For generations, this peculiar festival has drawn crowds to witness nearly unclothed men vying for possession of a hemp bag filled with charms, braving the harsh chill of the Tohoku winter. However, the Kokusekiji temple, custodian of this age-old event, revealed that the advancing age of participants and a dearth of successors necessitated the decision to discontinue the festival.
“The participants are growing too old for the event, and there’s a shortage of successors to carry on the tradition,” stated the temple authorities, as quoted by Asahi Shimbun.As the curtains closed on this historic spectacle, participants clad only in ‘fundoshi’ engaged in rituals at the Yakushido hall before engaging in a symbolic skirmish over the coveted ‘somin-bukuro’, believed to bestow protection against misfortune upon its possessor.
Simultaneously, in another corner of Japan, the Saidaji Temple in Okayama prefecture witnessed the culmination of its own version of the ‘naked festival’, known locally as the ‘Eyo festival’. NHK World reported the scene where men, adorned minimally, scrambled for luck-bringing wooden sticks in a celebration deeply rooted in Japan’s intangible folk cultural heritage.
Despite a hiatus due to the COVID-19 pandemic, approximately 9,000 males congregated at the Okayama temple festival, underscoring the enduring significance of these age-old traditions in the collective consciousness of the nation.These events occur against the backdrop of Japan’s demographic challenges, with a fertility rate of 1.3, well below the threshold required for population stability. With deaths surpassing births for over a decade and a rapidly aging population, concerns about the nation’s future have intensified, casting a shadow over its economic prospects. Japan’s rapid demographic transition, characterized by an aging populace, has profoundly affected traditional customs and rural communities. Japan’s demographic crisis has led to the closure of schools, businesses, and essential services, particularly in rural areas.
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