Thursday, December 25, 2014

Santa-san

Questions for Santa Claus from Japanese children:

"I was naughty this morning; how come I still get a present?"
"Do you have any brothers or sisters?"
"How many floors do you have in your house?"
"What kind of food do you like?"
"What present do you want for Christmas?"


A Kyoto Christmas








Sunday, December 21, 2014

Christmas

Walking through the grounds of the Imperial Palace at dusk

alone

a light snow
the intersection of my horizontal journey
and
the vertical journey of the falling snow

my boots meet the gravel path
each step recorded with a crunch
tiny stones shifting slightly

on the edge of the sharp evening air
I smell the proud ancient pines

the world
this Japanese world
slides quietly into monochrome
color washed out in the fading light
the low clouds
the snow.

I close my eyes
and
walk a straight line.


Monday, December 15, 2014

Bonsai


Bonsai is one of those cultural exports from Japan that everyone is familiar with, like kimonos and chopsticks.  But recognizing or being aware of something is very different from understanding it, as I came to discover at the 34th annual Taiken-Ten Bonsai exhibition.

Bonsai inhabits a strange place somewhere between gardening and sculpture.  Growing miniature trees in containers has existed in Japan for more than a thousand years.  As with many cultural things in Japan, Zen Buddhism has played a role in defining the aesthetics of bonsai.  There are long established and rather strict   guidelines and techniques for cultivating little trees that have the appearance of big trees.  This is both beautiful and bizarre.  Even as I admired the many artistic interpretations of bonsai - the sensuous flowing lines, the often gravity defying balance, the congruity of living and dead elements - I couldn't help but think this is really a perverse manipulation of nature, the same way chihuahuas, toy poodles and other small dogs are.  It is worth noting that bonsai trees are not genetically modified plants.  The tiny size is achieved through meticulous trimming, pruning, wiring and even grafting.


The question running through my head the whole time was, "How?"  How are these insanely twisted, completely unnatural forms achieved?  How are these trees kept alive?  How long does it take to grow them into these shapes?  There was a vendor section to the exhibition that for me, an outsider, could only hint at answers.  There was the vendor that had a wide array of bonsai tools for sale spread out like surgical instruments used by a doctor in an operating room.  There were vendors selling bonsai containers of varying shapes, sizes and finishes, vendors that specialized in soil and fertilizers, elegant rocks and books about bonsai.  And of course there were trees, very expensive trees.  They ranged in price from ¥2,000 (about $20) for a starter specimen no larger than your pinky finger to fully mature, show-quality trees upwards of ¥1,000,000 (about $10,000).

Adding to the somewhat surreal atmosphere was a musical soundtrack that swung from a Muzak version of traditional Japanese melodies to a Lord of the Rings fantasy score.

I got the impression that bonsai has a sort of cult following, that the people in attendance were part of a small clique, like Trekkies at a Star Trek convention.  But like so many of the people that support traditional Japanese culture it would seem, this clique was mostly 60+.  As the Japanese population continues to gray, one wonders if these ancient art forms will survive.




Monday, December 1, 2014

Daihikaku Senkoji (大悲閣千光寺)



The tourists, both foreign and Japanese, tend to swarm on all the big temples and shrines on weekends and holidays, especially during the peak seasons.  It is best to avoid these areas and days.  Find a quiet cafe near home and do some reading.

Japan has a sort of Thanksgiving holiday at the end of November, but unlike the American version, it is a day to express gratitude for labor and production.  I think mostly it is just a day off.

Aware of the crowds that would certainly meet me, I set out Monday afternoon anyway.  Arashiyama is just a few stops on the train from Katsura, so I figured I could easily retreat if overwhelmed by the humanity.  The Arashiyama station was thronged.  I paused for a moment, observed the direction of the multitude and went up an adjacent road that was relatively empty.  A good decision.  This led me past a quiet shrine and on to the south bank of the Hozu River.

The river was full of bright blue rowboats and couples trying to navigate it.  Nonomiya-jinja is nearby which is the shrine of choice for lovers and would-be lovers, so I imagined the romantic aquatic excursions were part of some courtship.  It was a charming sight, the azure blue of the boats hemmed in by the steep canyon dressed in full autumnal regalia.

As I discovered last year, the farther along a path you go, the more solitary the journey.  I like this.  Little by little the sounds of human conversation and movement is replaced by nature's equivalent.  Serenity arrives.

Far up the river I found a sign for a temple and some steps leading up the hillside.  I knew this could only lead to something really good.  There were only a few other people that had ventured this far upstream and some were dissuaded by the climb necessary to reach the temple.





Perched high above the Hozu is Daihikaku Senkoji.  This temple was apparently founded by a wealthy 16th Century merchant named Suminokura Ryoi who pioneered Southeast-Asian trade.  It is meant to commemorate the heavy human toll of his river excavation project.

There was something beautifully ramshackle about this temple.  Most temples are pristine and untouchable, the route through the grounds clearly marked with large red arrows, the dos and don'ts posted everywhere.  Here, at Daihikaku Senkoji there is none of that.  This is not simply a historical showpiece with coffers of tourist Yen; this is a proper habitation.  Everything has the warm patina of frequent use and time.

Information about the temple is hand or typewritten and photocopied like a punk rock fanzine from the 80s.  There are shelves of books, not rare antique tomes, but well-thumbed paperbacks you'd find in an ordinary bookshop.  There are art supplies, bamboo brushes, inkstones and washi paper for shodo (calligraphy) and sumi-e (ink painting).  Two temperamental Shiba Inus keep the lone monk and his attendants company and also entertain visitors.

A cup of matcha tea and a sweet appear on a tray decorated with a freshly fallen red maple leaf.  I sit for a long time listening to the water dripping from a bamboo spigot and the temple bell that rings periodically.  The sun begins to set illuminating the city in the distance.  Somewhat reluctantly, I make my way back down the hill to the now deserted river.