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Oyasato-yakata

The oyasato-yakata (おやさとやかた) complex is a collection of buildings in Tenri City, Nara, Japan, that form an incomplete square 872 m (954 yd) on each side surrounding the Divine Residence (Oyasato), a structure sacred to the Japanese new religion Tenrikyo. The task of revitalizing the area around the Residence was informed by both religious prophecy and city planning, and construction began in 1954 on a project that continues today. The oyasato-yakata is a massive organizational undertaking that is understood by Tenrikyo adherents as a spiritual practice,[1] creating a model city that reflects their belief in a Joyous Life.[2] As such a practice it has involved the entire Tenrikyo community, from the volunteers who assist in construction to professors who plan the scope of future wings. Archaeologists have also excavated ancient artifacts beneath its foundations.

The complex includes Tenri University, Tenri Hospital, Tenri Seminary, the Besseki Lecture Hall, the Shuyoka, dormitories, and Tenri High School. Currently 25 wings of the complex are complete. The complete structure calls for 68 wings.[3]

Origins

 
Uchida's plan for the Residence

At the beginning of the 20th century, the teachings of Tenrikyo's foundress Oyasama Miki became popular throughout Japan. In the following decades, the most devoted followers coalesced around Oyasama's residence in rural Nara, which she had perceived as the birthplace of the world, or Jiba. The six villages surrounding the Jiba slowly became filled with Tenrikyo ministers, mystics, and evangelists, and the area was urbanized. A popular international school (now Tenri University) and Tenri Central Library, built by followers, were also attracting a variety of people to the area. It was around this time that Tenrikyo's Second Shinbashira (community leader) Shōzen Nakayama conceived of creating a grand construction project as a testament to the loyalty of Oyasama's followers.[4]

In 1934, Nakayama commissioned the famed architect Yoshikazu Uchida to draw up a blueprint for the area. Uchida arranged ten buildings around Oyasama's Residence. A 50-meter boulevard would come out of the Residence on a north–south axis, along which six school buildings would be lined up. Classrooms and large auditoriums would be built at the end of this boulevard. The international school and library were to be eventually integrated into this plan. In January 1937, a middle school (now Tenri High School) was built according to Uchida's plan, but as Japan mobilized for the Pacific War the plan had to be temporarily shelved.[4]

In 1952, after the war and Occupation, Tenrikyo Chief of Architecture Onzō Okumura (奥村音造) was asked by Nakayama to design a large Besseki Lecture Hall to accommodate 10,000 people on the site of an old girls' school. However, considering the location of the school, several hundred meters to the west of the Residence. Okumura thought back to an old prophecy of Oyasama, as recorded in Tenrikyo's Anecdotes:[4]

One day Oyasama was gazing out of the south window of Her room in the Nakaminami-Gatehouse and looking at the vast expanse of bamboo thickets and rice fields. Suddenly She said to the attendants: "Someday this neighborhood will be filled with houses. Houses will line the street for seven ri between Nara and Hase. One ri square will be filled with inns. The divine Residence will become eight cho [872 meters] square."[5]

Since Tenrikyo was at the time a tiny cult centered on a house in a farming village, the growth of Tenri into a city full of inns paralleling this prophecy was seen as miraculous. In the Osashizu these prophecies are repeated, with the admonition that "it will not do to think of small things."[5] The original idea was that the planned school buildings and classrooms would be the first part of an enormous central hub that would eventually fill eight cho square. But Okumura began to consider the relationships between the planned buildings and the Residence. If other buildings were placed directly next to the Residence, he reasoned, they would put the Residence in shadow during the sunrise, and metaphorically crowd out the importance of the Jiba itself. Thus, with Nakayama's permission, he developed a new overarching plan for the school, library, and other Tenrikyo buildings surrounding the Residence. His new plan, which arranged the buildings in a great square with open space on the inside, was dubbed the oyasato-yakata, roughly meaning the "grounds of Oyasama's Residence".[4]

In 1954 the Japanese government merged the six villages surrounding the Residence into a single city, which was dubbed Tenri City. In the same year, the Tenrikyo central church announced the construction of the first wing of the yakata.[4] The continuing development of the oyasato-yakata is currently overseen by a committee with a small office in Tenri Seminary.

