Wednesday, January 10, 2024

DOLL FESTIVAL OF JAPAN

 Hina Matsuri 

   The Japanese Doll Festival, Hina Matsuri or Girl's Day, is held on March 3. Platforms covered with a red carpet are used to display a set of ornamental dolls representing the Emperor, Empress, attendants and musicians in traditional court dress of the Heian period. 

    Origin and custom: The custom of displaying dolls began during the Heian period. Formerly, people believed the dolls possessed the power to contain bad spirits. Hina Matsuri traces its origin to an ancient Japanese custom called hina-nagashi, in which straw hina dolls are set afloat on a boat and sent down a river to the sea, supposedly taking troubles or bad spirits with them. The Shimagamo Shrine (part of the Kamo Shrine complex in Kyoto) celebrates the Nagashibina by floating these dolls between the Takano and Kamo Rivers to pray for the safety of children. People have stopped doing this now because of fishermen catching dolls in their nets. They now send them out to sea, and when the spectators are gone they take the boats out of the water and bring them back to the temple and burn them.

   The customery drink for the festival is shirozake, a sake made from fermented rice. A coloured hina-arare, bite-sized crackers flavoured with sugar or soy sauce depending on the region, and hishimochi, a diamond-shaped coloured rice cake, are served. Chirashizushi (sushi rice flavoured with sugar, vinegar, topped with raw fish and a variety of ingredients) is often eaten. A salt-based soup called ushiojiru containing clams still in the shell is also served. Clam shells in food are deemed the symbol of a united and peaceful couple, because a pair of clam shells fits perfectly, and no pair but the original pair can do so.

   Families generally start to display the dolls around mid-February and take down the platforms immediately after the festival.  Superstition says that leaving the dolls out past March 4 will result in a late marriage for the daughter. 

A CELEBRATION OF TOGETHERNESS

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