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A Fiery Inferno at the Wakakusa Yamayaki Festival in Japan
Published by Catherine O'Halloran, Writer
Country: Japan ![]()
The Experience
Wakakusa Yamayaki begins at around 5:30 p.m. with purification rituals and sacraments, as well as prayers for safety during the fiery event. Following this a procession of locals and monks carrying torches stream from the Silk Road Exchange Hall in Nara Park to Wakakusa Hill. When the time comes to set alight to Wakakusa Hill, monks will sound blasts on conch shells. The dead winter grass at the base the hill is then ignited by priests dressed as warriors. They use torches lit with the sacred flames of Kasuga Shrine (known as Kasuga Taisha), originally built in 768 AD as a powerful royal shrine. In accordance with the Shinto concepts of purity, the Shrine was destroyed and rebuilt in its original form every twenty years, continuing this way until 1863.
More than 100,000 people come to watch Wakakusa Yamayaki each year. Once the hill is set ablaze, it takes less than an hour for the whole thing to be engulfed in flames. The best views of this fiery spectacle are to be had at the foot of the hill in Nara Park. After the event, fireworks light up the sky to prepare Japan for new beginnings.
When to Go to Yamayaki
Odds n' Ends
To ensure safety, the Nara Fire Brigade work alongside the monks and the fire is restricted to prevent it from spreading uncontrollably.
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- Feed the Sika Deer at Nara Park
- The approach to Nara Park in the old capital city of Nara, Japan, is dominated by an imposing view of a wooden pagoda and beautiful tall trees. However, it is arguably the deer that make Japan's Nara Park as famous as it is. In fact, in many cases, Nara Park is known as “Deer Park” for the hundreds of so-called “wild” sika deer that roam the grounds. Although they are not raised by humans, the 1,200 sika deer within Nara Deer Park have grown so accustomed to tourists feeding them that they will boldly venture up to visitors, expecting pieces ...0 miles away.
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