Japanese Buddhist monks strutted their stuff Wednesday in a contest highlighting sutra chanting skills, giving funeral sermons and, surprisingly, loud karate chops, AFP reports.
Japanese Buddhist monks strutted their stuff Wednesday in a contest highlighting sutra chanting skills, giving funeral sermons and, surprisingly, loud karate chops, AFP reports.
The contest, held on the sidelines of Japan's first ever expo on the business of death and dying, was aimed at winning back public interest in funeral services offered by priests and monks as more people seek alternatives to traditional burial customs.
Wearing pale gold, purple, or black and white robes, the eight monks walked calmly onto a stage one by one, bowing to an audience of about 100 people with their palms together.
They then proceeded to give short sermons and also chant solemn sutras and Buddhist songs, key requirements for conducting wakes and funerals according to the rites of the ancient religion.
But one of the contestants, Taigen Yokoyama, showed off a different talent, demonstrating his technique in the Japanese martial art of karate by breaking a pile of 10 tiles with his bare right hand.
"Ha!" he shouted, followed by the cacophonous sound of tiles shattering.
"I'm sorry to have frightened you," he added calmly.
The event was held in conjunction with the Life Ending Industry Expo, which attracted more than 200 companies involved in the business of death and funerals.
Shift from tradition
It followed another unique competition the previous day that highlighted the work of the declining number of specialists who prepare the dead for Buddhist funerals and cremations.
Observers say an increasing number of people are cutting ties with traditional Buddhist temples and are not building new tombs in graveyards, citing growing individualism and shortage of younger family members who can take care of graves.
"It's getting more and more difficult for monks to maintain their temples as a business as the temple memberships are declining, especially in the countryside," said Mayumi Tominaga, a spokeswoman for the event.
"The number of people who die will peak in 2040 in Japan, but many elderly people are choosing to stop using their ancestral tombs," she said.
The winner of the "Beautiful Bozu (monk) Contest" was Shouyo Takiyoshi from a temple in northern Hokkaido, who sang melancholic Buddhist songs.
He was selected the winner based on the votes of audience members as well as a five-judge panel of company managers, a monk and a pianist.
"It was interesting to see monks in a scene different from funerals" usually filled with a solemn atmosphere, said Sae Igarashi, 24, who works for a company offering ceremonial services.
Yokoyama, who performed the karate chop, said he is also pursuing a parallel career as a nurse.
"Priests often meet people for the first time after their death," he said, stressing that he wanted to know and care for people fighting illness or other difficulties.
As an example, he mentioned an elderly woman who had forgotten her own name because of dementia but still cared for her children in her mind.
"I found the heart of Buddha in her," he said.
By Kyoko HASEGAWA