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Mountaintop festival marks arrival of spring in Tokyo

Participants dressed as a Samurai warriors look on before the start of the second day of the two-day Hinode Sai, or Sunrise festival
Participants dressed as a Samurai warriors look on before the start of the second day of Hinode Sai, or Sunrise festival

A centuries-old festival that heralds spring drew hundreds of worshippers to a mountain in Tokyo yesterday, as robed Shinto priests led a procession to a sacred shrine at the summit.

The Hinode Sai, or Sunrise festival, is believed to have started when wandering ascetics climbed Mount Mitake in search of enlightenment.

Each spring, it attracts devotees from across Japan to the still largely untouched mountaintop about 55km from Tokyo's metropolitan area.

Priests prepare for the evening procession marking the start of a two-day Hinode Sai, or Sunrise festival
Priests prepare for the evening procession marking the start of the festival

The annual two-day ritual sees the shrine's deity - carefully wrapped in white silk and hidden from public view - brought from the summit down to a temporary "resting place" at the mountain's base before being returned in a celebratory ascent.

Shrine officials say participants receive the deity's blessing, offering protection for households and freedom from illness for the year ahead.

Devotees walk under a Torri gate, marking the entrance to a Shinto shrine, as they prepare to carry a portable shrine, holding a deity
Devotees walk under a torii gate marking the entrance to a Shinto shrine

The ritual, which has continued since the Middle Ages, according to the shrine's website, also symbolises the arrival of spring.

The silent procession began on Tuesday evening, winding through a mountain village past devotees and shuttered shops bestowing blessing as it went.

Guided by lantern light, priests took the wrapped deity down to its overnight resting place believed to be where it originally descended from the heavens.

Devotees pause before making the final ascent to the mountaintop
Worshippers pause for a break before making the final ascent to the mountaintop

At dawn, the Shinto priests in court robes - joined by people dressed as armoured samurai warriors and children in ceremonial attire - set off on a kilometre-long climb back to the summit shrine.

Their pilgrimage culminated with the echo of conch shells through the forest as the procession completed its final ascent of 330 stone steps to the mountaintop.