Harae

Harae

Harae or harai (祓?) is the general term for rituals of purification in Shinto. Harae is one of four essential elements involved in a Shinto ceremony [1]. The purpose is the purification of pollution or sins (tsumi) and uncleanness (kegare) [2]. These concepts include bad luck and disease as well as guilt in the English sense. Harae is often referred to as the purification, but is also known as an exorcism to be done before worship.[3] Harae often involves symbolic washing with water, or having a Shinto priest shake a large paper shaker called ōnusa or haraigashi over the object of purification. People, places, and objects can all be the object of harae.

Contents

History

Harae stems from the myth of Susano-o, the brother of the Sun goddess Amaterasu. In the myth, while Amaterasu supervised the pure weaving hall, Susano-o broke in through the rooftop and dropped a flayed heavenly horse killing one her attendants. Startled by the horse, Amaterasu fled to cave Amano-Iwato. Susano-o then was expelled from heaven and Amaterasu’s sovereignty resumed. The traditional Shinto purification ritual, Harae is represented when Susano-o is removed from heaven. [4]

The rituals

There are various ways in which harae is practiced. In Ise, “the holiest of all Shinto shrines”[5], wooden charms named o-harai, another name for harae or harai, are hung all over the shrine.[6]

In all Shinto religious ceremonies, harae is performed in the beginning of the ritual to cleanse any evil, pollution or sins away before anyone gives offerings to the kami. Often, water and salt are used for the ceremonies to rinse hands and the face, as well as the shrine before it is prepared with offerings of goods and food (Boyd & Williams, 2005). Then the priest, along with the rest of the participants of the ritual chant a solemn liturgy before the assistant priest purifies the offerings using a wand called haraigushi [7].

Another method used to perform harae is misogi. A participant standing under a cold waterfall while chanting a liturgy characterizes this method. Misogi is said to be done on the 11th day of the month, including the winter months at the Tsubaki Grand Shrine [8].

Oharae is another method performed as a cleansing ritual to cleanse a large group of people. This ritual is practiced mostly in June and December to purify the nation, as well as after a disaster occurs. The practice is also performed at the year-end festival and also before major national festivals [9].

Shubatsu, a cleansing ritual performed by sprinkling salt, is another practice of the Shinto religion. Salt is used as a purifier by placing small piles in front of restaurants, known as morijio (盛り塩?, pile of salt) or shiobana (塩花?, salt flowers), for the two-fold purposes of warding off evil and attracting patrons.[10] In addition, sprinkling salt over a person before attending a funeral is also practiced commonly in the Shinto religion. Another type of this cleansing is to sprinkle water at the gate of one’s home, both in the morning and evening [11]. A significant use of this practice is seen when Sumo wrestlers sprinkle salt around the fighting ring to purify the area [12].

See also

  • The Glossary of Shinto for an explanation of terms concerning Japanese Shinto, Shinto art, and Shinto shrine architecture.

Notes

  1. ^ (Ben Yari, 1991)
  2. ^ (Norbeck, 1952)
  3. ^ (Norbeck, 1952)
  4. ^ (Miller, 1984)
  5. ^ (Chamberlain, 1893)
  6. ^ (Chamberlain)
  7. ^ (Boyd & Williams, 2005)
  8. ^ (Boyd & Williams, 2005)
  9. ^ (“Basic Terms of Shinto”, 1997)
  10. ^ Can you pass the salt, please?, Robert Camara, March 30, 2009
  11. ^ (“Basic Terms of Shinto”, 1997)
  12. ^ (“Harae—purification rites”, 2009)

References

  • BBC. (n.d.). Harae - purification rites. BBC - Homepage. Retrieved May 15, 2011, from http://www.bbc.co.uk/religion/religions/shinto/ritesrituals/harae.shtml
  • Basic terms of shinto. (n.d.). Kokugakuin University. Retrieved May 16, 2011, from www2.kokugakuin.ac.jp/ijcc/wp/bts/index.html
  • Ben-Ari, E. (1991). Transformation in ritual, transformation of ritual: audiences and rites in a Japanese commuter village. Ethnology, 30(2), 135-147. Retrieved May 15, 2011, from the JSTOR database.
  • Boyd, J. W., & Williams, R. G. (2005). Japanese Shintō: an interpretation of a priestly perspective. Philosophy East and West, 55(1), 33-63. Retrieved May 14, 2011, from the JSTOR database.
  • Chamberlain, B. H. (1893). Some minor japanese religios practices. The Journal of the Anthropological Institute of Great Britain and Ireland, 22, 355-370. Retrieved May 16, 2011, from the JSTOR database.
  • Miller, A. L. (1984). Ame no miso-ori me" (the heavenly weaving maiden): the cosmic weaver in early shinto myth and ritual. History of Religions, 24(1), 27-48. Retrieved May 14, 2011, from the JSTOR database.
  • Norbeck, E. (1952). Pollution and taboo in contemporary japan. Southwestern Journal of Anthropology, 8(3), 269-285. Retrieved May 15, 2011, from the JSTOR database.
  • Shinto no Iroha (神道のいろは), Jinjashinpōsha (神社新報社), 2004, (ISBN 4-915265-99-4)
  • Mihashi, Ken (三橋健), Wa ga ya no Shūkyō: Shinto (わが家の宗教:神道), Daihōrinkaku (大法輪閣), 2003 (ISBN 4-8046-6018-6)

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