2/02/2005

Botamochi Cakes

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Botamochi Cakes

***** Location: Japan
***** Season: Spring
***** Category: Humanity


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Explanation

"Peony Cakes", Botamochi
ぼた餅
牡丹餅 (ぼたもち)

round rice cakes covered with sweet anko

CLICK for more photos CLICK for many more photos

During the week of spring equinox (vernal equinox) , families visit cemetaries to clean and maintain graves. They also pray for their loved ones, burn incense and offer them flowers and food. The spirits are known to prefer round food, so botamochi (round glutinous rice balls covered in bean paste) are eaten on this day. The treat gets its name from botan, Chinese peonies which bloom in the spring time.

The Adzuki-beans used for the sweet red paste (anko) are symbollically used to drive out the bad spirits.

The same type of sweet is eaten at the autumn equinox. It is then called "O-Hagi", since it looks like the bushclover (hagi 萩).

Spring Equinox and Haiku


Read more botamochi haiku by Issa HERE !

Click HERE for more photos !


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Jooeiji 常栄寺 temple Joei-Ji in Kamakura
(popularly called Botamochi-dera 牡丹餅寺)


The Temple was erected in 1606 based on the story dating back to the 13th century. There was an observatory deck on this site which was built for Yoritomo Minamoto (1147-1199), the founder of Kamakura Shogunate. In case bird-releasing games were held at the beach of Kamakura, Yoritomo came over here and watched the show. Serving him and his guests was a nun called Nichiei (1187-1274).

CLICK for more photos In 1271, the year unforgettable for the Nichiren Sect Buddhists, Priest Nichiren (1222-1282), the founder of the Nichiren sect, was sentenced to death on charges of his fierce criticism against the government policy. He had also reprimanded all other religious sects saying they were fallacious, false and even dangerous to the welfare of the country. True Buddhism is, he argued, in the Lotus Sutra and unless the government follow his suggestion, the country would continue to face natural disasters and social unrest.

On September 12 of the year, Priest Nichiren was on the way to the execution site at Tatsunokuchi located at the west-end of Kamakura, passing near this observation deck. The devout gathered here anxious to see him, expecting it would certainly be the last chance, and were in a sorrow of parting. Suddenly appeared before him was Nun Nichiei, an ardent devotee of Priest Nichiren, and presented Botamochi, or rice-cake dumplings covered with sesame paste. It was obvious to everybody that he would be executed within hours. However, she believed that the great Priest would survive, come hell or high water, with his messianic charisma.

Yes, a miracle occurred at the last moment. He was brought down to the site for beheading that night, and the executioner hold up the sword to decapitate, when the area was hit by a stroke of lightning. Back then, lightning was thought one of the most feared super-natural powers or a divine act. The executioner was terrified and had to suspend the execution. Priest Nichiren's life was thus saved. His followers believed that the Botamochi Nun Nichiei gave to Priest Nichiren must have saved his life.

In reality, Nichiei entered nunhood after her husband died. Her husband was also a pious devotee of Priest Nichiren. Meanwhile, she had a younger brother Nissho (1221-1323) by name (same name as the founding priest of the Temple in alphabet, but a different priest). He was one of the Six Great Disciples of Priest Nichiren and founded Jissoji, another Nichiren sect temple.

On September 12 every year, the Temple holds a memorial service for Priest Nichiren.
The devout cook Botamochi and distribute to visitors after offering it to the altar in honor of Priest Nichiren. At the same time, the Temple dedicates this Botamochi to the statue of Priest Nichiren at Ryukoji, where another memorial service takes place on this particular day.

