ritual practice of the

    imperial court, which maintained a formal schedule of elaborate ritual for both

    Buddhas and kami. It was during this period that the widespread Japanese

    practice to Shinto ritual to mark birth and Buddhist ritual to mark death

    became a commonplace. The second layer consisted of the large shrines that

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    had sufficient resources to support an hereditary priesthood. Many were

    branch shrines (i.e., linked with an original shrine through a ceremony); often

    these shrines were a result of migration of members from the original shrine as

    they settled so they a new shrine dedicated to the clan deity. Many of the

    most prestigious shrines, such as Usa Hachiman, Inari, Kasuga, Tenjin, Konpira,

    Munakata, Suwa, and Izuma, developed branch shrine throughout Japan. The

    third layer involved many thousands of local shrines dedicated to a local

    tutelary deity. Often these shrines did not have a professional priest, but

    simply survived through the support of the local community .

    Towards the end of the Tokugawa period, two distinct developments emerged.

    The Ise pilgrimage was the means by which many Japanese people found

    themselves in the worship of Kami. Villages would support certain carefully

    chosen pilgrims as they traveled to the shrine to offer prayers for a bounteous

    harvest. The second development was the Shinto school of thought known as

    National Learning. This school has its root in the work of Kada no Azumamaro

    (1669-1739), but in the nineteenth century was heavily shaped by Hirata

    Atsutane (1776-1843). The key issues for this school were the separation of

    Shinto from Buddhism, the need for Shinto funerals taken by a Shinto priest,

    and the reestablishment of a department of religion within the government.

    Period 5: The Meiji Restoration

    Tokugawa feudalism came to an end with the Meiji Restoration (1868). Earhart

    sees this date as the movement of Japan into the modern world. Although

    ostensibly the restoration is so called because the Emperor was restored to his

    position as head of state, in fact it was the period when a modern nation statewas formed. Earhart outlines the extent of the change, when he writes: The

    whole system of government was reorganized along the lines of a nation-state.

    The office of the military ruler was abolished and the emperor formally ruled a

    centralized government with a constitution and elected legislators. The feudal

    clans were replaced with prefectures which administered local government as

    the branch of the central authority. The new capital was established at Tokyo.

    To finance the government a tax system was adopted.

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    On the religious front, it was the period when the state started to support

    Shinto as the state religion. A campaign was waged against Buddhism. In the

    same way that the Emperor had been restored so, the argument went, the

    original religion of Japan had to be restored. This meant the removal of

    Buddhist statues and Buddhist priests from the Shinto shrines.

    During the 1870s, the government found it difficult to insist on Shintoism as

    the main and most important religion in Japan. Japanese Buddhism was not

    going to be so easily dismissed. Between 1872 and 1875 the government had a

    Department of Religion which included both Shintoism and Buddhism. Matters

    were finally resolved in 1882, when the government formally recognized State

    Shintoism. Legally State Shintoism was not religious; it was a religion (i.e., the

    13 groups which were linked with Shintoism) and this was distinct from State

    Shintoism. The government argued that religion was separated from the State,

    thereby protecting religious liberty.

    Although religious diversity was permitted in Japan, Shinto dominated the

    scene right up until 1945. After the 1890s, every child in Japan was given a

    complete introduction to Shinto and a strongly nationalistic ethic. It is a

    widespread perception that Shinto is responsible for Japans military

    aggression. Actually most religious traditions in Japan supported Japans war

    activities. Although it is true that the State used Shinto to encourage a patriotic

    and nationalistic outlook, it would be wrong to simply link Japanese war

    machine to the Shinto religion.

