Connect with us

World

A ‘Killing Stone’ Broke in Japan. Is a Demon on the Loose?

Published

on

A ‘Killing Stone’ Broke in Japan. Is a Demon on the Loose?

With a lot going mistaken on the earth, ought to we now additionally fear a couple of nine-tailed fox demoness which may be unfastened in a forest in Japan?

The reply relies upon partly in your studying of historic Japanese mythology.

This month, a volcanic rock cut up in two in Nikko Nationwide Park, about 100 miles north of Tokyo. Intact, the rock was about six ft tall and 26 ft in circumference, in keeping with a information on the park. It had lengthy been related to a Japanese legend by which an evil fox spirit haunts a “killing stone,” or Sessho-seki in Japanese, making it lethal to people. Some folks have speculated that the fracture set the fox unfastened to trigger additional hurt.

Others have targeted on a variation of the legend that ends on a happier observe. In that telling, after a Zen monk splits the rock into a number of items and coaxes out the fox, she guarantees by no means to hurt people once more.

Social media has loads of theories about what the fracturing of the stone means for bizarre mortals. So does the Japanese information media. “Is that this an advance warning of a catastrophe or omen?” requested a latest article in The Asahi Shimbun, an influential newspaper.

Advertisement

Heightened curiosity within the fractured stone could also be an indication of our instances, stated Nick Kapur, a professor of Japanese historical past at Rutgers College who wrote a well-liked Twitter thread about it in early March.

“There’s a sort of millenarian sense within the air, an apocalyptic feeling, with the coronavirus and this struggle in Ukraine,” he stated in an interview. “Persons are feeling like, ‘Ah, why is all these items taking place now?’ And so possibly this stone cracking open at this explicit time simply touches a nerve.”

The nine-tailed fox legend is about within the twelfth century on the royal courtroom in Kyoto, Japan’s imperial capital. Students say it first appeared in written texts within the fifteenth century.

Within the primary model, a retired emperor, Toba, an precise historic determine, is enchanted by a wonderful and clever customer, Tamamo no Mae. When Toba falls mortally in poor health, a royal astrologer discovers that the customer is an evil fox in disguise. She flees into the wilderness, and warriors dispatched by the palace shoot her with arrows, reworking her into a toxic rock.

In actual life, Toba’s dying set off a succession disaster that led to an period of samurai combating and army rule. “In all chance, the story of Tamamo no Mae sprang from the true world of palace politics,” the scholar Janet Goff wrote in a 1997 essay about foxes in Japanese tradition.

Advertisement

In one other model of the legend — one which appeared in historic performs and illustrated scrolls — a Zen monk is strolling previous the stone when a girl warns him to not go close to it. She says it’ll kill any human, chicken or beast that does.

The lady admits that she is the spirit of the stone and disappears inside it. After the monk strikes and breaks the stone with a workers, she reappears, guarantees by no means to hurt people once more, and disappears for good.

For hundreds of years, the telling of the fox legend echoed a misogynistic trope of Japanese mythology by which feminine characters had been held accountable for the downfall of dynasties, Professor Kapur stated. However when the nine-tailed fox has appeared in fashionable Japanese cultural merchandise — together with anime, manga and even video video games — she tends to be portrayed extra favorably.

“There’s a touch of evil nonetheless there, however she’s sort of an antihero, possibly,” he stated. “It’s attention-grabbing how this character has reworked from an unredeemed villain to virtually somebody you’d admire or wish to be buddies with.”

The stone that broke aside in Nikko Nationwide Park sat in a forest dotted with sulfurous sizzling springs. Park rangers had been photographing cracks within the stone for years, and native officers stated the ultimate rupture was brought on by poisonous fuel and rainwater seepage.

Advertisement

“The stone is a government-designated cultural asset, so we can’t determine what to do by ourselves,” stated Riko Kitahara, an official on the park. “However from a upkeep standpoint, we expect it needs to be left as it’s because it cut up naturally.”

The Nikko stone was designated a cultural asset in 1957 by Tochigi Prefecture and as a scenic spot by the nationwide authorities in 2014. It’s stated to be one in every of a number of stones that the Zen monk created when he broke the bigger boulder aside throughout his legendary encounter with the chastened fox spirit.

