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Kagami Biraki
Renewing the Spirit
(New Year)
Since the formation of our
official Dojo in 2008 I have run a New Year training day as
practised in Japan on the second Sunday of January and
traditionally called the Kagami Biraki, to kick off the New Year
for our club. This has now become one of the Kyokushin Academy’s
traditions. Below is an insight into the origins of that most
Japanese of traditions.
Kagami Biraki, which literally
means "Mirror Opening" ( also known as the "Rice
Cutting Ceremony" ), is a traditional Japanese celebration
that is held in many traditional martial arts schools (Dojo)
usually on the second Saturday or Sunday of January so all
students will be able to attend. It was an old Samurai
tradition dating back to the 15th century that was adopted into
modern martial arts starting in 1884 when Jigora Kano (the
founder of Judo) instituted the custom at the Kodokan, his
organization's headquarters. Since then other Japanese arts,
such as Aikido, Karate, and Jujutsu, has adopted the celebration
that officially kicks off the New Year -- a tradition of
renewal, rededication and spirit.
In Japan Kagami Biraki is still
practiced by many families. It marks the end of the New Year's
holiday season which is by far the biggest celebration of the
year -- something which combines the celebration of Christmas,
the family orientation of the American festival Thanksgiving,
mixed with the excitement of vacation and travel.
It is a time when the whole nation
(except for the service industries) goes on holiday. It is also
a time for family and a return to traditional roots -- prayers
and offerings at the Shinto shrine and Buddhist Temples, dress
in kimono, traditional food and games. It is also a time when
fathers are free to relax and share with the family, to talk,
play games, eat and in more modern times, watch TV. It is also a
time for courtesy calls to business superiors and associates as
well as good customers. Work begins about a week into the month,
but parties with friends and co-workers continue.
In most traditional Dojo
preparation for the New Year’s season begins as in most
households. Toward the end of the year Dojo are cleaned, repairs
made, mirrors shined and everything made tidy. In Japan many
Dojo retain the tradition of a purification ceremony. Salt is
thrown throughout the dojo, as salt is a traditional symbol of
purity (goodness and virtue), and then brushed away with pine
boughs. Decorations are then frequently placed around the dojo.
In old Japan they had great symbolism, but today most people
just think of them as traditional holiday decorations.
Stacked rice cakes, often with an orange on top
(representing orchards) and other decorations, are placed on the
ceremonial centre of the Dojo, the Shinzen. Called Kagami Mochi,
these rice cakes are rounded in the shape of old fashioned metal
mirrors and formed from a hard dough of pounded rice. They
symbolize full and abundant good fortune. Their breaking apart
(or opening up) is the "Mirror Opening," after which
Kagami Biraki is named. Bits are then traditionally consumed,
often in a red bean soup.
In modern days, however, these
rice cakes are often vinyl coated, since homes and Dojo are
heated and food can easily spoil. The coating stops the rice
from getting mouldy and cracking due to heat and dryness. Thus
in many Dojo these rice cakes are no longer consumed.
Other decorations are called
Kadomatsu, which include bamboo (a symbol of uprightness and
growth), plum twigs (a symbol of spirit) and pine boughs (from
the mountains that are symbols of longevity). Pine boughs are
placed around the Dojo, principally on doors and in small vases
to both sides of the Kamidana which is a miniature wooden Shinto
shrine (usually set on a shelf high on the ceremonial centre).
Pine boughs are the only ornamentation not removed after Kagami
Biraki.
For martial arts students today,
however, the New Year's celebration of Kagami Biraki has no
religious significance. It does, however, continue the old
Samurai tradition of kicking off the New Year. It is also a time
when participants engage in a common endeavour and rededicate
their spirit, effort and discipline toward goals, such as
training.
At the World Seido Karate
Headquarters (Kyokushinkai derivative founded by Tadashi
Nakamura) hundreds of students congregate early in the morning
to train together, although it gets so crowded that real
training is difficult.
Practice thus become more a
sharing of spirit, as New Years is expressed amongst the
push-ups, Kiai (shouts) and many repetitions of technique. As
effort and sweat builds, a steamy mist rises among the
participants. There is also a message from the founder, Kaicho
Tadashi Nakamura, followed by short speeches by senior Dojo
members. The celebration ends with refreshments (which can be
viewed as a symbolic representation of the traditional rice cake
breaking and consumption) and a meeting of all teachers and
Branch Chiefs.