Construction

 
Another view of the Sankokan Museum, showing the walkways on the ground floor

The yakata was designed along the lines of Edo period tenement housing (長屋), but modernized with reinforced walls, multiple stories, and balconies for emergency access. The result is a fusion between Western and Japanese architecture. Gaps were purposefully left in the ground floors for pedestrians, making the yakata a walkable space. The balconies and rooftops were also designed to please the eye at the ground level. At the same time, the roofs are visible from Oyasama's gravesite north of the city.[2]

As construction began, Tenrikyo followers founded the Oyasato Construction Young Men's Association Hinokishin Corps, which volunteered time and labor to help build the yakata. The corps still continues their work today.[6] By 1956, one corner of the complex had been built at the cost of 23 billion yen, an enormous expense given the economic depression of the time.[7]

When part of the foundations for the complex were dug in 1977, an archaeological investigation uncovered prehistoric cum,[8] as is typical during construction in Tenri. Although it was a sparsely inhabited village in Oyasama's time, Tenri City lies on top of a confirmed cultural center of prehistoric Japan.[9]

Timeline of construction

Name[10] Translation Scale Date of completion Facilities
Shin Tō Tō (真東棟) East Center Wing six stories, one underground floor 26 October 1955 Kyōgi oyobi Shiryō Shūseibu, Tenri Ongaku Kenkyūkai, Tenri Kyōkō Honka
Tō Sa Dai-ittō (東左第一棟) East Left Wing 1 five stories, one underground floor 26 October 1955 Besseki-jō
Tō Sa Dai-nitō (東左第二棟) East Left Wing 2 five stories, one underground floor 26 October 1955 Besseki-jō
Tō Sa Dai-santō (東左第三棟) East Left Wing 3 five stories, one underground floor 26 October 1955 Besseki-jō, Shūyōka, Tenrikyō Mikka Kōshūkai
Tō Sa Dai-yontō (東左第四棟) East Left Wing 4 five stories, two underground floors 26 October 1955 Besseki-jō, Shūyōka
Tō Sa Dai-gotō (東左第五棟) East Left Wing 5 five stories, two underground floors 25 October 1962 Shūyōka
Nan Sa Dai-yontō (南左第四棟) South Left Wing 4 five stories, two underground floors 13 September 1965 Tenri University
Nishi U Dai-nitō (西右第二棟) West Right Wing 2 eight stories, one underground floor 25 November 1965 Tenri Hospital (Ikoi no Ie)
Nishi U Dai-santō (西右第三棟) West Right Wing 3 eight stories, one underground floor 25 November 1965 Tenri Hospital (Ikoi no Ie)
Nan Sa Dai-santō (南左第三棟) South Left Wing 3 five stories, two underground floors 25 November 1967 Tenri Elementary School
Nan Sa Dai-nitō (南左第二棟) South Left Wing 2 five stories, two underground floors 1 September 1969 Tenri Elementary School
Nishi Sa Dai-yontō (西左第四棟) West Left Wing 4 eight stories, one underground floor 25 October 1970 Shinja Tsumesho Dormitory (Kōriyama Daikyōkai, Chūka Daikyōkai)
Tō U Dai-ittō (東右第一棟) East Right Wing 1 five stories, one underground floor 30 December 1972 Tenri Seminary
Nan Sa Dai-ittō (南左第一棟) South Left Wing 1 five stories, two underground floors 29 June 1975 Tenrikyō Kyōchō
Kita Sa Dai-yontō (北左第四棟) North Left Wing 4 seven stories, two underground floors 29 September 1975 Shinja Tsumesho Dormitory (Gakutō Daikyōkai, Kashima Daikyōkai)
Nishi Sa Dai-santō (西左第三棟) West Left Wing 3 eight stories, one underground floor 15 October 1975 Shinja Tsumesho Dormitory (Kōchi Daikyōkai)
Tō U Dai-yontō (東右第四棟) East Right Wing 4 five stories, two underground floors 2 April 1979 Kyōkaichō Ninmei Kōshūkai, Kyōkaichō Shikaku Kentei Kōshūkai
Nishi Sa Dai-gotō (西左第五棟) West Left Wing 5 eight stories, one underground floor 27 March 1980 Shinja Tsumesho Dormitory (Shikishima Daikyōkai)
Nishi U Dai-gotō (西右第五棟) West Right Wing 5 eight stories, two underground floors 1 December 1981 Shinja Tsumesho Dormitory (Nankai Daikyōkai)
Nishi U Dai-yontō (西右第四棟) West Right Wing 4 eight stories, two underground floors 1 April 1983 Tenri Hospital (Ikoi no Ie)
Nan U Dai-santō (南右第三棟) South Right Wing 3 seven stories, two underground floors 31 August 1985 Shinja Tsumesho Dormitory (Takayasu Daikyōkai)
Shin Nan Tō (真南棟) South Center Wing six stories 25 May 1992 School bureau, Ichiretsukai scholarship foundation, Tenri Youth Society bureau, student committee, student hall
Nishi U Dai-hattō (西右第八棟)[n 1] West Right Wing 8 eight stories, one underground floor 25 October 1993 Tenri Kyōkō Gakuen High School
Kita Sa Dai-hattō (北左第八棟)[n 1] North Left Wing 8 eight stories, one underground floor 25 October 1993 Tenri Kyōkō Gakuen High School
Nan U Dai-ittō (南右第一棟) South Right Wing 1 five stories, two underground floors 30 November 2000 Tenri Sankōkan Museum
Nan U Dai-nitō (南右第二棟) South Right Wing 2 five stories, two underground floors 25 October 2005 Tenrikyō Kiso Kōza, classrooms, exhibition space, movie theater, Yōki Hall
  1. ^ a b The two wings completed in 1993 are together called the Inui-sumi-tō 乾隅棟 or Northwest Corner.