The federal government says the Seventeenth-century poet Matsuo Basho was referring to the stone when he wrote of visiting one which emitted toxic fumes and was surrounded by floor “coated in so many lifeless bees and butterflies which you can barely see the colour of the sand.”

Masaharu Sugawara, 83, a volunteer tour information in Nikko Nationwide Park, stated the poet’s reference to the stone has lengthy been a promoting level for vacationers. He added that animals that gravitate to sizzling springs close to the stone in winter generally die from poisonous gases.

“As Matsuo Basho wrote, it’s a scary spot,” he stated.

Advertisement

It’s unfortunate to debate unhealthy luck in Japan, so if persons are nervous that the fracturing of the stone will produce unhealthy vibes, they won’t be telling reporters.

Publicly, not less than, many have stated they consider the stone’s fracturing is an efficient signal, not an omen of impending doom. Some have even expressed hope that it might be precisely what the world wants at this chaotic juncture in historical past.

In a latest Fb publish, a tourism affiliation within the Nikko space stated that it hoped the stone’s fracturing was an “auspicious foretoken,” and that the nine-tailed fox may maybe “tame the coronavirus and the present world scenario.”

Masaki Akutsu, an official in Nasu, a city close to the park, instructed The Asahi Shimbun that he hoped the fox had been let out to handle world warming.

“That is the beginning of a brand new killing stone legend,” he stated.

Advertisement

Masako Hitomi, 80, whose husband is a retired Shinto priest at a shrine in Nasu that pays homage to the fox, stated she believed the scientific clarification for the stone’s fracture.

On the identical time, she stated, all of the dreary information these days, together with the struggle in Ukraine and the pandemic, appears to have performed a task within the stone’s destiny. (On Wednesday, a robust undersea earthquake off the Fukushima area of Japan, north of Nasu, left not less than three folks lifeless and greater than 190 injured.)

“It broke shouldering too many woes of the world,” she stated. “Because the stone shouldered the evils, I hope all these terrible occasions will finish quickly.”

Advertisement
Continue Reading
Advertisement
Click to comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

World

US rolls into Olympic quarterfinals as No. 1 seed, top Puerto Rico 104-83 in group finale

Published

on

US rolls into Olympic quarterfinals as No. 1 seed, top Puerto Rico 104-83 in group finale

VILLENEUVE-D’ASCQ, France (AP) — Halfway to its goal of gold, the U.S. has the No. 1 seed going into the medal round at the Paris Olympics.

And now the real games start.

Anthony Edwards scored 26 points, six players reached double figures for the U.S. and the Americans wrapped up the top spot coming out of group play by rolling past Puerto Rico 104-83 on Saturday.

The Americans — 3-0 in these Olympics, 8-0 so far this summer — will see Brazil in the win-or-go-home quarterfinals in Paris on Tuesday.

Joel Embiid scored 15 points for the U.S. Kevin Durant scored 11 points for the U.S. to get within five of matching Lisa Leslie for the all-time Olympic scoring record for the U.S.; he’s at 483, and Leslie finished her career with 488 in Olympic play.

Advertisement

LeBron James finished with 10 points, eight assists and six rebounds in 18 minutes. Jayson Tatum and Anthony Davis each added 10 for the U.S., which played without Jrue Holiday because of an ankle that he rolled in the Americans’ win over South Sudan on Wednesday.

Jose Alvarado led Puerto Rico (0-3) with 18 points.

It was the first Olympic matchup between the nations since the Athens Games in 2004, when Puerto Rico ran away in the second quarter and went on to embarrass the U.S. 92-73 in what was James’ debut in the tournament.

Little different story this time.

That day in Athens, Puerto Rico won the second quarter 28-7. This time, the U.S. won the second quarter 39-16. Give Puerto Rico credit; a team that came into Saturday knowing it was eliminated from contention took an eight-point lead late in the first quarter and still led 37-36 with 5:45 left in the half.

Advertisement

The rest of the half: U.S. 28, Puerto Rico 8. The run was quick and decisive.

