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Japan
This Week in AsiaLifestyle & Culture

For 1,250 years, Japan’s ‘naked man’ festival barred women – until now – but they can’t go ‘Full Monty’

  • Gender experts hail the decision to let women take part in the festival in Inazawa as a step towards equality
  • The 800-year-old Fire Festival in Moriyama is also opening to women’s participation for the first time

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Worshippers wait for the priest to throw the sacred batons during the 2017 “naked man” festival at Saidaiji Temple in Okayama, western Japan. Photo: AFP
Julian Ryall
A shrine in Japan that hosts a “naked man” festival dating back around 1,250 years will, for the first time in its history, permit women to take part in its rituals this year.

However, women will still not be allowed to participate in the crescendo of the festival that it is most famous for – a rough-and-tumble scrum in which men wearing only loincloths attempt to touch a completely naked man designated as the shin-otoko, or “god man” in Japanese, to gain good fortune for the next year.

Nevertheless, local women and gender experts have hailed the decision of the elders at Konomiya Shrine, in the town of Inazawa, in Aichi prefecture, as a step forward in their campaign for equality.
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The traditionally men-only Hadaka Matsuri festival is scheduled to take place throughout the day on February 22, with Mitsugu Katayama, an official of the organising committee, telling This Week in Asia that around 10,000 local people are expected to take part in the festival while a similar number will be spectators.

“We have not been able to hold the festival like we used to for the past three years because of the pandemic and, in the time, we received a lot of requests from women in the town to take part,” he said.

He claimed that women were not actively banned from taking part in every element of the day’s festivities but that no groups of local women had wanted to be involved previously. Around 40 women have banded together to take part in the coming ritual offering of bamboo at the shrine.

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