    Period 6: After World War II

    The surrender and occupation of Japan in 1945 brought State Shintoism to an

    end. William K. Brunce headed up the Religions Division of the Civil

    Information and Education Section and produced the Shinto Directive on

    December 15, 1945. This Directive prohibited the funding of Shinto doctrine

    and the supporting of any ideology that encouraged militarism and

    ultranationalism. It also prohibited any creed asserting the superiority of the

    Emperor or the Japanese people. The emperor duly announced that he was

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    only human and not a god. The occupying powers were insisting that Shintoism

    should be treated just like Buddhism and Christianity. Shinto priests no longer

    worked for the State, Shinto shrines did not receive any state subsidy; and

    religious nationalistic sentiments were removed from the school textbooks.

    The results was a crisis within Shintoism. Its popularity waned rapidly; it was a

    religion directly associated with the defeat. Once isolated from government it

    found itself lacking sufficient organization, which hampered the traditions

    capacity to recover. For many years it looked as if Shintoism was in serious

    trouble. However, in recent years it has recovered, or perhaps, to be more

    accurate, it has demonstrated how it has remained part of the Japanese

    psyche.

    This perhaps can be best illustrated by the controversy surrounding the death

    of Emperor Hirohito who died on January 7, 1989. The crown prince Akihito

    succeeded him on January 6,1989, but the enthronement ceremony was not

    held until November 1990. During the intervening period, the whole issue of

    state funding for the enthronement had to be confronted.

    Article 89 of the constitution of Japan (1946) states explicitly: no public

    money or other property shall be expended..... for the use, benefit ormaintenance of any religious institution or association........ This article would

    appear to prohibit funding for either the funeral or the enthronement.

    However, the strength of the traditionlists (i.e., those who insisted that

    Japanese traditions must be maintained) was sufficient for the government to

    be persuaded to pay for these rituals. For the funeral, the government divided

    the occasion into a religious private ceremony and a secular public part,

    both of which were paid for out of the public purse. For the enthronement, the

    government made a similar distinction. The actual enthronement ceremony

    (Sokui-no-Rei) was considered a state affair and paid for out of state funds. The

    Daijosai ceremony, which is the occasion when the Emperor assumes spiritual

    power by spending part of a night in a special Shinto shrine, was to be funded

    out of the Imperial court budget. The court budget comes from the

    government, so it is a moot point whether this careful distinction made any

    difference.

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    There are some movements that would like the government to extend further

    funding to certain other shrines. Such movements are vigorously opposed,

    especially by Christians, who fear a repeat of the 1930s. The result is that

    Shintoism continues to gain widespread recognition, although the government

    tries to keep its distance.

    Shintoism Today

    Worldviews

    Kami

    The concept of kami probably has its roots in the Japanese love of nature.

    According to traditions there are many thousands (yaoyorozu no kami vast

    myriads of kami) of these life powers. Although the Sun Kami Amaterasu-o-

    Mikami is considered the head of the kami, she is not considered the source or

    the overall creator. Indeed she pays respect to the other kami. This means that

    unlike many other traditions there is a fundamental plurality of forces in

    control of the world. The central texts that describe the main kami are the

    Kojikiand Nihongi. It is here that the marvelous Japanese story of the creatorkamiIzanagi and Izanami. Kami are found throughout nature: mountains,

    trees, rocks, seas, rivers, and animals. Even people can be described as kami,

    not least the Emperor. Naturally there are those kami which are destructive

    and cause suffering, for example Magatsuhi-no-kami (the kami of misfortune).

    Traditionally such destructive kami are located in the nether-world (the land of

    Yomi). Evil, in Shintoism, is not inherent in humanity but comes from outside.

    The primary human duty towards the kami is to worship them. All deserverespect, even the destructive kami. There are thousands of shrines in Japan. All

    insist on approaching the kami having observed the fundamental rituals of

    purification. Then it is possible to offer food, offer dances and music, and chant

    prayers. Some homes have a kami shelf (kamidana). This is a miniature shrine,

    which is often decorated with pine sprigs or the sacred sasakitree. The family

    will deposits various offerings on the shelf and demonstrate their

    acknowledgement of the kami by clapping, boying and praying in front of the

    shrine.