James had all six of his first-half assists during that burst and the Americans took a 64-45 lead into the break. He finished the flurry with a dunk in the final seconds, ran by his 2004 Athens teammate Dwyane Wade — now commentating for NBC, sitting courtside — while yelling something with a big smile and from there the countdown to wrapping up the No. 1 seed was officially on.

As would be expected, really.

It’s been three games, three easy wins for the Americans so far in France: a 26-point opening victory over Serbia, a 17-point win over South Sudan to clinch the top spot in Group C, and then Saturday’s game against Puerto Rico that once it got one-sided it stayed that way.

___

AP Summer Olympics: https://apnews.com/hub/2024-paris-olympic-games

Advertisement

Continue Reading

World

VP short-lister Shapiro on defense over Israel after decades-old college paper surfaces

Published

on

VP short-lister Shapiro on defense over Israel after decades-old college paper surfaces

Pennsylvania Gov. Josh Shapiro, D-Penn., has had to defend his stance on Israel after an op-ed he penned more than three decades ago, in which he wrote of being an Israeli army volunteer and disparaged the Palestinian people, resurfaced.

“Since he wrote this piece as a 20-year-old student, Gov. Shapiro has built close, meaningful, informative relationships with many Muslim-American, Arab-American, Palestinian Christian, and Jewish community leaders all across Pennsylvania,” Shapiro’s spokesman Manuel Bonder told Fox News Digital in a statement. 

“The Governor greatly values their perspectives and the experiences he has learned from over the years – and as a result, as with many issues, his views on the Middle East have evolved into the position he holds today,” Bonder continued. 

The Philadelphia Inquirer uncovered the essay that Shapiro wrote for the Campus Times, the student newspaper of the University of Rochester, from which Shapiro graduated in 1995. In the article, Shapiro stressed his view that “Palestinians will not peacefully coexist,” because “they do not have the capabilities to establish their own homelands and make it successful even with the aid of Israel and the United States.”

HARRIS’ VETTING TEAM PRIVATELY MEETS WITH SHAPIRO, KELLY AHEAD OF VEEP ANNOUNCEMENT: REPORT

Advertisement

“They are too battle-minded to be able to establish a peaceful homeland of their own,” Shapiro wrote, identifying himself as a “past volunteer in the Israeli army.” He referred to the Arab world as divided and “belligerent.”

The comments have resurfaced as part of a thorough review of Shapiro as he edges closer to a potential vice-presidential nod for the Democrat ticket topped by current Vice President Kamala Harris after she secured the nomination this week. 

Gov. Josh Shapiro, D-Pa., speaks at a campaign event, Tuesday, April 16, 2024, in Scranton, Pa.  (AP Photo/Alex Brandon)

Shapiro’s support for Israel has been controversial inside the Democratic Party due to the strong pro-Palestinian views of the party’s far-left flank. Those who oppose his candidacy launched the “No Genocide Josh” campaign and continue to pressure Harris to pick another running mate. 

Some Jewish members of Congress have said that criticism of Shapiro is unfair and assumes that Jewish politicians cannot be objective on Israel. 

Advertisement

AMID HARRIS’ YOUTH POLLING SURGE, LATEST FIGURES SHOW BIDEN DID BETTER WITH BLACK VOTERS

“I think there is that sense that somehow we’re not objective [on Israel] because we’re Jewish, which is just not true or fair,” Rep. Greg Landsman, D-Ohio, told Axios. “There are a lot of members who are pro-Israel who have been protested against — I think as Jews it feels particularly intense and personal.”

Bonder pushed back on the idea that the newspaper op-ed, written decades ago, provides any indication of the governor’s current thinking regarding Israel. 

Josh Shapiro, Kamala Harris

Vice President Kamala Harris and Pennsylvania Governor Josh Shapiro (L) speak to the press while making a stop at the Reading Terminal Market in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, July 13, 2024. (Photo by Ryan Collerd/ AFP) (Photo by Ryan Collerd/AFP via Getty Images) (Ryan Collerd/AFP via Getty Images)

“As the Governor has made clear for years, he supports a two-state solution where Israelis and Palestinians can live together peacefully – and he believes it is critical for leaders on both sides of this conflict to take meaningful, necessary steps towards a lasting peace,” Bonder stressed. 

