Tokyo: 29 Walks in the World's Most Exciting City. John H. Martin

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is the Festivals Section, while the Hall of Arrival is to the right of the Honden. Behind the Haiden is the Treasury, with the mementoes of Japan’s wars mentioned above. Farther to the right-hand, rear of the shrine are the attractive Divine Pond, teahouses, and sumo ring.

      The two major festivals of the Yasukuni shrine occur in the spring on April 21–23 while the autumn festival is held on October 17–20. At these times, in the tradition of the past, Noh dances, Bugako, Kyogen farces, biwa music, folk music, kendo, and other activities to please the spirits of the dead are offered. These are festive occasions as are all Japanese commemorative functions for the dead. At these times, an Imperial Messenger presents imperial offerings at the shrine and reads the Imperial Message to the deities here enshrined. Commemorative services are also held each August 15, the day World War II ended for Japan. One other period of the year is particularly noted at this shrine, and that is the springtime blossoming of the many ornamental cherry trees on the shrine grounds.

      6 CHIDORIGAFUCHI WATER PARK

      Returning to the large statue of Masujiro Omura and crossing Yasukuni-dori, one can walk down Yasukuni-dori to the street that runs south along the Kita-no-maru Garden to Chidorigafuchi (Plover Depths), the pond that existed before the castle was built and that was included within the moat structure of the castle grounds. It takes its name from the perceived resemblance of this waterway to the wings of a plover in flight. Chidorigafuchi Water Park is lined with some 90 cherry trees that in 1953 replaced the ones first planted here by Sir Ernest Satow (1843– 1929), a British diplomat in the early Meiji period in the 19th century. The original trees were uprooted in the course of the construction of the Shuto Expressway.

      The name “Water Park” refers not only to the moat but to the fact that one can rent rowboats for a pleasurable time on the waters of the park. Beyond this area, just before the Shuto Expressway and in a small park on the right is a hexagonal pavilion with a light green roof that has served since 1959 as the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier, a sacred spot commemorating the 90,000 unknown dead of Japan’s wars. Under the roof is a symbolic, large stone sarcophagus. Each August 15, the anniversary of the end of World War II, the emperor makes his obeisance at this shrine, which remembers all those who died, regardless of their religion (unlike the Yasukuni Shrine, which is Shinto) or whether they were civilian or military. This visit occurs without the opprobrium connected with the Yasukuni Shrine for many non-nationalists and people of other nations.

      Continuing along the western side of the Imperial Palace grounds, the handsome British Embassy is passed in the Bancho district of the city. In this sector the Hatamoto, the 7,000 guardsmen, drawn from the retainers of the shogun’s domains, were stationed in an area that stretched to Ichigaya. Six regiments of these warrior guards lived here, each in his own district (bancho), and the district is still divided into six bancho blocks. After 1868, many of the Meiji nobility had their mansions here, and the area is still an upper-class residential district. Opposite the British Embassy, for example, is the modern Bancho House by the American architect Robert Stern, a combination office and apartment building.

      Farther south along Uchibori-dori, the Hanzo-mon Gate to the Fukiage Imperial Palace is monitored by a police guard. At this place once lived Hattori Hanzo, the leader of the shogun’s spies, those black-clad Ninja of tradition who were adept at infiltration, assassination, and acts of derring-do that still fill Japanese cinema and television with their version of traditional medieval Japanese soap operas. The Hanzo-mon Gate has a more pacific reputation in modern times, since this is one of the entrances to the Fukiage area of the Imperial Palace private grounds. It was in this area that the Showa emperor, Hirohito, had his botanical laboratory and rice paddy fields. The emperor was unwittingly carrying on a tradition from the 18th century, for here the eighth shogun, Yoshimune (1716–1745) had an herb garden and a plantation for plant research. Just before the gate, on the left, is a small park that runs along the palace moat, and in it is a statue grouping of three nude, young male figures (such as the Tokugawa and Meiji governments would not have permitted). The park is a favorite place for lunchtime use by workers from adjacent office buildings.

      The Hanzomon subway station lies two short streets along Shinjuku-dori to the west of the Hanzo-mon entrance to the palace, and it can be taken to other connecting lines as one leaves this area. However, the JCII Camera Museum offers a possible diversion before reaching the end point of this walk. It can be reached by taking the first right on Shinjuku-dori and continuing past two quick intersections and almost to the third.

      7 JCII CAMERA MUSEUM (DIVERSION)

      The JCII Camera Museum (open Tuesday—Sunday, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.) was established by the Japan (Nippon) Camera and optical instruments Inspection and testing Institute (JCII) in the late 1980s. Although likely of limited interest to non–camera buffs, it is a must-see for photographers for its collection of several thousand cameras from Japan and overseas, which range from historic models and so-called “curio” cameras to modern gear. Of broader interest are the photographic exhibitions that the museum puts on regularly. To proceed to the Hanzomon subway station after your visit, return along the street by which you came and, at the first intersection, turn right. The station will lie before you when you reach the next cross street.

      GETTING THERE

      This tour starts at Otemachi Station, which is served by the Toei Mita Line, the Hibiya Line, the Tozai Line, the Marunouchi Line, and the Hanzomon Line. One can also walk to Otemachi Station in five minutes from Tokyo Station.

      Walking Tour 3

      NAGATACHO AND AKASAKA

      High Culture, the Law, Politics, an Ancient Shrine, Commercial Palaces, and the Shadow of Geisha Times

      1 Hanzo-mon to Nagatacho

      2 National Diet Building

      3 Kasumigaseki and Toronomon

      4 Ark Hills and the Okura Museum (diversion)

      5 Hie Shrine

      6 Akasaka Mitsuke Area

      7 New Otani Art Museum

      8 Toyokawa Inari Shrine

      9 Akasaka detached Palace

      10 Sogetsu kaikan

      11 The Meiji Outer Garden (diversion)

      Tokyo is, of course, the capital of Japan, and as such it has the nation’s legislative chambers and its massive bureaucratic offices as major aspects of contemporary life. Few countries are as controlled by their bureaucracy as is Japan, and most of these offices of government are clustered about the National Diet Building so as to be certain, perhaps, that elected officials do not stray from what is considered best for the nation by the bureaucracy. The area geographically falls into two districts, Nagatacho, whose center is the Diet Building and the offices of the political parties, and then Kasumigaseki, where the governmental offices and ministries and the first skyscraper of modern Tokyo, the 36-story Kasumigaseki Building, are located. Kasumigaseki derives its name from the seki or 14th-century guarded barrier that once existed in this quarter. It was poetically named the Kasumi Barrier, the “Barrier of the Mists,” a name that is perhaps appropriate even today for a government quarter.

      Behind the political center of Tokyo and of Japan, situated on one of those fingers of hills of the original Edo’s High City that stretch into the Low City where the commoners dwelled, is the Hie Jinja, a Shinto shrine of great antiquity that served to protect the shogun’s capital and perhaps still protects governmental affairs today. It was the locus of one of the three great festivities that enlivened

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