Nun Nichiei and her husband, who was a retainer of Sixth Shogun Munetaka (1242-1274), were buried here and their Gorinto (five-tier stupa) tombs are placed beside the main hall.
© www.asahi-net.or.jp


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Worldwide use


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Things found on the way



Botamochi Jizo ぼた餅地蔵


An old story from Japan
Original at .. www.houzenin.jp/mizuko/index.htmlFrom Hiratsuka town on the Old Tokaido, at the temple Hozen-In 宝善院. The village was poor in former times and had not much rice. Many children died of malnurishment. When the cold wind blew from the west in Hiratsuka, many children died. And their mothers could only cry for days on end, when they had to abort their children in the river.
One day the poor mothers collected money to build a statue of Jizo and prayed to him for help. They prayed to be able to give at least one plentiful meal of a mochi to their children before they would die anyway ! Many graves of babies are here and all others, who could not even affort a grave, are also prayed for here.
. . . CLICK here for Temple 宝善院 Photos !




At the temple Choen-Ji in Ichigaya, Tokyo.

It is said to help mothers after childbirth to get well soon. Jizo appeared as a young priest and gave some botamochi to a poor mother to help her provide milk for her baby.
杉並区和田1-44-24 長延寺


More about
... ... ... Jizo Bosatsu 地蔵菩薩

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a proverb


source : shikaminato.blogspot.jp


tana kara botamochi 棚から牡丹餅
"botamochi falls from a shelf"

shortened to
tanabota たなぼた

something good can happen unexpectedly, without your own effort.



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HAIKU



. WKD : Kobayashi Issa 小林一茶 in Edo .

辻風やぼた餅程な秋の蝶
tsujikaze ya botamochi hodo na aki no chô

in the whirlwind
like rice cakes...
autumn butterflies

Tr. David Lanoue


ぼた餅をつかんでかすむ烏哉
botamochi o tsukande kasumu karasu kana

snatching a jellied rice cake
in the mist...
crow

Tr. David Lanoue



ぼた餅や辻の仏も春の風
Botamochi ya tsuji no hotoke mo haru no kaze

botamochi cakes -
the Buddha at the crossroads
also in spring wind

Tr. Gabi Greve

Nichiren was famous for his preaching at the crossroads of Kamakura (tsuji no seppoo 辻の説法).
Nichiren 日蓮上人 Saint Nichiren

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botamochi ya Jizo no hiza mo haru no kaze

ricecakes -
also in Jizo’s lap
the spring wind

Tr. Ad Blankestijn

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ぼた餅や藪の仏も春の風
bota-mochi ya yabu no hotoke mo haru no kaze

A stone image
Before a bamboo thicket
Savors a huge rice cake
In the spring wind.

Tr. David Lanoue


rice cake with bean paste
for the Buddha of the thicket ...
spring breeze

Tr. Nobuyuki Yuasa


quote
in spring breeze
a stone buddha in a grove
eats sweet rice balls


Tr. and Comment by Chris Drake :

This hokku comes at the end of a haibun passage in Issa's My New Year (My Spring) and depends on the haibun for much of its meaning. The haibun is the third consecutive passage about unfortunate stepchildren, and all three passages allude to the fact that Issa himself lost his mother at age two and later suffered so much as a stepchild after his father remarried that his father sent him away to Edo when he was fifteen. The haibun passage makes it clear that the "buddha" in or by the grove or thicket in the hokku is a stone statue of the bodhisattva Jizo, famous for his mercy and for the help he gives to children, pregnant women, travelers, and those with eye ailments. Bodhisattvas and other revered figures in Buddhism were customarily referred to as buddhas, as were newly dead souls, and the haibun makes it clear that this isn't a statue of Shakyamuni Buddha or any other main buddhas in the narrow sense but, rather, a statue of the very popular bodhisattva Jizo.

In the haibun, Issa relates a legend from Tatsuta, near Nara. A cruel stepmother deprives her stepson of all food for ten days and then torments him further by giving him a bowl of rice and telling him he can also have a bowl of rice if he can get the stone statue of Jizo nearby to eat the rice in the bowl. After the boy places the bowl offering before Jizo he clings to the stone sleeves of the statue and prays as hard as he can to the bodhisattva. Then a miracle happens, and Jizo gobbles down the rice like a hungry child. When the boy's stepmother hears what happened, she changes her ways and from then on treats her stepson just as she treats her own son. The statue of Jizo, Issa says, still stands, and countless people give him offerings. The hokku is about one of these offerings, which Issa imagines.

