Three weeks into my trek, as I ascended a steep path towards Yokomine-ji, the sixtieth of 88 temples alongside the Shikoku pilgrimage, I discovered myself enveloped by an unforgiving fog. Immediately, the colourful forest round me — principally pink cedar timber and fern bushes — pale, leaving me in a world of muted grey. Capable of make out solely the faintest shapes within the surrounded timber, I used to be satisfied that I’d stumbled into an eerie fairy story.
Quietly, within the distance, I started to listen to a refrain of small bells. Then, immediately, the celebration of unintentional musicians got here into view: a big group of Japanese pilgrims who, coming towards me, all stopped neatly in line to let me stroll previous.
Inside an hour, the fog had begun to carry. Inside two, it was gone solely, changed by an equally unforgiving noon solar. Within the newfound readability of daylight, I started to surprise: Had the courteous band of fellow pilgrims existed solely in my thoughts?
The pilgrimage on Shikoku, the smallest of Japan’s 4 essential islands, is a 750-mile route that hyperlinks 88 Buddhist temples, every of which claims a connection to Kukai, a celebrated monk — posthumously often known as Kobo Daishi — who, after coming back from a visit to China within the ninth century, based one of many main colleges of Buddhism in Japan.
After Kukai’s loss of life in 835, wanderers started making pilgrimages to the websites on Shikoku that had been affiliated together with his life and work: his beginning and burial locations, the caves the place he meditated, the websites of varied non secular rites. Later, these websites had been linked, and the temples and shrines had been formally numbered.
As is true with many modern-day pilgrimages, the ranks of Shikoku pilgrims — as soon as completely practitioners of Shingon Buddhism, one of many main colleges of Buddhism in Japan — have grown to incorporate vacationers with a extra numerous array of motivations. And so the regular succession of monks, clergymen and devoted Buddhists has given option to younger individuals on journeys of self-discovery, older hikers having fun with their retirement and even international guests like me, who know little of the language and customs however are drawn by the journey of the trek, by Shikoku’s breathtaking views and by its chic classes on Japanese cultural heritage.
And the pilgrimage is less complicated now than it was. Though pilgrims historically accomplished the route on foot, guided bus excursions now carry many guests to the websites. (The purpose for many individuals, in spite of everything, is to go to all 88 temples, to not endure the hardships of a 750-mile hike.) Others decide to take personal vehicles, or to trek for a part of the best way and drive (or be pushed) for the remainder.
Even for nonreligious trekkers, probably the most prized pilgrimage memento is a totally stamped nokyocho, or stamp e book. The books have devoted pages for the entire temples, at every of which a clerk applies a number of stamps and some strokes of gorgeous calligraphy, made utilizing a conventional brush.
One scorching afternoon I met a middle-aged German couple who instructed me this was the fourth time they’d launched into the Shikoku pilgrimage. I requested why they selected to return as an alternative of attempting different treks elsewhere on the planet. Throughout every pilgrimage, they mentioned, they found one thing solely totally different. And the meals is phenomenal, they added.
One other day, I walked for a number of hours behind two Japanese males by means of rice fields in Kochi Prefecture, which traces the island’s concavely curved southern coast. I ended at a relaxation hut alongside the best way and located the 2 males there, joined by two different males, all of them smoking and chatting.
In my restricted Japanese and their restricted English, they instructed me that they had been all from Shikoku. Two of them stroll two days annually, whereas the opposite two journey by automobile, ferrying the baggage and becoming a member of the walkers on the temples to worship collectively.
“Wait, how lengthy will it take you to finish the entire pilgrimage then?” I requested.
One of many males threw his arms into the air. “Who is aware of? Many years!” he mentioned, and so they all laughed.
Wherever I went on the island, a way of peacefulness appeared to observe. In Shikoku, virtually with out fail, the individuals I encountered had been type. They appeared content material. Although I’m not a non secular particular person, the silence and the vastness of the panorama — and the warmheartedness of the individuals I met — created an abiding aura of serenity.