Influence on the city

 
Tenri University Sankokan Museum, an example of the oyasato-yakata architecture

Information theorist Nomura Masaichi, noting Tenrikyo's description of the oyasato-yakata as a realization of the prophecy of Oyasama and the Tenrikyo saying that "in the construction of form lies the construction of hearts", refers to the ongoing construction as a "medium that combats decontextualization", claiming that it gives renewed relevance to the teachings and introduces a physical context by giving them an active role in shaping the city, and that in time, the thoughts of Tenrikyo believers will come to embody the grand scale of the architecture.[11]

One Tenrikyo elder has written the following on the subject:

"This vision of the Home of the Parent is not one of a world of concepts and beliefs apart from the actual world. It is a place where living beings can lead their lives, and place where they will have everything that is required for their lives. Yet it is not an ordinary place for living. Centered on the Jiba, it is a place to which the children return out of their longing for their Parent. Here, embraced by the love of God the Parent, they seek and cultivate the mind that is single-hearted with God. Here, they savor the joy of Parent and children living together in peace and harmony."[12]

Taro Igarashi notes first and foremost its massive accomplishment in city planning. The ground-level architecture can be compared somewhat to Karl Marx-Hof, a massive tenement complex in Vienna, and the pilotis evoke Charles Fourier's phalanstère, an architectural form specifically designed to evoke and construct an egalitarian utopia. However, the use of Japanese roofs in a modern city is quite rare, and the sheer size of the yakata makes it perhaps a unique megastructure anywhere in the world.[2] Commenting on Taro's article, the theologian Akio Inoue adds that the final interpretation, for the Tenrikyo believers who funded and built the structure, cannot be to inspire individual faith alone, but to "bridge the Joyous Life of the individual which determines the inner substance of faith and the world of the Joyous Life as an organized community".[13]

