Thoughts on the Gods that Connect Humans and Nature - Kiso Mt. Ontake - Part 2
In the summer of 2019, about five years after the eruption, the ban on climbing to the summit ofMt. Ontakesummit is finally about to be lifted. Makoto Nakamura, who independently researches the beliefs in shrines and daily life, writes about his thoughts on going toMt. Ontakewith thoughts of remembrance.
Climbing to Mt. Ontakecan be said to be a pilgrimage journey to the Holy Land that is experienced by the gurus (leading practitioners) and the laity together. It is also a journey back and forth between two worlds, the ordinary and the extraordinary, the life and death, the world and the afterlife, the profane and the sacred. People will temporarily break with the mundane world of everyday life and throw themselves into the spatial world where extraordinary sacred time flows.
Facing harsh nature and interacting with the sacred world is also a journey of self-discovery, driven by a greater religious power beyond oneself, and it also becomes a journey to heal one's own heart.
★ Previous article:KisoMt. Ontake Thoughts on the Gods that Connect Nature and Humans Part 1
The sacred mountain is a natural environment with rocky areas, steep cliffs, springs, and plants, or a religious environment with many deities enshrined. People transform into pilgrims in white attire and visit these sacred sites. In summer, the pilgrimage to these sacred sites begins from Hokkaido, Kagoshima, and even as far as Okinawa. Both individual pilgrimages and group pilgrimages organized by different groups were conducted, and during the peak of the Showa era, it is said that more than 300,000 people gathered in one summer.
Incidentally, considering that the most recent peak ofMt. Fujiclimbers was about 320,000 in 2010, we can see the spread of the Ontake cult nationwide.
The schedule and route for each group's pilgrimage to this sacred land vary depending on the founder of the group and the object of worship, but each group has a set pilgrimage route every year. Before undertaking the pilgrimage, they always perform a ritual called 'Oza' to receive divine revelations and offer prayers in accordance with the will of the gods.
However, a common pilgrimage for many groups involves praying at the summit, where the highest deity is enshrined, or at its remote worship site. Pilgrimages to the sacred sites of the second-tier deities are optional, and specific sacred sites enshrining third-tier deities have been visited by the leaders of each group and a limited number of followers.
Mt. OntakeWorship is not just a mountain climb, but a mountain trip to interact with the gods around the concrete space built by the people who believe in Ontake, to face nature and deepen our faith, and to realize that our lives are with the gods.
In modern times, there are various routes to the summit, but I think that many people climb from the Tanohara trailhead, where the roadway is drawn to the shortest route to the summit near the 7th station ofMt. Ontake.
During the summer, the parking lots near the trailhead are crowded not only with private cars but also with chartered buses from 'Ontake Pilgrimage Groups' from all over the country. Many people are likely familiar with the rest houses (tourist centers) and Tanohara Mountain Lodge near the trailhead.
The gentle mountain visible behind the entrance to the hiking trail is Mikasa Mountain, which is particularly important in Ontake faith and enshrines 'Toritenn,' a deity in Buddhism.
When you pass through the large torii gate with Mt. Mikasa in the background and start heading toMt. Ontake, you will be greeted by a promenade that goes around the Tanohara Marshland. When you see several torii gates on your right, you will come across a shrine with a large 5-yen coin stone monument. It is said that this is the Great Black Heaven of Tanohara and that it has the benefits of fortune, and many climbers stopped in their tracks and put their hands together.
Beyond that, the slope gradually becomes steeper after passing the Haruka worship hall where the bronze statues of the three gods of Ontake are enshrined. For those who have a bad leg, it is important to worship theMt. Ontakethat rises far ahead at this worship place. After passing the shrine and the slope becomes even steeper, you will reach the shrine of Ōe Gongen (Ōe Gongen, which was once located in the Yukawa area of Kurosawa's 6th station), which was forbidden to women until the early Meiji era.
From here, the path becomes a full-fledged mountain trail. Although the path from Oe Gongen is a gentle coniferous trail, it soon takes on a reddish hue, and a crumbling valley appears on the right.
As I climbed up the side of the valley called "Akapage", I eventually came to a square lined with several small halls. Statues of Kongo Doko and Zao Gongen, donated by the people of the Ontake Lecture, are enshrined here, and it is said that the old worshippers changed their straw shoes here and aimed forMt. Ontakewith a new heart.
Climbing the ridge ahead, you will come across the stone chamber at the 8th station. Many people must have survived thanks to this stone chamber. As you continue walking, the rocky steps increase, and the slope becomes steeper. Reflecting on each step, you will reach the 9th station in about 10 minutes, passing Fujimi Rock on your left. Walking with the Galle Valley on your left, you will soon reach 'Hitokuchi Mizu,' the only water source on this route. While you can get water during the remaining snow season, it is safer not to rely on it after early August. Even if it flows, you might only get a sip...