One customized that distinguishes the individuals of Shikoku is the observe of osettai, the act of giving items to the pilgrims. These items come within the type of meals, drink, trinkets, automobile rides, meals, a spot to sleep — even, at instances, small sums of cash. Greater than as soon as I noticed drivers cease in the course of the highway at hand out goodies from their automobile home windows.
One night, after having been granted free lodging from a temple (which occurred twice), I heard a knock on the door of my hut. A younger girl, a temple assistant who spoke no English, bowed and handed me a slip of paper: “Miss Marta, you might be welcome to make use of the temple’s bathtub freed from cost,” it mentioned in Japanese.
In complete, over the course of my 28 days spent visiting all 88 temples, I used to be additionally given: 700 yen (about $5), 11 candies, seven small desserts, seven automobile rides, six mandarin oranges, 5 rice balls, three cookies, three sweets, three cups of inexperienced tea, two crackers, two mochi, two soda cans, two multipurpose cloths, two yuzu juice cartons, one yokan (a pink bean jelly snack), one bicycle (lent to me for half a day), one bag of steamed chestnuts, one bag of cherry tomatoes, one lunch and one bowl of selfmade udon.
The pilgrimage’s temples are scattered alongside the perimeter of the island — some close to the coast, and a few farther into the mountainous inside. Some are grouped collectively, and others are 50 miles aside.
As a pilgrim, I typically arose early — by 5:30 a.m., within the spring — and spent a full day on the highway. About 80 % of the route is on asphalt, principally by means of open fields and small cities and previous lovely shoreline. I spent a number of days climbing up and down mountain peaks.
The fading of Japan’s rural inhabitants is dramatically evident on Shikoku. Younger individuals have fled to the cities or to different islands that supply a greater high quality of life. My expertise confirmed as a lot: Almost the entire younger individuals I noticed had been within the capitals of the island’s 4 prefectures.
For breakfast and dinner, many pilgrims reap the benefits of home-cooked meals supplied by most minshuku, or family-operated bed-and-breakfasts, and ryokan, conventional Japanese inns. These meals often include rice, miso soup, fish and pickled greens. For lunch, relying on one’s location, comfort shops can present a fast chunk.
Regardless of the delectable meals, the beautiful vistas and the fascinating cultural histories, it was the individuals I met who had the strongest impact on me.
At a hostel one night time I met Midori-san, a 71-year-old pilgrim who spoke no English. She confirmed me the way to behave at a big sentō, or public bathhouse.
As soon as, after I requested the 2 staff at a mountain temple’s stamp workplace if the temple supplied free lodging, they replied that it didn’t. However, talking by means of a translator on my cellphone, they supplied to drive me to a spot the place I may camp in a close-by valley.
A number of days later, hoping to see the panorama from a special perspective, I boarded a tiny ferry with a fellow pilgrim, Patricia, and went zigzagging for practically an hour in Uranouchi Bay. Patricia and I had been the one vacationers on board.
One very wet day, after strolling for a number of hours beneath a water-resistant however sweltering poncho, I made a decision to hitchhike to the subsequent temple, which was a few hours away. After I caught my thumb out on a busy highway for a couple of minutes, a person in a beat-up van stopped. He spoke no English, as I discovered to be frequent on Shikoku, and I knew just a few related phrases in Japanese. Nonetheless, because the previous van cautiously made its approach up a winding highway, we managed to change a number of sentences.
I acquired the sensation that the scenario vastly amused him — and I used to be proved proper when he known as his spouse on an previous cellphone and mentioned, with amusing, that he had picked up a foreigner who had grown determined beneath a torrential downpour.
Earlier than we parted methods, he requested me to repeat my identify, and wrote it down on the again of a receipt in katakana, a Japanese alphabet generally used for international phrases. “Ma-ru-ta,” he mentioned aloud, sounding out the characters. After which he was gone as rapidly as he’d appeared. Grateful for the favor, and grateful to be dry, I watched his truck vanish round a bend and turned towards the trail to the temple.
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