References

  1. ^ Tadashi Yamamoto. "The northwest corner of Tenrikyo Oyasato-Yakata building complex". Process: Architecture 123 (1995), 38–9
  2. ^ a b c (in Japanese) Taro Igarashi, "Learning from Tenri: 'The Heavenly City'," 2010-05-16 at the Wayback Machine 10+1 vol. 4 (1995), 90–109
  3. ^ The Path to the Joyous Life: Tenrikyo. Tenri: Tenri Overseas Department, February 2001. p.24.
  4. ^ a b c d e (in Japanese) Masahiro Yamaguchi and Kazuhiko Niwa, "The Transition Process of Urban Area Surrounding the Oyasato-Yakata," 2010-01-05 at the Wayback Machine 日本建築学会研究報告 48 (2009), 709
  5. ^ a b Tenrikyo Church Headquarters. Anecdotes of Oyasama, the Foundress of Tenrikyo (Tenri: Tenri Jihosha, 1976), 78
  6. ^ Inside Report in Honor of 50th Anniversary of Young Men's Assn. Hinokishin Corps 2011-07-22 at the Wayback Machine. Tenrikyo newsletter, December 2004
  7. ^ Mika Tokuchika, "Reminiscences of Religion in Postwar Japan" 2011-06-26 at the Wayback Machine Contemporary Religions in Japan 7.2 (June 1966), 265
  8. ^ Masaaki Okita, "Outline of Academic Excavation Accompanying Construction in Furu-cho, Tenri-shi, Nara-ken #200, Oyasato-yakata East Right Wing 4" 「奈良県天理市布留町200番地おやさとやかた東右第四棟建設に伴う学術的発掘調査の概要」 (1977). As quoted in Gina Lee Barnes, Protohistoric Yamato: Archaeology of the First Japanese State (Detroit: University of Michigan, 1988), 421, 463
  9. ^ Jonathan Edward Kidder. Himiko and Japan's Elusive Chiefdom of Yamatai (Honolulu: University of Hawaii Press, 2007), 245, 261
  10. ^ (in Japanese) Tenrikyō Kyōkai Honbu, ed. Michi no ugoki 2007: Tenrikyō nenkan 2007 no kiroku. Tenri, Tenrikyō Dōyūsha, 2009. p. 15
  11. ^ 野村雅一 ”伝達媒体としての建築物—天理教の「神殿」「おやさとやかた」普請をめぐって” 「情報と日本人」 (現代日本文化における伝統と変容 8) 東京: ドメス出版, 1992.8, p.55-6 (Nomura Masaichi, "Communicating Architecture through Media: Concerning Tenrikyo's 'Oyasato-Yakata' 'Temple'." In News and the Japanese (Tradition and Change in Modern Japanese Culture, vol. 8). Tokyo: Domesu Shuppan, 1992), p.55-6. 「形の普請に心の普請」「脱文脈化を阻止する媒体」
  12. ^ Yoshikazu Fukaya, Omichi-no-Kotoba, Tokyo: Doyusha 1990. As translated in "Oyasato-yakata" 2011-07-22 at the Wayback Machine, TENRIKYO, September 1990.
  13. ^ (in Japanese) Akio Inoue. 2009. "Oyasato-yakata and Utopia." 2011-10-05 at the Wayback Machine Glocal Tenri Vol. 10, No. 6, p. 1

Further reading

  • Igarashi Takayoshi, "City of the Joyous Life: Tenrikyo's Oyasato-Yakata." In Beautiful Cities and Wishes, Tokyo: Gakugei Shuppansha, 2006.
    • 五十嵐敬喜 ”陽気ぐらしの都市—天理教とおやさとやかた” 「美しい都市と祈り」 京都: 学芸出版社, 2006.4

Coordinates: 34°36′09″N 135°50′33″E / 34.60250°N 135.84250°E / 34.60250; 135.84250