Sweet rice balls, literally "peony (botan) rice balls," are different from the large round "mirror rice cakes" made and eaten at New Year's and also presented to temples on the death day of Shakyamuni, the historical Buddha. The rice balls are made partly of the sticky rice used in the larger rice cakes and partly of ordinary rice. After these two kinds of rice are cooked and made into balls the size of small dumplings, the balls are covered with a sugar-sweetened paste or jam made mainly of partially mashed red beans. Sometimes the paste is fairly smooth, and sometimes it's a bit lumpy with slightly-mashed red beans. The rice balls are a treat and a worthy offering to Jizo, who is believed to love the sweets of the children he protects.

In Issa's hokku, believers are implied to be happy because they are able to present delicious things to Jizo with the expectation that he will eat them, and Jizo also seems very satisfied and happy to receive the sweet rice balls. Together Jizo and believers enjoy the moment as a mild spring breeze blows. Of course the eating the bodhisattva statue does is invisible, but it seems to be implied by the invisible yet pleasant breeze. Issa is presumably happy about this situation, and his hokku may be his virtual-world plate of sweet rice balls that he is presenting to the Jizo statue near Nara, far from his hometown in the highlands of Shinano. In the original legend, which Issa uses as a parallel narrative that resonates with his own situation as a stepson, the boy presents a bowl of rice to Jizo, so it's natural that the mature man Issa would present a hokku about sweet rice balls, which are even more delicious.

Of course Issa must have been aware that if the legend was true, it meant that the boy cheated by eating the rice himself and then lied to his stepmother and thus achieved happiness through (unavoidable) cunning and deceit, though Issa must also be aware that the legend implies that the boy himself became (or became one with) Jizo for a short time and ate the rice as Jizo, so his deceit resembles literary creation. Perhaps Issa is suggesting that the invisible eating being done by the stone bodhisattva resembles the sleight of hand that allows a hokku to taste just as delicious as a physical rice ball and to offer pleasure that lasts even longer than the sense of taste allows. In any case, Issa's hokku seems to be meant to honor and spiritually feed Jizo and may imply that, inspired by the legend, it was written by Jizo through Issa.

Just before the above haibun passage and hokku is placed the following famous hokku, which Issa claimed to have written when he was six and suffering without a mother:

orphan sparrows,
come over here
and play with me


With the placement of this hokku next to the haibun and hokku about Jizo, Issa may be linking the creation of his first hokku with the invisible eating done by the stone bodhisattva and the boy.

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大切のぼたもちふむなりきりぎりす
taisetsu no botamochi fumu nari kirigirisu

hey cricket,
don't walk on those
important rice dumplings!

Tr. Chris Drake

This hokku is probably from 1810, when Issa was mostly in the area just east of Edo.

. Read the comment by Chris Drake .


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命婦よりぼた餅たばす彼岸哉
myoobu yori botamochi tabasu higan kana

from a court lady
I get some Botamochi -
spring equinox

Tr. Gabi Greve

quote
In Japan, myōbu (命婦) is a title which was given to ladies of the fifth rank in the imperial court or to midrank noblewomen. In The Pillow Book, Lady Myōbu was also the name of a pet cat belonging to Empress Consort Sadako, whom the author Sei Shōnagon served.

This title is commonly associated with the kitsune fox messengers of the rice deity Inari, for reasons that are obscure. Japanese folklore contains several stories that suggest explanations for the connection, mainly involving the Fushimi Inari Shrine on Mount Inari near Kyoto. On this mountain are a vast number of shrines, mainly to Inari, but also to other deities, including a fox deity named Myōbu. The Fushimi shrine itself contains smaller shrines, including the Byakko-sha ("white fox shrine") and the Myōbu-sha ("court lady shrine").
Legends connecting kitsune to the title myōbu . . .
Kitsune who did not follow Inari are often referred to as Nogitsune.
© More in the WIKIPEDIA !


