Matsuri Days (1): A Guide to Asakusa and the Sanja Matsuri

Experiencing the Sanja Matsuri

Culture

Involving some 100 mikoshi and attracting crowds of well over a million people, the Sanja Matsuri is one of the biggest of the thousands of festivals that bring color and exhilaration to people around Japan each year. But at its heart it remains a local celebration, with its roots in the heart of the community.

Sunday: Exhilaration as the Gods of Asakusa Shrine Tour the Neighborhood

On Sunday morning, the three colossal mikoshi leave Asakusa Shrine at dawn. The third of these (known as San no Miya) will take all day to traverse the 16 neighborhoods of the southern district. Each group of neighborhood bearers has approximately 40 minutes to carry the shrine around its territory before handing on to the next group. This is organized chaos on a major scale—a maelstrom of commotion and raucous high spirits that arks its way through each of the neighborhoods in order before the gods are returned to Asakusa Shrine in the evening.

The “miya dashi” ceremony takes place early on Sunday morning, as the three colossal “mikoshi” belonging to Asakusa Shrine begin their tours of the 44 Asakusa neighborhoods.

May 20, 6:00 AM. As many as 3,000 people wait for a chance to carry the three main “mikoshi.”

The third “mikoshi” (San no Miya) will tour the 16 southern neighborhoods. Onda climbs up onto the “mikoshi” to clear a path as the procession gets underway.

 

Komagata Goes Wild

The San no Miya mikoshi arrives at Komagata roughly nine hours after leaving Asakusa Shrine, in a stampede of noise and excitement. Weighing around a ton, the mikoshi is carried by a seething crowd of more than 100 people. Handover takes place in front of the Asakusa Fire Station, as the San no Miya enters Komagata territory. There is a short speech, words of thanks and exhortation, and more ceremonial clapping. Then an elderly man on a raised platform in front of the mikoshi gives his signal, and like a gun going off, pandemonium and chaos are unleashed as people compete for a place under the heavy beams of the mikoshi.

Excitement builds as the San no Miya approaches Komagata.

Pandemonium ensues as people compete for a place under the “mikoshi.”

Onda keeps the crowds under control.

Onda leads the ceremonial clapping as the San no Miya “mikoshi” begins its tour of the Komagata neighborhood.

For a few moments, things threaten to veer completely out of control. Men thrust rivals aside and throw themselves headlong into the mass of thrashing bodies. People come bouncing out like peas flicked into a spinning drum. After a few moments of total chaos, the giant mikoshi rises into the air and barrels down the narrow streets like a moving bar brawl, escorted by a small phalanx of whistle-blowing police and followed by a man in blue robes, riding a horse. Buses and cars blare past.

Onda and his team are in charge of making sure that no accidents happen at this vital, violent juncture. Occasionally, things seem about to spin out of control, but Onda smiles and says it’s “nothing out of the ordinary. We’ve budgeted for this.” Perhaps the most thrilling moments for Onda are the occasions when he clambers on top of the mikoshi to direct traffic. “At those moments, I can honestly say without any exaggeration that I felt closer to the gods,” he says.

Close to the handover point. Onda waits to perform the formalities.

One last round of ceremonial clapping to send the “mikoshi” on its way.

In exuberant spirits, the Komagata team of volunteers escorts their local mikoshi on a final tour of the neighborhood as the evening sky grows dark. After it’s all over, Onda slumps down on the sidewalk to enjoy a beer with his family. “That was pretty good. But next year we’ll make it even better!” he laughs. “Not that you can compare them, really. I just really love this festival . . .”

Tired shrine-bearers stretch out on the street to sleep.

Relative peace returns to Komagata after the San no Miya moves on to the next neighborhood and the locals parade their “mikoshi” through the neighborhood.

Onda carries the “mikoshi” alongside his wife and father-in-law.

Darkness falls, and the Sanja Matsuri comes to an end for another year.

Smiles all round as the day’s events draw to a close.

Onda and his team.

The Komagata festival committee.

 

Getting aTaste of the Community Spirit

Nowadays, many neighborhoods struggle to find enough people living locally to carry their heavy mikoshi every year. Stepping in to fill the gap are teams of willing volunteers from around Japan—and further afield.

Mark (Australia)

“This year was the tenth time I’ve helped to carry the Komagata mikoshi. What do I get out of it? A sense of community, I guess. Each neighborhood has its own atmosphere—Komagata is particularly warm and welcoming. Although a lot of the people taking part don’t actually live locally these days, everyone comes back for the festival each year. I see the same people each year, and often end up walking alongside the same people. You tend to end up with people roughly the same height when you’re carrying the mikoshi—and there aren’t too many people my size!”

David (Oregon)

“This was a bit wilder than the Kanda Matsuri, which is the other major festival I’ve taken part in. I’m a bit taller than most of the other people in the crowd, so I was down in an awkward crouching position for most of the time when we were carrying the mikoshi. It was difficult to stand up—but you can’t fall down, because you are being pushed and held up from all directions! My toes got stepped on a few times—but luckily everyone is wearing these soft tabi, so it was OK.”

Ivan (Spain/Russia)

“I’ve been in Japan for four years, and living in Komagata for two. My wife’s family runs a traditional eel restaurant in the area. The festival was cancelled last year because of the earthquake, so this is the first time taking part in the festival as one of the organizers. It’s fun! My daughter, Sophie, is helping to carry the children’s mikoshi.”

Looking Back on the Festival

One of the most enjoyable aspects of this visit to the Sanja Matsuri was the opportunity we had to follow one neighborhood over the course of the weekend and watch events unfold at close quarters. It was clear how much the festival and its traditions mean to the local people. The whole neighborhood is involved—from the kids carrying the children’s shrine to their grandparents looking on proudly from a few paces behind.

The arrival of the big mikoshi was probably the most exhilarating moment of the weekend—an explosion of noise and frenzy that lasted for forty minutes and then moved onto the next neighborhood exactly on schedule. It sometimes felt as though there were 44 different local festivals all happening at the same time—you could walk for an hour or more across the Asakusa district and pick up the sounds of festival music and chanting wherever you went. The spectacle of several thousand people waiting to escort the big mikoshi back to Asakusa Shrine on the Sunday evening—with Sensōji lit up against the evening sky and the new Tokyo Skytree shining blue across the river—is a memory that will stay with me for a long time.

(Originally written in English by Paul Warham. Photographs by Yamada Shinji, Kodera Kei, and Hanai Tomoko.)

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Asakusa Matsuri Sensoji mikoshi festival Nakamise Sanja Matsuri

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