TsukuBlog A Local Perspective on Life in Tsukuba, Ibaraki, Japan.

14Jan/10Off

Dondoyaki: Festive Decorations Go up In Smoke on Jan. 16th in Tsuchiura

In Tsukuba, when we want to get rid of any unneeded or unwanted stuff taking up space in our homes, it’s always necessary to consult the City`s GARBAGE SEPARATION MANUAL, which after much bewildered scrutinization might finally reveal when and where certain materials can be disposed of.

However, there are some items for which even that labyrinthine text gives no clue as to  how to deal with. For example, the festive decorations and other sacred objects that Japanese people, as a matter of pure common sense, would never simply throw into the garbage.

What is to be done with last year’s Daruma doll and the New Year’s shimenawa (sacred rope), kado-matsu ( a sort of Japanese Christmas tree in pairs) and other decorations?  The Japanese do not  need to have this information  printed in the Trash Disposal Manual. It is natural for them to take such items to a shrine to be disposed of respectfully, or bring them to a ritual burning ceremony usually called DONDOYAKI ( どんど焼き)in this area (though it is variously called called sagicho- 左儀長, dosojin-yaki, sankuroyaki, onpe, etc. in other parts of Japan).

Traditionally, New Years Decorations and other sacred items have been burned at shrines ( or other set locations)  throughout Japan on January 14th or 15th. It has been ( and still is) considered VERY lucky and healthy to eat mochi rice cakes which have been roasted in these fires.

Since it  was believed that the gods would descend, attracted to these sacred ropes, bamboos and paper etc., it was at the dondoyaki ceremonies these these spirits were thought to return, along with the smoke, to the heavens.

It is when watching the decorations go up in smoke, warmed by the large bon-fire on what is certainly a very cold January day that the Japanese have the sense that the O-Shogatsu ( New Year`s) period is over. 

I have also heard that practicioners of Japanese calligraphy ( shodo), take their first works of the year ( kakizome), and put them into the pyres. If these works ascend high into the sky with the smoke,it is a sign that their skill will RISE this year.

If you have any  items (straw, wood or paper) that you would like to dispose of with respect, there will be a big dondoyaki bash held on the Tsukuba-Tsuchiura border, by the Gakuen O-hashi Bridge, on The Tsuchiura Gakuen Road (the same place from which the fireworks are launched at the Hanabi Festival). The event will be held on the 16th and not the 15th, because weekends are more convenient, and will begin at 11am. Mochi will be served to the first 200 people who sign up, and registration begins at 9am ( get there early!).

Don’t put any plastic, ceramic or metal objects in the fire.

See you there! Its quite a spectacle with the huge bonfire and 2oo people roasting rice cake stuck onto the tips of long, bending bamboo poles!
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If you would like to read more about DARUMA DOLLS read my article:

http://blog.alientimes.org/2009/01/the-daruma-doll-the-evolution-of-japans-longest-selling-character/

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