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samurai007 (Offline)
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Posts: 890
Join Date: Oct 2007
12-28-2007, 04:26 PM

Quote:
Originally Posted by BestFriend View Post
Enyafriend,
Thanks for the help! I had planned to visit temples for new years but is that a all day/night thing for the 1st 3 days of new years?
Also... I don't want to be rude and have no manners while I'm there. Is there anything I should be aware of? Although I'll be just another tourist, I want to be respectful.
Like if I see a lady wearing a kimono, would it be rude if I asked her to take a picture with me?

I'm about to extend my stay in Japan... hope it doesn't damage my wallet.

I love this forum. Thank you very much!
I went to a temple with some Japanese friends one New Years. I'd suggest not taking pictures of people while they are praying (especially not with a flash bulb), but you can take pictures of them walking around the temple, the temple maidens, the fortune telling lottery and sticks, the huge barrels of sake, etc.

At the temple I went to, there were temple maidens who, for a price, will let you spin a lottery-type basket filled with little numbered balls. The ball you get corresponds to a stick that has your fortune for the coming year.

Sake makers sent sample casks of the coming year's product to the temple on New Years, where it is blessed by the priests, and that blessing is supposed to then extend to the whole batch.

If you actually go on New Years night, you'll hear them ring the bell 108 times, to chase away each of the "mortal desires" that plague mankind (we have "7 deadly sins", they have 108). Buddhist Channel | Buddhism News, Headlines | Arts & Culture | Japanese New Year Bell Ringing Ceremony at the Asian Art Museum


JET Program, 1996-98, Wakayama-ken, Hashimoto-shi

Link to pictures from my time in Japan
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