oyasato, yakata, been, suggested, that, this, article, merged, into, tenrikyo, church, headquarters, discuss, proposed, since, october, 2022, oyasato, yakata, おやさとやかた, complex, collection, buildings, tenri, city, nara, japan, that, form, incomplete, square, ea. It has been suggested that this article be merged into Tenrikyo Church Headquarters Discuss Proposed since October 2022 The oyasato yakata おやさとやかた complex is a collection of buildings in Tenri City Nara Japan that form an incomplete square 872 m 954 yd on each side surrounding the Divine Residence Oyasato a structure sacred to the Japanese new religion Tenrikyo The task of revitalizing the area around the Residence was informed by both religious prophecy and city planning and construction began in 1954 on a project that continues today The oyasato yakata is a massive organizational undertaking that is understood by Tenrikyo adherents as a spiritual practice 1 creating a model city that reflects their belief in a Joyous Life 2 As such a practice it has involved the entire Tenrikyo community from the volunteers who assist in construction to professors who plan the scope of future wings Archaeologists have also excavated ancient artifacts beneath its foundations The complex includes Tenri University Tenri Hospital Tenri Seminary the Besseki Lecture Hall the Shuyoka dormitories and Tenri High School Currently 25 wings of the complex are complete The complete structure calls for 68 wings 3 Contents 1 Origins 2 Construction 2 1 Timeline of construction 3 Influence on the city 4 References 5 Further readingOrigins Edit Uchida s plan for the ResidenceAt the beginning of the 20th century the teachings of Tenrikyo s foundress Oyasama Miki became popular throughout Japan In the following decades the most devoted followers coalesced around Oyasama s residence in rural Nara which she had perceived as the birthplace of the world or Jiba The six villages surrounding the Jiba slowly became filled with Tenrikyo ministers mystics and evangelists and the area was urbanized A popular international school now Tenri University and Tenri Central Library built by followers were also attracting a variety of people to the area It was around this time that Tenrikyo s Second Shinbashira community leader Shōzen Nakayama conceived of creating a grand construction project as a testament to the loyalty of Oyasama s followers 4 In 1934 Nakayama commissioned the famed architect Yoshikazu Uchida to draw up a blueprint for the area Uchida arranged ten buildings around Oyasama s Residence A 50 meter boulevard would come out of the Residence on a north south axis along which six school buildings would be lined up Classrooms and large auditoriums would be built at the end of this boulevard The international school and library were to be eventually integrated into this plan In January 1937 a middle school now Tenri High School was built according to Uchida s plan but as Japan mobilized for the Pacific War the plan had to be temporarily shelved 4 In 1952 after the war and Occupation Tenrikyo Chief of Architecture Onzō Okumura 奥村音造 was asked by Nakayama to design a large Besseki Lecture Hall to accommodate 10 000 people on the site of an old girls school However considering the location of the school several hundred meters to the west of the Residence Okumura thought back to an old prophecy of Oyasama as recorded in Tenrikyo s Anecdotes 4 One day Oyasama was gazing out of the south window of Her room in the Nakaminami Gatehouse and looking at the vast expanse of bamboo thickets and rice fields Suddenly She said to the attendants Someday this neighborhood will be filled with houses Houses will line the street for seven ri between Nara and Hase One ri square will be filled with inns The divine Residence will become eight cho 872 meters square 5 Since Tenrikyo was at the time a tiny cult centered on a house in a farming village the growth of Tenri into a city full of inns paralleling this prophecy was seen as miraculous In the Osashizu these prophecies are repeated with the admonition that it will not do to think of small things 5 The original idea was that the planned school buildings and classrooms would be the first part of an enormous central hub that would eventually fill eight cho square But Okumura began to consider the relationships between the planned buildings and the Residence If other buildings were placed directly next to the Residence he reasoned they would put the Residence in shadow during the sunrise and metaphorically crowd out the importance of the Jiba itself Thus with Nakayama s permission he developed a new overarching plan for the school library and other Tenrikyo buildings surrounding the Residence His new plan which arranged the buildings in a great square with open space on the inside was dubbed the oyasato yakata roughly meaning the grounds of Oyasama s Residence 4 In 1954 the Japanese