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    The comcept of is a distinctive Japanese contribution to the understanding of

    the spiritual in the world. Only certain forms of Hinduism and animism are

    similar. It is the acknowledgement of the many varied powers that maintain

    the balance of the cosmos. The worship of the kami is essential to maintain

    the harmony of the human with nature.

    Kojiki (Records of Ancient Matters) and Nihongi (Chronicles of Japan)

    These are the earliest texts of Shintoism. Emperor Temmu (672-86) felt that

    existing histories were unreliable and offered to provide a corrected text. The

    Kojiki was compiled first in 712 CE, closely followed by the Nihongi, which

    according to tradition was compiled in 720 CE. The major theme of the Kojiki is

    the origin of kingship. Book 1 explains the origins of the world through the

    marriage of two kami, Izanagi and Izanami. Together they create the Japanese

    islands and many other kami, Izanamu is then killed by the kami of fire, so

    Izanagi descends to the underworld to try and find her. When Izanagi returns

    to the earth, the act of purification brings about the existence of the Kami of

    the Sun, Amaterasu. She is the historic ancestors of the Imperial family. She is

    the administrator of the heavenly domain. It is her grandson Ninigi whodescends form heaven to Mount Takachiho to rule the Japanese islands.

    Books 2 starts with the great-grandson of Ninigi, Jimmu, who becomes Japans

    first Emperor. Jimmu goes to war against the forces of evil and finds the center

    of the land, which is where he builds the Imperial Palace. We are then

    provided with a careful record of 13 other Emperors before arriving at

    Emperor Ojin, who historians have evidence lived in the fifth century CE. Book

    3 continues to document the achievements if the great Emperors. It describestheir exploits, from Emperor Ninotoku to Empress Suiko.

    Nihongi covers similar ground. There are thirty volumes, of which the first two

    deal with the age of the kami and the remaining twenty-eight tell the story

    from Emperor Jimmu to Empress Jito. It seems that the two books are

    intended for different audiences. The Nihongi has made use of more sources; it

    seems to be intended as an official chronicle, comparable to the historical

    records of the Chinese.

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    Institutions and Rituals

    The Shrine Association (Jinja Honcho)

    On February 3, 1946 the Shrine Association was formed. This is the body

    responsible for coordinating and governing shrine Shinto. After the

    breakdown of State Shintoism, this was the body that emerged to coordinate

    continuing Shinto activies. Although some shrine are independent of the

    Association, more that 80 percent of Japanese shrines are affiliated to it.

    Relatively recently the headquarters were moved from Tokyo to Meiji Jingu.The central teaching is the guidance of the spiritual leaderships of the Ise

    shrines because this embodies the spiritual homeland of Japan. The Ise Shrine

    is the Imperial household shrine, which is identified with the Emperor; it

    remains popular as a place of pilgrimage. The Association retains certain

    traditional convictions about the character of Shinto: for example, it assumes

    the Shinto is a national faith, which is separated from Buddhism. The president

    is responsible for the recognition of priestly rank and the appointment of

    priests to shrines. On certain other occasions the president stands in for the

    Emperor.

    Festivals

    The Shinto word which is closer to festivals is matsuri. According to Brian

    Bocking, this term may be rendered festival, worship, celebration, rite,

    or even prayer, which is actually captures the range of activities connected

    with Shinto festivals are organized around the annual seasonal celebrations.Most are held at a shrine and will involve offering, prayers, rites, gratitude to

    the kami, and straightforward entertainment.

    Major Festivals

    Oshogatsu (New Year) 1-3 January

    Ohinamatsuri (Dolls or Girls Festival) 3 March

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    Tango nu Sekku (Boys Festival) 5May

    Hoshi Matsuri/Tanabata (Star Festival) 7 July

    Ethics

    Shintoism is not preoccupied with ethics. Bocking explains that Japanese do

    not associate the Shinto word shushin with morality and behavioural norms,

    but with the pre-war ethics courses and textbooks used in Japanese schools

    to underpin the emperor system. For Bocking, the ethics of Shinto are simply

    Japanese versions of Confucianism or Buddhism.

