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Koir (Offline)
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Posts: 971
Join Date: Jun 2008
Location: Canada
10-05-2009, 12:35 PM

Quote:
Originally Posted by YuriTokoro View Post
Hi.
Could you correct my English?

"Ise Grand Shrine"

I went to Ise Grand Shrine last week. Ise Grand Shrine is the headquarters of approximately 80,000 shrines, and the most traditional site in Japan.
The Ise Grand Shrine has two distinctions. One of them is that the shrine has two gods.
There are 125 shrines within Ise Grand Shrine, and the two main shrines each house a major god (not saints). The names are “Amaterasu-oomikami” and “Toyoukeno-ookami”. “Amaterasu-oomikami” is said to be one of ancestors of Tennoh(Emperor of Japan) and the Imperial Household of Japan.
The other distinction is that the two main shrine buildings and the gate bridge are rebuilt every 20 years.
You would think a very traditional shrine would be old and huge. However, Japanese people believe that gods would like to live in new houses. We think gods lives in the shrines, not in Heaven Above. So we can’t take pictures near the buildings. (I took the picture shown below at the foot of the stairs in front of the building.)
Another reason for rebuilding is the architectural style known as Shinmeizukuri. That means the building doesn’t have groundwork. Ise Grand Shrine is the one and only shrine built in this style.
When I entered the gate of the shrine, it started raining. I walked about 20 minutes to get to one of the main buildings in the downpour. I thought gods might dislike me.

Thank you.

Ise Grand Shrine - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Amaterasu Omikami - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Emperor of Japan - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
http://www.sengu.info/index.html
Impressive post, Yuri. I didn't have to do much revisions at all this time.

The major revision was with the explanation of gods preferring to live in new buildings. There were too many sentences inside the parentheses, as doing so means the information they had wasn't essential to understanding the concepts being explained. I still left parentheses around the explanation of the picture at the end of the post as that was extra information explaining a different image.

The temple sounds very interesting. Once again, it's good to hear more about the traditions of Japan and how they are being followed in this modern world as they were in ancient times (Shinmeizukuri, etc.).

As for the rain...I don't think the gods dislike you, Yuri. My first thoughts about rain were about how it replenishes the earth and allows things to grow, and other things to wash clean. A very good sign, I'm thinking.

Good work, Yuri!


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