government merged the six villages surrounding the Residence into a single city which was dubbed Tenri City In the same year the Tenrikyo central church announced the construction of the first wing of the yakata 4 The continuing development of the oyasato yakata is currently overseen by a committee with a small office in Tenri Seminary Construction Edit Another view of the Sankokan Museum showing the walkways on the ground floor The yakata was designed along the lines of Edo period tenement housing 長屋 but modernized with reinforced walls multiple stories and balconies for emergency access The result is a fusion between Western and Japanese architecture Gaps were purposefully left in the ground floors for pedestrians making the yakata a walkable space The balconies and rooftops were also designed to please the eye at the ground level At the same time the roofs are visible from Oyasama s gravesite north of the city 2 As construction began Tenrikyo followers founded the Oyasato Construction Young Men s Association Hinokishin Corps which volunteered time and labor to help build the yakata The corps still continues their work today 6 By 1956 one corner of the complex had been built at the cost of 23 billion yen an enormous expense given the economic depression of the time 7 When part of the foundations for the complex were dug in 1977 an archaeological investigation uncovered prehistoric cum 8 as is typical during construction in Tenri Although it was a sparsely inhabited village in Oyasama s time Tenri City lies on top of a confirmed cultural center of prehistoric Japan 9 Timeline of construction Edit Name 10 Translation Scale Date of completion FacilitiesShin Tō Tō 真東棟 East Center Wing six stories one underground floor 26 October 1955 Kyōgi oyobi Shiryō Shuseibu Tenri Ongaku Kenkyukai Tenri Kyōkō HonkaTō Sa Dai ittō 東左第一棟 East Left Wing 1 five stories one underground floor 26 October 1955 Besseki jōTō Sa Dai nitō 東左第二棟 East Left Wing 2 five stories one underground floor 26 October 1955 Besseki jōTō Sa Dai santō 東左第三棟 East Left Wing 3 five stories one underground floor 26 October 1955 Besseki jō Shuyōka Tenrikyō Mikka KōshukaiTō Sa Dai yontō 東左第四棟 East Left Wing 4 five stories two underground floors 26 October 1955 Besseki jō ShuyōkaTō Sa Dai gotō 東左第五棟 East Left Wing 5 five stories two underground floors 25 October 1962 ShuyōkaNan Sa Dai yontō 南左第四棟 South Left Wing 4 five stories two underground floors 13 September 1965 Tenri UniversityNishi U Dai nitō 西右第二棟 West Right Wing 2 eight stories one underground floor 25 November 1965 Tenri Hospital Ikoi no Ie Nishi U Dai santō 西右第三棟 West Right Wing 3 eight stories one underground floor 25 November 1965 Tenri Hospital Ikoi no Ie Nan Sa Dai santō 南左第三棟 South Left Wing 3 five stories two underground floors 25 November 1967 Tenri Elementary SchoolNan Sa Dai nitō 南左第二棟 South Left Wing 2 five stories two underground floors 1 September 1969 Tenri Elementary SchoolNishi Sa Dai yontō 西左第四棟 West Left Wing 4 eight stories one underground floor 25 October 1970 Shinja Tsumesho Dormitory Kōriyama Daikyōkai Chuka Daikyōkai Tō U Dai ittō 東右第一棟 East Right Wing 1 five stories one underground floor 30 December 1972 Tenri SeminaryNan Sa Dai ittō 南左第一棟 South Left Wing 1 five stories two underground floors 29 June 1975 Tenrikyō KyōchōKita Sa Dai yontō 北左第四棟 North Left Wing 4 seven stories two underground floors 29 September 1975 Shinja Tsumesho Dormitory Gakutō Daikyōkai Kashima Daikyōkai Nishi Sa Dai santō 西左第三棟 West Left Wing 3 eight stories one underground floor 15 October 1975 Shinja Tsumesho Dormitory Kōchi Daikyōkai Tō U Dai yontō 東右第四棟 East Right Wing 4 five stories two underground floors 2 April 1979 Kyōkaichō Ninmei Kōshukai Kyōkaichō Shikaku Kentei KōshukaiNishi Sa Dai gotō 西左第五棟 West Left Wing 5 eight stories one underground floor 27 March 1980 Shinja Tsumesho Dormitory Shikishima Daikyōkai Nishi U Dai gotō 西右第五棟 West Right Wing 5 eight stories two underground floors 1 December 1981 Shinja Tsumesho Dormitory Nankai Daikyōkai Nishi U Dai yontō 西右第四棟 West Right Wing 4 eight stories two underground floors 1 April 1983 Tenri Hospital Ikoi no Ie Nan U Dai santō 南右第三棟 South Right Wing 3 seven stories two underground floors 31 August 1985 Shinja Tsumesho Dormitory Takayasu Daikyōkai Shin Nan Tō 真南棟 South Center Wing six stories 25 May 1992 School bureau Ichiretsukai scholarship foundation Tenri Youth Society bureau student committee student hallNishi U Dai hattō 西右第八棟 n 1 West Right Wing 8 eight stories one underground floor 25 October 1993 Tenri Kyōkō Gakuen High SchoolKita Sa Dai hattō 北左第八棟 n 1 North Left Wing 8 eight stories one underground floor 25 October 1993 Tenri Kyōkō Gakuen High SchoolNan U Dai ittō 南右第一棟 South Right Wing 1 five stories two underground floors 30 November 2000 Tenri Sankōkan MuseumNan U Dai nitō 南右第二棟 South Right Wing 2 five stories two underground floors 25 October 2005 