HANAMI
Hanami - Hanami Party - The Japanese custom of enjoying
cherry blossoms along with the
arrival of Spring. See many Hanami pictures.
Hanami (花見, Hanami lit. "flower viewing") is the Japanese
traditional custom of enjoying the beauty of flowers, "flower" in this case
almost always meaning cherry
blossoms (桜 or 櫻, sakura), or ume blossoms (梅, ume). From late March to
early May, sakura bloom all over Japan. The blossom forecast (桜前線,
sakurazensen, lit. cherry blossom front) is announced each year by the
weather bureau, and is watched carefully by those planning hanami as the
blossoms only last a week or two. In modern-day Japan, hanami mostly
consists of having an outdoor party (Hanami Party) beneath the sakura during
daytime or at night. Hanami at night is called yozakura (lit. "night sakura").
In many places such as Ueno Park
temporary paper lanterns are hung for the purpose of yozakura.

Hanami Party in Ueno Park
Hanami Pictures
We have many pictures of cherry
blossoms and people enjoying Hanami Party in our Japanese picture
gallery including the following sections:
Ueno Park Pictures
Shinjuku Gyoen National Park
Pictures
Kitanomaru Park Pictures
Hanami History
The practice of hanami is many centuries old. The custom
is said to have started during the Nara Period (710–784) when the Chinese
Tang Dynasty influenced Japan in many ways; one of which was the custom of
enjoying flowers. Though it was ume blossoms that people admired in the
beginning, by the Heian Period, sakura came to attract more attention. From
then on, in tanka and haiku, "flowers" meant "sakura."
Hanami was first used as a term analogous to cherry blossom viewing in the
Heian era novel Tale of Genji. Whilst a wisteria viewing party was also
described, from this point on the terms "hanami" and "flower party" were
only used to describe cherry blossom
viewing.
Sakura originally was used to divine that year's harvest as well as an
announcer of the rice-planting season. People believed in gods' existence
inside the trees and made offerings at the root of sakura trees. Afterwards,
they partook of the offering with sake.
Emperor Saga of the Heian Period adopted this practice, and held
flower-viewing parties with sake and feasts underneath the blossoming boughs
of sakura trees in the Imperial Court in Kyoto. Poems would be written
praising the delicate flowers, which were seen as a metaphor for life
itself, luminous and beautiful yet fleeting and ephemeral. This was said to
be the origin of hanami in Japan.
The custom was originally limited to the elite of the Imperial Court, but
soon spread to samurai society and, by the Edo period, to the common people
as well. Tokugawa Yoshimune planted areas of cherry blossom trees to
encourage this. Under the sakura trees, people had lunch and drank sake in
cheerful feasts.
Today, the Japanese people continue the tradition of hanami, gathering in
great numbers wherever the flowering trees are found. Thousands of people
fill the parks to hold feasts under the flowering trees, and sometimes these
parties go on until late at night. In more than half of Japan, the cherry
blossoming period coincides with the beginning of the scholastic and fiscal
years, and so welcoming parties are often opened with hanami.
The teasing proverb dumplings rather than flowers (花より団子, hana yori dango)
hints at the real priorities for most cherry blossom viewers. (A punning
variation, Boys Over Flowers (花より男子, Hana Yori Dango), is the title of a
manga and anime series.)
(Article
based on
Wikipedia article and used under the
GNU Free Documentation License) |