    Insofar that Shintoism has an ethic, it is one that stresses the corporate

    dimensions of human life. Sokyo Ono writes, The Shinto faith brings not onlythe individuals, the neighbourhood and society into direct relationship with the

    kami and makes them more ideal; it does the same for the political world. As

    we saw in the examination of the history of Shintoism, it is true that Shintoism

    has been a bond that linked the people with nature and the state. This, if

    course, partly created the problems that led to the allies requiring the

    disestablishment of State Shinto at the end of World War II. Sokyo Ono insists

    that the use of Shinto for nationalistic purposes was a distortion of the

    tradition and writes, Fundamentally, Shinto is a faith which is based on the

    belief that many kami cooperate together. Shrines Shinto is worship to unite

    and harmonize the various kinds of kami. The spirit of tolerance and

    cooperation is a hitherto unnoticed aspect of Shinto. Generally, however,

    there is little that is distinctive about Shinto ethics. Japanese ethical traditions

    do not draw heavily on the Shinto tradition.

    Women

    Some feminist scholars suspect that Shintoism historically was positive about

    women. There is some evidence that prior to the sixth century CE there was a

    female shamanic cult and that menstruating women were viewed positively as

    possessed by kami and pure. Problems arose with the arrival of the more male-

    dominated Buddhist traditions, which marginalize Shinto shamanesses and,

    perhaps, women more generally. However, as Martinez has shown, the

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    domination of the major festivals by men can easily lead scholars to ignore the

    way that women dominate the minor rituals and festivals.

    Martinez provides a study of Kuzaki village. She shows how the bulk of house

    hold rites are organized by women. The daily offerings to the kami and theprayers to household ancestors are almost always performed by the women.

    Even the monthly climb up Sengen, the sacred mountain, is an activity of the

    working women. This monthly pilgrimage is to ask the kami for good fortune. It

    was only when the village celebrated a major festival that the men became

    involved. All the political leaders were present, all of whom were men, and

    they dominated the occasion.

    For Martinez, the interesting feature is the way that the regular acts of ritualsare being dominated by women. She suggests that women,....... because of

    their innate power, always have the potential to meditate directly for the

    deities. In other worlds there is a constructive message underpinning this,

    largely rural, participation in religious activities.

    Modern Expression

    It is commonplace that western scholars of Japanese religions find themselves

    denying the existence if Japanese religion. The education system stresses the

    worlds if technology and science and is impatient with the spiritual. Book

    shops are full of books in ghosts, avoiding pollution, and UFOs. Ian Reader

    insists that there is considerable evidence that Japanese young people are

    reacting against such reductionism. He writes, The processes of moderation,

    rationalisation, scientific development and increased education thus tend to

    stimulate rather than diminish interest in spiritual matter and the world of the

    irrational. Religion is alive and well in Japan.

    Yet traditional forms are struggling. The evidence is that it is ani-establishment

    traditions that attract the interest. Shintoism continued to be identified with

    the establishment. However, Ian Reader writes, the rising numbers

    participating in festivals, ...... the various occasions which memorialize the

    ancestors, the current interest in pilgrimages, the large numbers who acquire

    amulets and talismans and visit religious centers to pray for benefits, the small

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    but growing interest in meditation ....., the contemporary focus on ascetic and

    charismatic figures of power, and the seemingly endless emergence and

    growth of new religions, are indicative of the energies inherent in the religious

    world of Japan today.

    Shintoism remains significant because underpinning many festivals and

    customs are Shinto traditions. In the 1980s, growing Japanese prosperity

    enabled the Japanese to revisit their traditions with pride. In the 1990s, the

    economic miracle was less strong and interest in religious traditions waned. It

    seems to remain true that interest in Shintoism runs in parallel with Japanese

    self-perception; when the Japanese nation is doing well, Shintoism is viewed

    positively; when it is doing less well, Shintoism attracts less interest.