Following the tsunami, earthquake, and nuclear disaster of 2011, the Tōhoku region of Japan became widely known as people around the world followed the events presented in various news outlets. Since that time, little has been presented in the media about northern Japan outside of the events related to the disaster and its aftermath. The photographs in this essay center upon one aspect of the culture of northern Japan: its complex and varied religious sites. From the mountain Buddhist temple complex at Hiraizumi, which dates back at least 1,000 years, to the tiny Shinto shrines that dot the countryside, the region provides visitors with a tremendous variety of locales dedicated to the memorialization of ancestors and expression of concern about nature through the kami or Shinto deities.
Photo Essays | Society | East Asia
Narrow Road to the North: Religious Sites in Tōhoku
Every day is a journey, and the journey itself home. Matsuo Bashō