Showing posts with label Japan. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Japan. Show all posts

Saturday, January 5, 2013

From "City of Sadness" to Tourist Madness


Photo by Kevin Willett 

A film about Taiwan's Dark Days shone spotlight on Jiufen
Right after the 921 Earthquake that rocked Taiwan in 1999, I spent my first Moon Festival with my gf in Jiufen (Jiuofen, Chuifen), on the north-east coast of Taiwan. Far from the madding crowds in Taipei, it felt for a while like going to heaven. A little like Banff. A taste of Japan.

As you can see, this city in the clouds is a picturesque mountainside town. But during the height of the Japanese colonial era, it was a booming gold-mining town. "Little Shanghai." It went into decline when the events of World War II forced the mine to close. In other words, the Japanese lost the war and therefore had no POWs to work the mines. Then they were kicked out of Taiwan.

But the collection of historical buildings made Jiufen the ideal location for the filming of City of Sadness -  the first Chinese-language film to win the Golden Lion award at the Venice Film Festival in 1989.

City of Sadness was the first film to deal openly with the KMT's dictatorial reign of terror after Taiwan was "handed-over" from Japan to Chiang Kai-shek's Nationalist China. 

The film was also the first to depict the infamous 228 Incident of 1947, in which thousands of people were massacred by Nationalist (KMT) troops that Chiang sent from China to put down Taiwan's version of "the Arab Spring." Tens of thousands of Taiwanese and Chinese were rounded up, shot, sent to prison or "disappeared."

As one war veteran told me, "Chiang's troops landed at [the nearby port of Keelung] and started firing at anything that moved."

Despite the dark and depressing story, the success of the movie had the odd effect of turning the almost forgotten town of Jiufen into a popular attraction full of tea houses, coffee shops, and artisans. Legions of tourists. Myriads of visitors.

So - on a good day - Jiufen is about one hour from Taipei by train or by car. On a bad day -  such as the last day of a Chinese holiday or a long weekend - it can take more than three hours of hellish driving. Trust me, I've done it.

Photo by Kevin Willett

Saturday, December 22, 2012

Turning Japanese - Let's Dance


Japanese girls are dressed for the the bon-odori during the Obon festival in the port city of Kobe.
Obon - with its bonfires and ceremonies welcoming the ancestors' spirits - is similar to the Ghost Festival in Taiwan or the Celtic Samhain.
photo copyright Stephen A. Nelson

Tuesday, July 6, 2010

Sands of Awaji-shima - Awaji Island (淡路島) Japan - First born of the gods


Photo and story by Stephen A. Nelson

This is a small island connected to the main island of Awaji, in central Japan.

 It's in the eastern part of the Seto Inland Sea between the islands of Honshu and Shikoku - so it's a relatively short boat ride from the port city of Kobe.

It is connected to Kobe by the longest suspension bridge in the world - even though that bridge collapsed during the 1995 earthquake that flattened much of downtown Kobe. The fault that caused the earthquake cuts right across Awaji-shima.
  
In the Japanese Shinto creation mythology, Awaji was the first of the oyashima islands born from the union of two Japanese deities, Izanagi and Izanami.

So it's an important place in Shinto, as well as a centre for a 500-year old form of puppet theatre that has its roots in religious ceremony.

Friday, June 25, 2010

Kyoto, Japan: Temple of the Golden Pavilion


The Kinkaku-ji (Temple of the Golden Pavilion) is a Zen Buddhist temple in Kyoto, Japan. It's also known informally as Rokuon-ji (鹿苑寺, Deer Garden Temple).

Photo taken during a trip to the Kansai District  - cultural centre of Japan.

Photo copyright Stephen A. Nelson