Muza-chan's Gate to Japan

Japanese Customs and Traditions, the Dance of Fools

Thu, July 25, 2013, by Muza-chan
In the fourth Saturday and Sunday of July, which this year is tomorrow and the day after tomorrow, for 2 hours after dusk, the streets around the Bishamonten Zenkoku-ji in Kagurazaka, Tokyo will be flooded by frenetic dancers...
One of the most beautiful festivals taking place in Japan, the Awa Odori Dance is, in my opinion, one of the must see Japanese summer events.

The festival originated 400 years ago in Tokushima, on the Shikoku Island, when the townsmen danced enthusiastically to celebrate the inauguration of the local castle. They enjoyed the celebration so much, that the next year they did it again... and the next year again. Thus, it became a local tradition and since then the festival was never interrupted.

Moving to Kanto, a group of people from Tokushima brought the tradition to Tokyo and in 1956 the festival spread, taking place first in Koenji and 15 years later in Kagurazaka. The number of dancers is smaller than in Tokushima, but the dance is the same and the atmosphere is great.

There are about 20 groups, each composed of both men and women teams plus the orchestra. Here is one of the women teams, elegantly dressed in yukata and wearing amigasa straw hats...

Awa Odori Dancers, Kagurazaka, Shinjuku, Tokyo
EXIF info:

Nikon D300
Lens: 18-70mm F/3.5-4.5G
Focal Length: 18mm
Aperture: F/5.6
Shutter Speed: 1/60s
ISO Sensitivity: ISO 400


Popular searches:

# Sakura, cherry blossoms

# Kyoto travel

# Japanese trains

# Travel tips for visiting Japan

# Japanese castles

# Night time photos from Japan

# Tokyo travel

# Traditional Japanese house


  •  Home
  •  Featured articles
  •  A Japan photo per day
  •  Japan travel
  •  Japanese customs & traditions
  •  Japanese food
  •  Japanese history
  •  Anime & otaku
  •  Did you know? Japan facts
  •  About Muza-chan