From there, the steep climb continues for a while, but you will see the stone chamber at the 9th station once you overcome it. Beyond that, there is a fork leading to the summit and the inner shrine. If you head straight for the summit, you will come across a small hall enshrining Fudo Myo-o in less than five minutes. From here, you can see the summit lodge in the distance, but there is still a long way to go.
Originally, the route would continue to the summit from here, but you can see traces of disaster in various places up to this point, such as entry restrictions and reconstruction work on buildings. The flowers offered in various places were also impressive. Near the summit, there are still restriction lines, and the buildings, including the shrine, are visibly damaged.
Even now, the area within 1 km of the crater is still an exclusion zoneMt. Ontake(※)。 There is no plan for the lifting of the exclusion zone, but it is also true that the gods enshrined inMt. Ontakecontinue to guard the ascent route in various places, and if you make a pilgrimage to meet the gods and Buddhas who have kept theMt. Ontake, you should be able to join hands with the gods and Buddhas embraced by the mountain in the mental landscape, even if you do not necessarily climb to the top of the mountain.
Mt. OntakeIt is in the thoughts and actions of the people who live at the foot of the mountain and continue to protect the mountain even after the volcanic disaster, and in the thoughts and actions of the people who have a heart forMt. Ontake, that we can see the appearance of the Great God of Ontake and the spirit gods.Mt. Ontakeis more than just a mountain. It still exists with many gods as a mental image spirit mountain engraved in the heart.
Finally, I would like to reiterate that this article, which I wrote in the form of my own thoughts onMt. Ontake, was tackled with the feeling of remembrance for those who lived their lives in Miyama during the volcanic disaster of Heisei 26. I feel that what we can learn and receive from that volcanic disaster is infinitely deep and essential, and I myself would like to engrave it in my heart in my future relationship with the mountain and fulfill my daily worship Thailand.
The gods who connect us with nature - Mt. Kiso Ontake (2/2)
A tohai (mountaineering pilgrimage) to Mt. Ontake is a journey to sacred places that sendatsu (pilgrim guide) and pilgrims experience together. It can also be characterized as a back-and-forth trip on which to experience and ponder about contrasts: daily life and the extraordinary; life and death; the Earth and the celestial world; or the sacred and the profane.
For the duration of the pilgrimage, the participants make a clean break from their ordinary worldly lives and throw themselves into the spatial world where a sacred, completely different flow of time presides. The harsh natural environment challenges you, and in it you are embraced by a sacred world.
Surrendering yourself to something far bigger than yourself and realizing that you are not living, but rather, are allowed to live, is a spiritual expedition of self-rediscovery, and at the same time a self-healing retreat.
The mountain holds plenty of both natural and spiritual elements: crags to climb, precipitous cliffs, clearest water springs and a diverse range of plant-life; and, all across the mountainside, a great number of deities are enshrined.
Pilgrims wear a traditional white ensemble to make the journey. During the summer season, people come from all corners of the nation to make their pilgrimages, which begin right from their doorsteps. A few decades ago, when this kind of spiritual journey was at its peak, it is said that more than 300,000 people made their pilgrimage to Mt. Kiso Ontake in a single summer. The largest number of people to climb Mt. Fuji in recent years was 320,000 in 2010. This brings some perspective to how many pilgrims Mt. Kiso Ontake has drawn and continues to draw from all over the nation.
How each kou (pilgrimage group) designs their route and timing to visit this holy land varies slightly among them, depending on the founder of the group or their subject of worship, but each group sticks to its own original route every year.
Prior to their climbing the mountain, they never fail to conduct a deity-invocation ritual called “oza”, during which they receive divine messages and dedicate their prayers to following the deities’ intentions. The primal destination for the majority of kous is the summit, where the highest deity or deities are enshrine, or given a specifically-designated space in which believers can pray being far-distant from the summit.
The hallowed ground of secondary deities is an optional destination, and those of the third level of deities onwards are visited only by especially devout sendatsus and a few congregations. A pilgrimage climb (tohai) of Mt. Ontake is not merely a mountain climb to challenge your physical boundaries, but an ascetic practice done in order to visit various spaces created and protected by people who worshipped and put a lot of faith in this mountain throughout history.
There, you encounter and interact with the deities and deepen your faith in the nature that surrounds you. It’s a time to really feel and remember how our lives are, and have always been, in the presence of the divine.
There are currently several tohai routes available. I believe it’s the shortest route to the top of the mountain – which includes a road for vehicles that reaches the 7th station, the route from the Tanohara Tozan-guchi entrance – that attracts the largest crowd. During summer, the parking near the entrance point is packed with climbers’ cars and buses hired by various kous from across the nation.
If you’ve been there, you probably noticed that the rest house (tourist center) and the Tanohara Lodge stand very close to the entrance. The gentle slope you see in the background here is that of Mt. Mikasa, a prominently important subject of worship. This mountain enshrines the Buddhist deva called “Tavatimsa”.
