blinkx
  • JAPAN: SOCCER - Japanese shrine dedicated to the god of sports preserves an ancient form of football

  • 00:00:15
  • ITN Source
    • Browse

JAPAN: SOCCER - Japanese shrine dedicated to the god of sports preserves an ancient form of football

A shrine in the ancient Japanese capital of Kyoto dedicated to the god of sports preserves a thousand-year-old form of football with a match of the sport by players dressed in traditional costumes. The Shiramine (pronounced Shee-rah-mee-neh) shrine in central Kyoto, the ancient Japanese capital, is a popular place of worship amongst professional and amateur football players. On Saturday (July 7) the shrine dedicated, as it does twice a year, a game of kemari (pronounced keh-mah-ree) -- an ancient form of football -- to its patron deity Seidai-Myojin (pronounced Say-dah-ee-Myoh-jeen), popularly known in Japan as the god of sports and especially football. The shrine grounds also serve as a practice pitch once a week for the members of the local Kemari Preservation Society. Kemari is an ancient form of football that swept the nation over one thousand years ago starting with the aristocrats of Kyoto. The game is believed to have been introduced in to Japan around 600 AD from China, the official birthplace of football according to sports governing body FIFA (Federation International de Football Association). However while the Chinese version called Cuju (pronounced: tsoo-djewoo) at one point developed into a fierce training tool for the military, the Japanese aristocracy of the time gentrified it. "In Kemari, the player that drops the ball is not at fault. In fact it is the guy that gave him a bad pass that is considered at fault," said Shigeyuki Kitamura (pronounced Shee-geh-you-kee Kee-tah-moo-rah), the Head Priest of Shiramine Shrine. Players dressed in traditional attire and wearing leather shoes kick around a deerskin ball stuffed with barley grains to the required height-limit marked by four different trees surrounding the small square field called kakari (pronounced kah-kah-ree) This Japanese version of the ancient game does not have winners or losers and instead of players competing against each other, the object of the game is for all to cooperate and show off their team spirit. While it looks easy, locals -- even the youngest -- admit it is not so. "I think Kemari is harder than football, because in football you can use both feet, bend your knees and drop the ball. Here you can't drop the ball, bend your legs or use your right foot," explained seven-year-old enthusiast Takara Ishida (pronounced Tah-kah-rah Ee-Shee-dah). Locals are proud to be part of a centuries-old tradition and to have preserved a sport that has practically disappeared in China after it was banned under the Ming and Qing dynasties. "This ancient traditional sports can only be seen in Kyoto, but its a good thing it is been preserved," said 69-year-old Kyoto resident Miraku Kodama. But even China is now reassessing the sport and is looking to revive it in time for the Beijing Olympics in 2008. Both the Chinese Cuju, and the Japanese Kemari, mean "kick-ball".

ITN Source | July 10, 2007Watch more videos from ITN Source

Tags:. .however. .introduced. .legs. .foot. .feet











Admit   Amongst   Ancient   Aristocrats   Attire   Bad   Ball   Banned   Barley   Beijing   Bend   Birthplace   Centuriesold   China   Chinese   Competing   Considered   Cooperate   Costumes   Dedicated   Deity   Disappeared   Does   Dressed   Dynasties   Enthusiast   Especially   Fault   Feet   Fierce   Fifa   Foot   Football   Gave   Grains   Harder   However   Instead   Introduced   Ishida   Japanese   Knees   Kyoto   Leather   Legs   Losers   Ming   Object   Olympics   Pass   Patron   Pitch   Players   Preservation   Preserved   Preserves   Priest   Pronounced   Proud   Qing   Reassessing   Required   Revive   Sevenyearold   Shoes   Shrine   Soccer   Society   Spirit   Square   Stuffed   Surrounding   Swept   Tool   Traditional   Twice   Version   Wearing   Worship