In other schools the celebration
is very different. Ernie Estrada, Chief Instructor of Okinawan
Shorin-ryu Karate-do, reports that their Kagami Biraki is
highlighted by a special "Two Year Training." This
includes ten to twelve hours of intense training, the length and
severity symbolically representing the two year time span!
George Donahue, a student of the
late Kishaba Chokei and Shinzato Katsuhiko, and former director
of Matsubayashi Ryu' Kishaba Juku of New York City, notes that
in Japan Kagami Biraki started with a long morning session of
Zazen (kneeling meditation), and includes visits to the dojo
throughout the day by well-wishers, ex-students, and local
politicians. The day is ended with an especially intense workout
followed by a long party attended by dojo members and honoured
guests from the community. After three or four hours of
speeches, toasts, eating, and drinking, people demonstrate their
Kata. For non-local students this is usually the only
opportunity in the year to receive a promotion.
For old style teachers who don't
‘officially’ charge for instruction, Kagami Biraki has special
significance. It is a day for students to anonymously honour
their teachers with cash gifts. Contributions are placed within
identical brown envelopes with no contributor identification,
and discreetly left in a pile in the Dojo for the teacher.
The Ancient New Year's Observance
The Japanese New Year's tradition
has its roots in the ancient folk beliefs of agrarian China. If
a bountiful harvest was desired, it was thought necessary to
first create a warm, human atmosphere into which the harvest
would grow. Critical to this process were the bonds of family
and community based on blood, obligation and work that were
further strengthened during this holiday from common celebration
and sharing.
In Japan this tradition further
evolved into a Shinto celebration based primarily around the
worship of a deity Toshigama, (thought to visit every household
in the new year) in order to insure the production of the five
grains: rice, wheat barley, bean and mullet.
In preparation for the deity's
visit, people cleaned and then decorated their homes to beautify
them for the deity. There were also prayers and ringing of
temple bells to ward off evil spirits. New Years was initiated
with visits to Shrines and family and ritual ceremonies -- all
revolving around Toshigama. While today the meaning of most of
these Shinto observances has been forgotten, many of rituals
remain in the form of holiday traditions.
The symbolism of the mirror, which
is central to Kagami Biraki, dates back to the original trilogy
myth (along with the sword and the jewel) of the creation of
Japan. By the 15th century Shinto had interpreted the mirror and
sword to be important symbols of the virtues that the nation
should venerate. They also symbolized creation, legitimacy and
authority of the Emperor and by extension the Samurai class
itself as part of the feudal system. The mirror enabled people
to see things as they are (good or bad) and thus represented
fairness or justice. The mirror was also a symbol of the Sun
Goddess -- a fierce spirit (the light face of god).
Swords had long been given
spiritual qualities among the Samurai and their possession
contributed to a sense of purpose and destiny inherent within
the Samurai culture. So legendary were some swords that they
were thought to posses their own spirit (Kami).
Considered as one of the Samurai'
most important possessions, the sword (and other weapons)
symbolized their status and position. Firm, sharp and decisive,
the sword was seen as a source of wisdom and venerated for its
power and lightning-like swiftness, but it was also seen as a
mild spirit (the dark face of god).
Taken together, the mirror and sword represent
the Chinese yin and yang, or two forms of energy permeating
everything -- the primeval forces of the universe from which
everything springs -- the source of spirit empowering the
Emperor by extension Samurai class who was in his service.
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The Beginning
of Kagami Biraki
It was from this
time (15th century), it is said, that the tradition of Kagami
Biraki began. It developed as a folk Shinto observation with a
particular class (Samurai) bent. Before the New Year
Kagami Mochi, or rice cakes, were placed in front of the armoury
to honour and purify their weapons and armour. On the day of
Kagami Biraki the men of Samurai households would gather to
clean, shine and polish their weapons and armour.
So powerful was
the symbol of armour and weapons that even today links to these
feudal images remain. Japanese households and martial arts Dojo
often display family armour (family Kami), helmets or swords, or
modern replica, displayed in places of honour. In front of these
relics, sticks of incense are burned to show honour and
acknowledge their heritage.
Women in Samurai
households also placed Kagami Mochi, or rice cakes, in front of
the family Shinto shrine. A central element (set in front of the
Shrine) was a small round mirror made of polished silver, iron,
bronze or nickel. It was a symbol of the Sun Goddess, but was
also thought to embody the spirits of departed ancestors. So
strong was this belief that when a beloved family member was
near death, a small metal mirror was often pressed close to the
person's nostrils to capture their spirit.
The round rice
cakes were thus used as an offering -- in gratitude to the
deities in the hope of receiving divine blessing and also as an
offering to family spirits (and deceased family heroes). It was
thought that this offering would renew the souls of the departed
to which the family shrine was dedicated.