. Yosa Buson 与謝蕪村 in Edo .


. haru higan 春彼岸 spring equinox .


. Fushimi Inari Taisha 伏見稲荷大社 Fushimi Shrine .


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Related words

***** "Ricecakes in difficult times"
gonan no mochi 御難の餅 (ごなんのもち)

kigo for mid-autumn
september 12

Ceremony at the "Dragon Mouth" Tatsu no kuchi Hoonan E
龍口法難会(たつのくちほうなんえ)
Botamochi Ceremony, botamochi eshiki 牡丹餅会式(ぼたもちえしき)

Read the above story about Nun Nichi-Ei and Nichiren for the background of this ceremony.



. Saint Nichiren 日蓮
(February 16, 1222 – October 13, 1282)
and kigo related to him


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Saijiki of Japanese Ceremonies and Festivals

Sweets from Japan (wagashi)

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7 comments:

Gabi Greve - Issa said...

Kobayashi Issa

大切のぼたもちふむなりきりぎりす
taisetsu no botamochi fumu nari kirigirisu

hey cricket, don't walk
on those precious
rice dumplings

Read another comment by Chris Drake

Gabi Greve said...

Kappa the Water Goblin
-
Legend from Fukushima
-
On December 1 is the day of Kappare カッパレ(川入り) going into the water.
Once upon a time a mother was worried about her son who went to the beach swimming every day. She worried he might be eaten by Kappako かっぱっこ(河童). So she made him many botamochi ぼた餅 rice cakes to feed to the Kappa and spare his life instead.
.
http://kappapedia.blogspot.jp/2015/03/fukushima-prefecture.html
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Gabi Greve said...

- Mochi 餅 rice cakes and 妖怪 Yokai monsters -
with botamochi
.
http://kappapedia.blogspot.jp/2015/05/mochi-and-yokai.html
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Gabi Greve said...


Legends about Jizo Bosatsu and mochi rice cakes - 地蔵と餅
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http://gokurakuparadies.blogspot.jp/2015/05/jizo-mochi-legends.html
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Gabi Greve said...

Ta no Kami, Tanokami 田の神 God of the Rice Fields
and inoko 亥の子 / イノコ / 亥子 the "young wild boar"

Tokyo 東京都 ..... 多摩村 Tama
botamochi ボタモチ rice cakes

Botamochi are given to エビス様 Ebisu.

On the day of Inoko, a frog puts some Botamochi in a box and carries them on his back to the Daikon fields. The Daikon are already waiting and stick out their heads, calling
moo inoko ka もう亥の子か (a pun with moo ii kai? in a children's game).
.
https://japanshrinestemples.blogspot.jp/2017/10/tanokami-inoko-legends.html
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Gabi Greve said...

Tengu and botamochi legends
Kichigo 吉吾 sat under a tree and asked the Tengu what he feared most.
The answer was いけが(茨 ibara)wild roses .
When the Tengu asked Kichigo what he feared most, Kichigo said
botamochi 牡丹餅 "Peony Cakes".

A few days later when the Tengu was asleep, Kichigo placed a lot of wild roses around his bed. As a revenge, the Tengu now threw many peony cakes down the roof of Kichigo's house. Kichigo picked them up and ate them all.
.
Fukuoka Tengu legends
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Gabi Greve said...

Botamochi Bakemono monster ぼた餅化け物
Appearance: Botamochi bakemono are audio phenomena which come from underneath a house’s floorboards. It gets its name from botamochi, a sweet made from sticky rice covered in brown azuki paste.

Behavior: Botamochi bakemono are sound mimics. They prank people by copying the voices of people who live in the house.
more
https://yokai.com/botamochibakemono/
.