Sunday, September 16, 2007

A Sunday Afternoon in Tokyo

A while back I knew I had a long weekend coming up this month and made plans for a trip to Hiroshima this weekend. Unfortunately, those plans fell on the same days as a National holiday and it turns out the entire country has a 3-day weekend. Needless to say, tickets were booked solid. So here I am, with 5 days off work and nowhere to go. Today I ended up just visiting some places around Tokyo that I'd never been to before, and here are the pics:




Photos:
  • Top left: the stunning-yet-controversial Yasukuni Shrine has a splendid little antiques market from sunrise to sundown every Sunday. (To see photos of the shrine, see my post from January 16th of this year.)
  • Top right: after the shrine and a quick trip to Ueno I was off to Harajuku, a place known all over the world for its fashion. Sunday is a particularly interesting day to stop by, because that's when all the local young people "put on their Sunday best" and go out and let people take pictures of them. (But in this case, "best" actually means "weirdest".) I got there after most of them had gone, but this pic is one of my favorites out of the few that I took.
  • Middle left: still at Harajuku. This man was doing some kind of weird interpretive dance in his boxer shorts and chanting. I think it goes without saying--though I'm going to go ahead and say it anyways--that this was one of the most intriguing attractions for the tourists.
  • Middle right: a photo of the main street in Harajuku (Takeshita-dori) with all of the Sunday shoppers. Click on the photo to enlarge and take a look at how many people there are...
  • Bottom left: concluded the afternoon with a trip over to Gakugei-daigaku (the area of Tokyo where my school is located) just in time to see the local annual harvest festival. Think of it as Thanksgiving for Buddhists, only without the turkey and football games.
  • Bottom right: as in the previous photo, groups of (usually) young men carry portable shrines in a parade-like procession around the streets. Buddhists believe that this spreads the blessings of the god around the city.
P.S. by the way...speaking of Thanksgiving, mark your calendars; you're going to have something extra to be thankful for this year. :) A tentative visit back to PDX has been scheduled for the week of Nov. 20th to the 27th. I say tentative because there's a lot that hinges on how things go at my school over the next few weeks, but I'm keeping my hopes up...

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