To members of
Japanese feudal society mirrors thus represented the soul or
conscience. Therefore it was considered important to keep
mirrors clean since it was thought that mirrors reflected back
on the viewers own thoughts. Thus the polishing of weapons and
armour on Kagami Biraki was symbolically (from mirror polishing)
seen as a method to clarify thought and strengthen dedication to
Samurai’ obligations and duty in the coming year. Thus Kagami
Biraki is also known to some as "Armour Day.”
This concept
continues even today. When your Karate, Judo or Aikido teacher
talks of self-polishing, of working on and perfecting the self
and to reduce ego, the concept harkens back to the ancient
concept of mirror polishing to keep the mind and resolve clear.
On Kagami Biraki,
the round rice cakes (often specially coloured to represent
regions or clans) would be broken, their round shape symbolizing
a mirror and their breaking apart symbolizing the mirror's
opening. The cakes were then consumed in a variety of ways.
The breaking of rice-cakes (Kagami Mochi) on Kagami Biraki
symbolizes the coming out (of a cave) of the Sun Goddess in
Japanese mythology, an act that renewed light and spirit to the
ancient world. Thus breaking apart the rice cakes each year on
this date represents a symbolic calling out again of this life
force and re-enactment of the (mythological) beginning of the
world.
The Kagami Mochi
are consumed. This is seen as an act of spiritual communion. It
was believed that partaking of these cakes not only symbolized
the renewal of the souls of their ancestors, but also the
absorption of the spirit (or aura) Toshigama (also probably the
Sun Goddess) to which the New Years season was dedicated. For
this reason eating Kagami Mochi has always represented renewal,
the start of the New Year and the first breaking of the earth or
the preparation for coming agriculture. Thus consumption was a
physical act of prayer, happiness and peace in the New Year in
the spirit of optimism, renewal and good luck. The New Year was
thus seen with hope, and full of fresh possibility, a clean
beginning and opportunity for dedication.
There were also
very human benefits. The sharing of rice cakes with family and
clan members helped strengthen common ties and bonds of
allegiance and friendship among warriors. Rice cakes also
prepared the body for the New Year.
The New Year
holiday was most often filled with drinking, celebration and
eating ceremonial foods. On January 7, the body was first
fortified with a special rice herbal concoction that was thought
to cure the body of many diseases. Thus, by Kagami Biraki
people's bodies were ready for regulation and cleansing. Mocha
was often eaten with different edible grasses for this purpose.
It prepared people to resume a regular schedule.
The very rice
consumed itself had symbolic meaning for the Samurai. Farmers
once thought that rice having breath (actually breathing in the
ground), thus giving rise to the concept of rice being
"alive," (breathing in the field), and thus divine imbued
with a living deity (Kami). On another level rice represented
the very economic backbone of the Samurai society. It was given
to the Samurai as a stipend in return for service and allegiance
to his lord (or alternatively given control over land and
peasants who produced rice) -- in a society where wealth and
power were not based on currency, but on control of land which
produced agriculture.
In recent years
some people have reinterpreted the "Mirror Opening Ceremony"
from a different viewpoint, Zen. In the book, Angry White
Pyjamas - An Oxford Poet Trains with the Tokyo Police, the
author Robert Twigger recounts as an interpretation of Kagami
Biraki an esoteric explanation given to him by someone who had
lived in a Zen monastery. The mirror, it was explained, contains
an old image, for what one sees in the mirror is seen with old
eyes. You see what you expect to see, something that conforms to
your own self-image based on what you remember of yourself. In
this way the eyes connect people with their past through the way
they see their own image. This creates a false continual.
Instead every moment holds potential for newness, another
possibility for breaking with the old pattern, the pattern being
just a mental restraint, something that binds us to the false
self people call "me." By breaking the mirror one breaks
the self-image that binds people to the past, so as to
experience the now, the present. "This is Kagami Biraki,"
recounts Twigger, "a chance to glimpse the reality we veil
with the mundane activities of day-to-day living."
I hope the above
article has not only been an interesting read but also provides
some understanding of one of the ceremonies rarely practiced by
the west other than by a few Dojo that unifies us to the Samurai
past we as Karate-ka have all evolved from. We are lucky to have
our own home in the Kyokushin Academy Dojo, let’s continue the
next year and make an academy that others envy, be a part of the
future of your Dojo.
As Sosai
testifies: “Kyokushin is the Karate, Samurai would be
proud of.” Budo Karate.
Osu!
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