Kashima Shrine's Best Kept Secret
For the most part, Kashima Shrine in Ibaraki Prefecture looks like any one of hundreds of other Japanese shrines. Founded over 1,300 years ago, the architecture of the shrine looks pretty typical for a place of Shinto worship. However, if you make your way back past the rear shrine buildings, you’ll find a scene of ethereal beauty.
#一度は行ってみたい日本の絶景 こちらのお写真では「鹿島神宮」と言う場所にある 「御手洗池」と云う御池の様なのですが これは確かに行きたくなってしまう美しい光景ですねぇ(*´ `*) pic.twitter.com/3CaqsQd1bH
— 榛の字(しんのじ-Shin no Ji) (@ShimbaHome) February 19, 2017
Called the Mitarashi Ike, or “Holy Washing Pond,” this body of water is fed by an underground spring that bubbles up to the surface. Legend has it that long ago the spring burst forth in a single night, and through the years it has never run dry, even when the region was struck by droughts.
【写真】信じられないような深い緑と透明度!鹿島神宮「御手洗池(みたらしのいけ)」 #travel_jp #茨城 #鹿島神宮 #旅行 b! https://t.co/iORfIMl11s pic.twitter.com/onORMkv7X3
— トラベルjp<たびねす> (@travel_jp_guide) July 7, 2016
The layout of Kashima Shrine has changed since its founding, and originally the Mitarashi Ike was located at the end of the main walkway by which worshipers approached the shrine. Before entering, they would use the waters of the pond to cleanse their bodies and souls, in keeping with the purifying properties of water recognized in the Shinto faith.
鹿島神宮 御手洗池 http://t.co/0WtcwtViwf pic.twitter.com/XmKBvvv07u
— 辰巳の辻占 (@divinus_jp) January 19, 2015
These days, visitors purify themselves at separate stations near the current main entrance to Kashima Shrine. That’s not to say no one uses the pond, though, as it serves as the habitat for the shrine’s school of beautiful koi.
The Mitarashi Ike does still serve in its former capacity of purifying human beings once a year, however. During the Kashima Shrine’s Daikan no Misogigyo ceremony, worshipers strip down to loincloths and wade into its waters to chant prayers together. Participants tend to be particularly devout, or at least courageous, as the ceremony takes place in early February, when Japan is still in the grip of bitterly cold winter temperatures.
If you’re after a less invigoratingly immersive experience, though, you can gaze at the pond’s peaceful and mysterious waters on any other day of the year you choose.
For more information about Kashima Jingu Shrine including its location, be sure to click on the full story below from RocketNews24.
Read full story: en.rocketnews24.com
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