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Hadaka Matsuri - Festival Web

Participants receiving purification by water at the naked festival at Saidaiji in Okayama.A hadaka matsuri hadakamatsuri, (lit. naked festival) is a type of Japanese festival, or matsuri, where participants wear a minimum amount of clothing; usually just a Japanese loincloth (called fundoshi), sometimes with a short hapicoat, and very rarely completely naked. Whatever the clothing, it is considered to be above vulgar, or everyday, undergarments, and on the level of holy Japanese shrine attire. Naked festivals are held in dozens of places throughout Japan every year, usually in the summer or winter.

Types and Participation

These Matsuri often happen in one of two times of year, but rarely both times at the same place.
  • It is common that mud is involved in the festivities in some way, and this no doubt lends to the entertainment.
  • Hadaka matsuri held in summer tend to involve participants in loincloths carrying mikoshi, while carrying portable shrines.
  • Hadaka matsuri held in winter tend to involve ritual purification by water followed by a mass fight for a holy object (such as a stick, jewel, etc) that symbolizes the event.
  • Participants are often adult males, who try to cultivate a strong image; however, young boys and girls have been known at times to participate, and in this sense the festival can become a rite of passage for young participants. Most naked festivals limit participation to adult males, but many have separate events where youth may participate, allowing communities to pass their traditions from generation to generation.
  • Some locations are dedicated to young men's (or rarer still, women's) hadaka matsuris. This is more common in Western Japan.
  • Some places have changed their hadaka matsuri traditions, and switched to female sumo instead.
  • Like other festivals in Japan, hadaka matsuri have multiple forms of entertainment for spectators, including stalls with food and games, and taiko drumming. Tourists often travel to see the spectacle.
Controversy
  • The nature of these festivals, with their scantly-clad participants, is not usually an issue in Japan. In fact, when participants do get naked, it is usually considered a healthy, sacred act, and not indecent. However, some controversies do exist.
  • Safety among slippery mud and water, and due to exposure, can be a concern.
  • One looming problem for some festivals has been the participation of unsavory characters looking to gain monetary prizes. Some festival organizers claim that yakuza participant numbers have risen, leading to aggravated violence in what are supposed to be jovial bouts.
  • Some festivals, such as the Doro mochi tsuki in Tara, Saga have been more subdued in recent years, due to unwanted attention from the media, and the claim that people are forgetting the true, religious meaning behind the festival.

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