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JAPANESE CEMETERIES

The aesthetic appeal of an unusual attraction

Cultures differ in how they deal with the passing of friends and family, certainly in the manner of burial and the aesthetics of cemeteries. Japan’s method is certainly very different from my own country in many ways.
In Japan, the deceased are cremated, and their ashes are placed inside stone gravestones dedicated to the family. Modern gravestones feature vertical columns made from black or grey stone with only names written on them.

At the base of a gravestone, you will find vases for flowers and an incense stand. People who visit graves will bring fresh flowers and water to pour a gravestone as part of a religious ritual. Some food items are left that were favourites of the deceased. You may find that some graves are decorated with a Buddhist statue or, more sadly, a jizo statue if the grave belongs to that of a child.

Cemeteries are usually located near a temple or a shrine. Japanese people don’t hold to a single religion and will attend both Buddhist temples and Shinto shrines depending on the occasion. In this case, cemeteries are conducted as Buddhist ceremonies.

Old gravestones look like a vase or a lantern, but the wealthy and those of the higher social classes would often build stone pagodas. Now and then, you will come across some very old graves covered in green moss, particularly in the countryside. Old gravestones are often a natural rock with carved names or simply carved into a rock wall. You can see some good examples of these in Matsushima and Yamadera.

Carved in rocks

Cemeteries in Japan are clean and neat, and don’t have any bright colours. Narrow wooden planks called sotoba are placed near gravestones. They have engraved names, prayers and dates of death. Each anniversary, a new sotoba is added. You will often see beautiful sakura bent over graves.

Beautiful sakura trees grow among graves

Cemeteries are not your usual tourist destination, but for many people, their aesthetics offer a private attraction. Situated by impressive temples and shrines, visiting a cemetery in Japan is often an unintentional part of any temple or shrine visit. Some are quite famous, like the graves of the 47 ronin in Sengakuji Temple in Tokyo, the expansive Kurodani in Kyoto or the historical Kitayama in Sendai.

Please remember that while open to visitors, cemeteries are for the deceased and their families first, so proper respect for the location must be shown.

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I would like to think of myself as a full time traveler. I have been retired since 2006 and in that time have traveled every winter for four to seven months. The months that I am "home", are often also spent on the road, hiking or kayaking. I hope to present a website that describes my travel along with my hiking and sea kayaking experiences.

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