“Governor Shapiro has worked hard to bring people together, listen, and keep our communities safe and heard – and he will always be a Governor for all Pennsylvanians,” Bonder added. 

Advertisement

COMIC MICHAEL RAPAPORT SAYS HARRIS LOST HIS VOTE OVER ISRAEL: ‘CAN’T SUPPORT PARTY THAT IS FOR THIS BULLS—“

Addressing the self-identification as a “past volunteer in the Israeli army,” Bonder said, “While he was in high school, Josh Shapiro was required to do a service project, which he and several classmates completed through a program that took them to a kibbutz in Israel where he worked on a farm and at a fishery.”

Josh Shapiro, governor of Pennsylvania, speaks during a campaign event with US President Joe Biden

Josh Shapiro, governor of Pennsylvania, speaks during a campaign event with U.S. President Joe Biden, not pictured, at the Scranton Cultural Center at the Masonic Temple in Scranton, Pennsylvania, on Tuesday, April 16, 2024. Photographer: Hannah Beier/Bloomberg (Hannah Beier/Bloomberg)

“The program also included volunteering on service projects on an Israeli army base. At no time was he engaged in any military activities,” Bonder said. 

When asked about the article during a Friday press conference, the 51-year-old Shapiro stressed his age and the time that has passed since publishing the article. He reiterated his belief that the only way forward for the region is a two-state solution that allows both Israelis and Palestinians “to determine their own futures and their own destinies,” the Times of Israel reported. 

Advertisement

Shapiro also had earlier this year called Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu “one of the worst leaders of all time” and blasted him for steering Israel “in a wrong direction,” according to the Times. 

Continue Reading

World

Ukraine fires barrage of drones over Russia overnight

Published

on

Ukraine fires barrage of drones over Russia overnight

Meanwhile, the Russian army has intensified pressure on the key Ukrainian transport hub of Pokrovsk, with no casualties reported so far.

ADVERTISEMENT

Russian officials on Saturday said Ukrainian forces targeted overnight multiple Russian regions with a massive drone barrage.

Russia’s Defence Ministry said in a statement that its air defence systems “intercepted and destroyed” a total of 75 drones over a number of regions that lie on the border with Ukraine or not far from it, including Belgorod, Krasnodar, Kursk, Oryol, Rostov, Voronezh, and the Ryazan region deeper inside Russia.

One of those drones was also shot down over the Azov sea, the statement said. Thirty-six drones were destroyed over the Rostov region, according to the ministry.

Rostov Gov. Vasily Golubev said in an online statement, however, that the region was attacked by a total of 55 drones. He didn’t specify how many of these were intercepted and how many hit the targets, saying only that “warehouse facilities” in the Morozovsk and Kamensky districts sustained damage in the attack.

Ukraine’s General Staff said Saturday in a Facebook post that its forces struck an airfield in Morozovsk, hitting ammunition depots with guided air bombs, as well as fuel depots in the Belgorod, Kursk and Rostov regions.

Advertisement

Belgorod Gov. Vyacheslav Gladkov confirmed that an oil depot was hit in his region. He said one of the tanks exploded and caught fire, but it was swiftly put out.

In the Oryol region, two drones crashed into a residential high-rise building, causing a brief fire, Oryol Gov. Andrei Klychkov said. One person sought medical assistance in the aftermath of the attack, he said.

Ukraine’s Air Forces, in the meantime, said on Saturday that Russia overnight attacked Ukraine with 29 Shahed drones and four missiles.

Ukrainian air defences shot down 24 drones over nine regions of the country, Air Force commander Mykola Oleshchuk said in an online statement. It wasn’t clear from his statement whether the missiles were intercepted as well or what damage the attack caused.

Meanwhile, Russian forces attacked Pokrovsk and Myrnohrad on Saturday, firing 11 missiles, the Donetsk regional police said. Pokrovsk was hit by seven missiles from the S-300 air defence system, with no casualties reported.

Advertisement

Police recorded 52 destructions – 40 residential buildings, three educational institutions, a polyclinic, an outpatient clinic, a shopping centre, a shop, an industrial facility, and office premises.

Continue Reading

Trending