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

The Sanja Matsuri in Six Key Words

Society Culture

The crowds, the clothes, the colors, the communities . . . We take a look at six of the key elements that make the Sanja Matsuri one of Japan’s biggest and most exciting festivals.

Miyagashira: The Shrine Head Who Keeps Things in Order

The miyagashira, or “shrine head,” plays the crucial role of overseeing the huge crowds of people who pass through the shrine during the festival.

“A miyagashira needs to keep a constant eye on everyone, making sure people are all right and that everything is running smoothly. It’s a job that requires a sense of duty and gratitude, and a willingness to work hard,” explains Sugibayashi Jin’ichi, seventh-generation bearer of the illustrious Shinmon Tatugorō name, which has connections to the festival dating back to the days of the Tokugawa shogunate (1603 –1867). “If someone asks you a favor, you can’t very well say no. And you have to be open enough to take on board comments from people all around you. Those are the skills you need to be a good miyagashira.”

The first Shinmon Tatsugorō was a construction worker and fireman. This prominent figure has appeared regularly in historical dramas depicting life in the capital during the nineteenth century. Sugibayashi is the seventh to bear the name.

At the Sanja Matsuri, most of the miyagashira’s work goes on behind the scenes. Numerous rehearsals are necessary to make sure that all the 44 neighborhood associations and their mikoshi arrive at Asakusa Shrine at the right time. During the festival itself, the miyagashira has to maintain constant contact with people throughout the area to make sure that the three main mikoshi complete their circuits on schedule.

“It’s important to make sure that every neighborhood gets the same opportunities with the mikoshi. It can lead to frictions and resentments if one neighborhood takes too long and cuts into everyone else’s time. It’s vital to ensure that the time is shared equally among all the 44 groups.”

In 2008, the main event of the festival was cancelled after a number of accidents and controversies involving unruly elements of the crowd climbing onto the mikoshi. “That cancellation really helped focus people’s minds. It’s our job to make sure that everyone obeys the rules that are in place to ensure everyone’s safety. Cooperation is necessary for everyone to have their moment. Festival weekend is a time when the usual order of things is suspended, and people can get away with things that would be unthinkable at normal times. But that only makes it more important to make sure that reasonable standards are observed so that everything runs smoothly.”

The three-dimensional “matoi” fire standards used during the Edo period. Each firefighting group had its own distinctive “matoi,” which would be placed atop a burning building to indicate a fire had broken out.

Sugibayashi with his grandson, who will one day be the ninth-generation Shinmon Tastsugorō.

 

next: Hanten and Festival Stalls: Bringing Color and Vibrancy to the Festival

Related Tags

shrine Asakusa mikoshi hanten Sanja Matsuri ujiko kaminarimon omatsuri museum bearers miyagashira ichi no miya ni no miya san no miya miya dashi miya iri

Other articles in this report