Tenrikyō Kiso Kōza classrooms exhibition space movie theater Yōki Hall a b The two wings completed in 1993 are together called the Inui sumi tō 乾隅棟 or Northwest Corner Influence on the city Edit Tenri University Sankokan Museum an example of the oyasato yakata architecture Information theorist Nomura Masaichi noting Tenrikyo s description of the oyasato yakata as a realization of the prophecy of Oyasama and the Tenrikyo saying that in the construction of form lies the construction of hearts refers to the ongoing construction as a medium that combats decontextualization claiming that it gives renewed relevance to the teachings and introduces a physical context by giving them an active role in shaping the city and that in time the thoughts of Tenrikyo believers will come to embody the grand scale of the architecture 11 One Tenrikyo elder has written the following on the subject This vision of the Home of the Parent is not one of a world of concepts and beliefs apart from the actual world It is a place where living beings can lead their lives and place where they will have everything that is required for their lives Yet it is not an ordinary place for living Centered on the Jiba it is a place to which the children return out of their longing for their Parent Here embraced by the love of God the Parent they seek and cultivate the mind that is single hearted with God Here they savor the joy of Parent and children living together in peace and harmony 12 Taro Igarashi notes first and foremost its massive accomplishment in city planning The ground level architecture can be compared somewhat to Karl Marx Hof a massive tenement complex in Vienna and the pilotis evoke Charles Fourier s phalanstere an architectural form specifically designed to evoke and construct an egalitarian utopia However the use of Japanese roofs in a modern city is quite rare and the sheer size of the yakata makes it perhaps a unique megastructure anywhere in the world 2 Commenting on Taro s article the theologian Akio Inoue adds that the final interpretation for the Tenrikyo believers who funded and built the structure cannot be to inspire individual faith alone but to bridge the Joyous Life of the individual which determines the inner substance of faith and the world of the Joyous Life as an organized community 13 References Edit Tadashi Yamamoto The northwest corner of Tenrikyo Oyasato Yakata building complex Process Architecture 123 1995 38 9 a b c in Japanese Taro Igarashi Learning from Tenri The Heavenly City Archived 2010 05 16 at the Wayback Machine 10 1 vol 4 1995 90 109 The Path to the Joyous Life Tenrikyo Tenri Tenri Overseas Department February 2001 p 24 a b c d e in Japanese Masahiro Yamaguchi and Kazuhiko Niwa The Transition Process of Urban Area Surrounding the Oyasato Yakata Archived 2010 01 05 at the Wayback Machine 日本建築学会研究報告 48 2009 709 a b Tenrikyo Church Headquarters Anecdotes of Oyasama the Foundress of Tenrikyo Tenri Tenri Jihosha 1976 78 Inside Report in Honor of 50th Anniversary of Young Men s Assn Hinokishin Corps Archived 2011 07 22 at the Wayback Machine Tenrikyo newsletter December 2004 Mika Tokuchika Reminiscences of Religion in Postwar Japan Archived 2011 06 26 at the Wayback Machine Contemporary Religions in Japan 7 2 June 1966 265 Masaaki Okita Outline of Academic Excavation Accompanying Construction in Furu cho Tenri shi Nara ken 200 Oyasato yakata East Right Wing 4 奈良県天理市布留町200番地おやさとやかた東右第四棟建設に伴う学術的発掘調査の概要 1977 As quoted in Gina Lee Barnes Protohistoric Yamato Archaeology of the First Japanese State Detroit University of Michigan 1988 421 463 Jonathan Edward Kidder Himiko and Japan s Elusive Chiefdom of Yamatai Honolulu University of Hawaii Press 2007 245 261 in Japanese Tenrikyō Kyōkai Honbu ed Michi no ugoki 2007 Tenrikyō nenkan 2007 no kiroku Tenri Tenrikyō Dōyusha 2009 p 15 野村雅一 伝達媒体としての建築物 天理教の 神殿 おやさとやかた 普請をめぐって 情報と日本人 現代日本文化における伝統と変容 8 東京 ドメス出版 1992 8 p 55 6 Nomura Masaichi Communicating Architecture through Media Concerning Tenrikyo s Oyasato Yakata Temple In News and the Japanese Tradition and Change in Modern Japanese Culture vol 8 Tokyo Domesu Shuppan 1992 p 55 6 形の普請に心の普請 脱文脈化を阻止する媒体 Yoshikazu Fukaya Omichi no Kotoba Tokyo Doyusha 1990 As translated in Oyasato yakata Archived 2011 07 22 at the Wayback Machine TENRIKYO September 1990 in Japanese Akio Inoue 2009 Oyasato yakata and Utopia Archived 2011 10 05 at the Wayback Machine Glocal Tenri Vol 10 No 6 p 1Further reading EditIgarashi Takayoshi City of the Joyous Life Tenrikyo s Oyasato Yakata In Beautiful Cities and Wishes Tokyo Gakugei Shuppansha 2006 五十嵐敬喜 陽気ぐらしの都市 天理教とおやさとやかた 美しい都市と祈り 京都 学芸出版社 2006 4Coordinates 34 36 09 N 135 50 33 E 34 60250 N 135 84250 E 34 60250 135 84250 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Oyasato yakata amp oldid 1121025454, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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