Thursday, October 25, 2007

祭り
Matsuri, The Traditional Japanese Festival

Before coming to Japan I knew very little if anything about Matsuri 、Japan`s Traditional community festivals, but it has come to be one of my favorite aspects of Japanese culture. Matsuri are held all throughout the year to celebrate a whole range of subjects, such as the solstice 、changing of the seasons, historical events and just about anything. There are national festivals celebrated by everyone, and most communities has local festivals also. Some of them date back hundreds of years, and some are very new, having been stared in the last few years.
Because Saitama city is the result of the amalgamation of many former cities, there are several annual festivals held here. I got to experience the Omiya  and Iwatsuki Matsuri and the newly formed Saitama city matsuri. Iwatsuki is famous in Japan for traditional Dolls, and as a result the Iwatsuki Matsuri is a doll festival, which includes a huge replica of the traditional Japanese doll wedding arrangement, but with real people. There is a competition and the winning couple gets to have their wedding at the festival, dressed as traditional dolls.


                       Iwatsuki Matsuri

The Saitama citizens festival has only been around for a few years, since the formation of the city, and is a Dragon festival, with each ward entering a dragon float which is paraded around the Super Arena area. I had the great opportunity of participating in the festival, and helped carry the giant 80m Snake (gunnies record for longest bamboo snake). Great fun! But I had a sore throat for days from yelling Washoi (kind of like,
heave ho I guess) for hours at the top of my lungs.














Me at Saitmatsuri with one BIG snake

By far the most entertaining and oldest Matsuri I went to was in the nearby city of Kawagoe and has a rich history dating back many centuries. The festival involves parading giant Dashi, wodden carts covered in ornaments. The cart usually has a large doll on the roof, and houses a band of small drums and a traditional flutes, as well as a single masked actor. There are dozens of Dashi that parade around the streets, playing music. If two of the Dashi should meet along the way, they have a musical battle, each one trying to put the other off beat. The Masked actors also have a mock battle, trying to intimidate the other with dancing and miming. It is an amazing sight to see these 16m tall wooden carts dueling, and the actors can often be quite hilarious.
                Two Dashi mid-duel at Kawagoe Festival

                           A full scale
Dashi

If you ever get a chance to go to be sure to try and get to a Matsuri if you have the chance, you wont regret it.

Wednesday, October 10, 2007

Still Alive

Ok, Ive got to admit it, I`ve been a total failure at keeping up on this Blog, and I`d be surprised if anyone is still checking it, but if it means anything, I have been having an amazing time over the past five months. Roughly the entire time since I posted last time, until now, I have been undertaking my traineeship at Saitama city council, very soon I will be putting up a post about the local government system and environmental management in Japan, and the differences with Australia. (I mean it, I really will post)
Saitama is a great part of Japan to be, Its about 30mins from Tokyo by JR rail, and is home to about 1.2 million people, many of whom commute to work in Tokyo. Since Ive been here I`ve worked in over 20 different departments at Saitama city hall, roughly spending a few days at each one. This can be extremely tiring at times, meeting new people all the time, going on site facility tours and answering the same questions over and over, but it is also an amazing learning opportunity. Most of my training is undertaken in Japanese, which was very difficult at first, but gradually go to the point where suddenly It snapped in my head and I could take in the main point of what was being explained to me nearly all of the time. I have been doing home stay whit a Japanese family too, which is very useful for picking up the language quickly. The time has gone so incredibly quickly, I knew it would, but now looking back and realising I only have one month left, it is almost scary how much time can seem to speed up when you are having an experience like this.
Anway, I honestly promise to post again soon, with a more details about my training, place Ive been to, festivals visited etc,
thanks, and sorry ;-)
Andi san,