With Mt. Mikasa behind you, pass through the large Shinto torii gate and you will be welcomed by the wooden bridge-like walkway over Tanohara moor. You will find few more torii gates on your right as you head toward Mt. Ontake, as well as a shrine which has the large stone monument of a five-yen coin. This is Tanohara Daikokuten, the place where Daikokuten (Maha kala, the god of wealth) is enshrined. Many passers-by stop to put their hands together there to pray for the blessing of wealth.
The slope gets gradually harsher from around the “distanced praying space”, where there are three copper statues of Mt. Ontake’s three deities. This distanced praying space is an important place for those people who would find it difficult to progress further, such as the elderly, as this will be the place where they pray to the mountain as they see it far in the distance.
The gradient sharpens further after this point, bringing you to the shrine of the deity Ooe-Gongen. From here onwards, no women were allowed until the early Meiji era (19th century). This is where the route becomes a real mountain track. Above your head are spread the needles of acicular trees, but soon the moderate green slope becomes red with the color of rocks, and you find an almost-collapsed valley on your right-hand side.
The valley is known as “Akappage” (“the red bald”) and walking alongside it takes you to an open field where several small temple buildings are lined up. You will discover many statues donated by people who participated in kous here, enshrining, for instance, Kondo-doushi (Kani-Krodha) or Zaou-Gongen. This was where the ancient pilgrims changed their straw sandals to new ones to signify the freshening of their minds and clothing before heading to holy Mt. Ontake.
Continue climbing up the ridge to reach the stone chamber which probably protected many people from harsh circumstances during their climbs, thereby saving their lives. This is currently called the 8th station of the mountain. From here, the rocky trail now forms steep stairs. The gradient is so sharp that you need to hold your spirit up to move forward one step at a time.
A formation called “Fujimi rock” beholds you from one side, and after 10 min. walk from the rock you arrive at the 9th station. Walking further, with the dry valley on your left, you reach the only spot where you can access spring water: Hitokuchi-mizu (“one sip water spot”). If it’s after August then there is unlikely to be water, but if there is still snow here there might literally be enough to take just one sip.
Between here and the 9th station is another lofty climb. Past the stone chamber of the 9th station, the trail branches off into two paths, one leading to the summit, the other to the oku-no-in (the innermost shrine). Take the path to the summit and walk 5 min. and you find yet another small shrine, this one in honor of Fudo-myoo (Acala Naatha in Sanskrit). Look up to the summit and you might see the summit lodge in the far distance, but you will need to climb quite a bit more to get there.
Since the 2014 volcano eruption, there are many sections for which entry is still restricted, and many built structures are going through restoration. The scars from the natural disaster are vividly noticeable and you will still find many bouquets left at various spots to mourn the passing of the deceased and to pray for their peaceful rest. Around the summit is particularly raw, still bearing many “No trespassing” tapes and all the structures including shrines heavily damaged. Anywhere within a 1km radius of the eruptive crater is off-limits, and there is no projection of when the restriction will be lifted.
But this doesn’t change in any way how all the enshrined deities protect the pilgrimage routes from various spots inside the mountain. If you get to climb this very special sacred mountain, you will be able to have a sincere interaction with these beings, even if you don’t get to put your feet at the top of the mountain. Your knowing the history of this holy mountain should immediately bring you to something sacred, something special, and your putting hands together for that will connect you to this divinity.
Where these deities really reside, in my opinion, is in those people who have chosen to live at the foot of the mountain through the centuries, and who still choose to protect and guard the mountain even in light of the tremendous volcanic hazard, as well as in those who worship the mountain and come together spiritually and physically to visit the site in the name of their faith. Mt. Ontake is not just a mountain. It evokes a powerful image, and remains standing along with its many timeless deities.
Once again, as I write this article about this special mountain, I would like to express my sincere condolences to those who lost their lives there in 2014. What we were reminded of by the volcanic disaster was profound and fundamental, and I myself hope to carry that remembrance with each mountain I step upon, each personal tohai I make, throughout my life.
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Nakamura Makoto
Born in Tokyo in 1972. He serves as the president of a publishing company that issues magazines such as "ecoloco" and books like "JINJABOOK". Currently, as the representative of Imagine Co., Ltd., he is engaged in planning publications, events, and advertisements that resonate with the five senses, as well as various media activities including social contribution programs.
Since 2013, the 'Onomichi Free University' was established in Onomichi City, Hiroshima Prefecture, and I assumed the position of principal. Since my student days, I have traveled the world, and by looking at Japan from the outside, I have come to realize its charm anew, and have completed a tour around Japan visiting hot springs and shrines three times.
His books include "JINJA BOOK", "JINJA TRAVEL BOOK", "JINJA TRAVEL BOOK2", and "How to Live Well with God in Japan".
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