Cracking the future: A Shinto priest performs purification rites after observing a streak of elevated ice cracks on the surface of Lake Suwa, in Nagano Prefecture, on Monday. KYODO
Priests peer into future on frozen Nagano lake
Tuesday, Feb. 7, 2012
Kyodo
NAGANO — A Shinto ritual was held Monday on the frozen surface of Lake Suwa in Nagano Prefecture to make predictions on weather, social trends and crop harvests based on a streak of elevated ice cracks observed Saturday for the first time in four years.
A priest from nearby Yatsurugi Shrine, together with devotees, checked the exact location of the streak of cracks and performed a purification rite. The predictions will be made later at the shrine by comparing data with past records.
The natural phenomenon, known as "omiwatari," occurs after ice on the surface of the lake repeatedly expands and contracts in concert with temperature changes from day to night, causing the cracks to rise.
In mythology, omiwatari is believed to trace the path taken when the male god at the shrine on the southern coast of the lake visited the female god at the shrine on the lake's northern coast.
Source:http://www.japantimes.co.jp/text/nn20120207a3.html
NAGANO — A Shinto ritual was held Monday on the frozen surface of Lake Suwa in Nagano Prefecture to make predictions on weather, social trends and crop harvests based on a streak of elevated ice cracks observed Saturday for the first time in four years.
A priest from nearby Yatsurugi Shrine, together with devotees, checked the exact location of the streak of cracks and performed a purification rite. The predictions will be made later at the shrine by comparing data with past records.
The natural phenomenon, known as "omiwatari," occurs after ice on the surface of the lake repeatedly expands and contracts in concert with temperature changes from day to night, causing the cracks to rise.
In mythology, omiwatari is believed to trace the path taken when the male god at the shrine on the southern coast of the lake visited the female god at the shrine on the lake's northern coast.
Source:http://www.japantimes.co.jp/text/nn20120207a3.html
No comments:
Post a Comment