Difference between revisions of "Sakishima seasonal folk festivals"

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(Created page with "*''Japanese'': 種子取祭 ''(Tanadui)'' ''Tanadui'' (lit. "seed pulling") is a popular festival held each year on Taketomi Island in the [[Sakishima Islands|southern Ry...")
 
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Rice-planting begins early in the year on Taketomi, [[Iriomote]], [[Ishigaki]], and the surrounding islands, often in the first lunar month. The Tanadui festival takes place shortly afterward, in the 1st or 2nd months. It is one of the most popular tourist events in [[Okinawa prefecture]], and is a key element of Taketomi's repeated selection as one of the best places in all of Japan for experiencing "traditional culture."
 
Rice-planting begins early in the year on Taketomi, [[Iriomote]], [[Ishigaki]], and the surrounding islands, often in the first lunar month. The Tanadui festival takes place shortly afterward, in the 1st or 2nd months. It is one of the most popular tourist events in [[Okinawa prefecture]], and is a key element of Taketomi's repeated selection as one of the best places in all of Japan for experiencing "traditional culture."
  
Around the 4th month, prayers for the crops' growth are performed, and in many Iriomote communities, prayers, hand-clapping, or music are performed for the crops for the following two months or so, to help encourage their growth. In the 6th month, the first crops begin to be harvested. The end of the harvest is celebrated in the 7th month, with a festival known as ''murapûru'' or ''murapûri'' (豊年祭), and the changeover to a new year's crop is celebrated in the 10th month, in a festival known as ''shichi'' (節祭).
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Around the 4th month, prayers for the crops' growth are performed, and in many Iriomote communities, prayers, hand-clapping, or music are performed for the crops for the following two months or so, to help encourage their growth. In the 6th month, the first crops begin to be harvested. The end of the harvest is celebrated in the 7th month, with a festival known as ''murapûru'' or ''murapûri'' (豊年祭), and the changeover to a new year's crop is celebrated in the 9th or 10th months, in a festival known as ''shichi'' (節祭). In many communities on Ishigaki Island, this ''shichi'' festival features figures dressed as the deity ''mayun ganashi'' going from house to house chanting words of prayer for the growth of the crops. On Iriomote, many communities send rowboats or canoes out into the distance across the ocean, towards ''[[nirai kanai]]'' (the land of the gods), in order to meet the gods and welcome them back to the island.
  
 
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==References==
 
==References==
*Gallery labels, National Museum of Japanese History.[https://www.flickr.com/photos/toranosuke/11880894933/sizes/l]
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*Gallery labels, National Museum of Japanese History.[https://www.flickr.com/photos/toranosuke/11880894933/sizes/l][https://www.flickr.com/photos/toranosuke/11881519506/in/photostream/]
  
 
[[Category:Ryukyu]]
 
[[Category:Ryukyu]]
 
[[Category:Culture]]
 
[[Category:Culture]]

Revision as of 22:55, 27 March 2018

  • Japanese: 種子取祭 (Tanadui)

Tanadui (lit. "seed pulling") is a popular festival held each year on Taketomi Island in the southern Ryukyus.

Rice-planting begins early in the year on Taketomi, Iriomote, Ishigaki, and the surrounding islands, often in the first lunar month. The Tanadui festival takes place shortly afterward, in the 1st or 2nd months. It is one of the most popular tourist events in Okinawa prefecture, and is a key element of Taketomi's repeated selection as one of the best places in all of Japan for experiencing "traditional culture."

Around the 4th month, prayers for the crops' growth are performed, and in many Iriomote communities, prayers, hand-clapping, or music are performed for the crops for the following two months or so, to help encourage their growth. In the 6th month, the first crops begin to be harvested. The end of the harvest is celebrated in the 7th month, with a festival known as murapûru or murapûri (豊年祭), and the changeover to a new year's crop is celebrated in the 9th or 10th months, in a festival known as shichi (節祭). In many communities on Ishigaki Island, this shichi festival features figures dressed as the deity mayun ganashi going from house to house chanting words of prayer for the growth of the crops. On Iriomote, many communities send rowboats or canoes out into the distance across the ocean, towards nirai kanai (the land of the gods), in order to meet the gods and welcome them back to the island.

References

  • Gallery labels, National Museum of Japanese History.[1][2]