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Friday, July 31, 2015

Osorezan, border between this world and the underworld (2)


Mmmm, fresh sulfur by Joe Jones /flickr



The smell of sulfur wafted over its ground.













Hell at Osore-zan, Honshu
Hell at Osore-zan, Honshu by shirokazan /flickr
























The temple has 136 hells and a paradise. In Japan, there are a lot of hells(jigoku) such as Owakudani(Great Boiling Valley) in Kanagawa, jigoku of Beppu in Oita. People in the past thought the view of a volcanic area resembled a hellish picture in Japanese Buddhism.

Blood Pond Hell is said to be a pond located in Hell. It is said the water looks red due to color change in algae. It doesn't always look red.

IMG_3113.jpg
IMG_3113.jpg by vera46 /flickr

Jizo(Ksitigarbha) is one of Buddhist bodhisattvas. His mission is to save people between Buddha's death and the appearance of Maitreya(弥勒菩薩, Miroku-bosatsu). Yama(閻魔大王, Enma Daio) is the lord of death and give sentence on the dead. Jizo and Yama are opposite sides to the same coin. Ancient people associated Jizo with a belief in a travelers' guardian deity, so its statues were located to hornor it by roadsides around Japan.

He is also regarded as the guardian of children because he saves children who have to pile stones eternally  like Sisyphus at Sai-no-kawara, the banks of the Sanzu River. The children can't cross the Sanzu River because  they predeceased their parents. They are bullied by ogres at Sai-no-kawara.

Stone piles were build by the bereaved to console the spirits of their deceased family members. Leave them alone.


Osorezan #6
Osorezan #6 by tsuda /flickr


Fear Mountain - Osorezan
Fear Mountain - Osorezan / Japanexperterna.se




  Lake Usori-ko and Sai-no-kawara

photo by APTINET Aomori Sightseeing Guide


photo by APTINET Aomori Sightseeing Guide



photo by APTINET Aomori Sightseeing Guide





photo by APTINET Aomori Sightseeing Guide




photo by APTINET Aomori Sightseeing Guide



Osorezan
Osorezan by macchi /flickr



Straw sandals and white cloth tied to trees were also done by the bereaved. Leave them alone.

Osorezan
Osorezan by macchi /flickr




Lake Usori-ko(or Lake Usoriyama-ko)

This is an acid lake in Japan with the water pH of 3.4 -3.8, but Japanese dace live in the water.

Lake Usori
Lake Usori  by blueskyfantasie /flickr
Lake Usori-ko and Sai-no-kawara

Osorezan
Osorezan by Joe Jones /flickr




Osorezan
Osorezan by blueskyfantasie /flickr






photo by APTINET Aomori Sightseeing Guide


Gokuraku-hama

Gokuraku-hama is the Lake Usori-ko's beach. It means the beach of the Buddhists' paradise filled with happiness. Gokuraku' and 'sukhaavatii' are Sanskrit words used to refer to Amitabha's pure land. This white sand beach is reminiscent of the pure land.


Osorezan
Osorezan by blueskyfantasie /flickr


The bereaved also burn incense and offer flowers there.


Osorezan
Osorezan by blueskyfantasie /flickr



The use of fire is limited on the temple's ground because Osorezan is a volcanic area with active sulphur vents.

Osorezan #1
Osorezan #1 by tsuda /flickr




The reverse side of the Earthquake Memorial Monument (jizo for the victims of the Great East Japan Earthquake in 2011)

This monument was build on Gokuraku-hama beach in 2012 because the temple's worshippers include the earthquake and tsunami victims. The temple hopes each of visitors will commemorate the victims by putting one's hand into one of 60 different handprints that fits one's size.

Osorezan
Osorezan by blueskyfantasie /flickr




Hiyamizu(spring located on the way to Osorezan)

It is about 4 kirometers away from Osorezan. Legend has it that eating a cup of the water will take off 10 years, two cups wil do 20 years. Many visitors get spring water.

Hiyamizu
Hiyamizu by tsuda /flickr



Osorezan
Osorezan by HerryLawford /flickr


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