Country for PR: Japan
Contributor: Kyodo News JBN
Monday, March 09 2020 - 17:00
AsiaNet
Aizuwakamatsu Showcases "Samurai" Legacy to Foreign Media
AIZUWAKAMATSU, Japan, Mar. 9, 2020 /Kyodo JBN-AsiaNet/ --

Aizuwakamatsu City, a final stronghold of "samurai" (feudal warrior) rule in 
Japan, held a press tour for foreign correspondents and social media 
influencers based in Tokyo from January 31 to February 2 to showcase its 
samurai heritage and promote inbound tourism to the area in Fukushima 
Prefecture, northeastern Japan. 

(Photo1: 
https://kyodonewsprwire.jp/prwfile/release/M105755/202002287495/_prw_PI5fl_78PWlQS3.png)


During the three-day tour, the correspondents were guided around local sites 
revealing the legacy of the area's Aizu clan samurai, left after their demise 
during the Meiji Restoration in the middle to late 19th century. 

Correspondents experienced "kyudo" (the Japanese martial art of archery) and 
"zazen," a meditative discipline practiced by the samurai, at Aizu Hanko 
Nisshin-kan, a school for children of samurai said to have been one of the best 
of over 300 Edo-era (1603-1867) clan schools in Japan.

(Photo2: 
https://kyodonewsprwire.jp/prwfile/release/M105755/202002287495/_prw_PI6fl_W349562f.png)


At Fukunishi Honten, a former merchant home, correspondents saw how private and 
government investment is helping to preserve local history in Aizuwakamatsu 
after restoration of the facility provided a space to care for and exhibit 
local treasures.

"We are doing this to preserve and showcase our identity as the people of 
Aizu," said Takashi Yoshida, Fukunishi Honten curator.

Correspondents were also taken to the scenic old post town of Ouchijuku and to 
Iimoriyama, the latter being the site of the tragic deaths of a group of 
teenage Byakkotai samurai. 

(Photo3: 
https://kyodonewsprwire.jp/prwfile/release/M105755/202002287495/_prw_PI7fl_sRUKkWfF.png)

The tour introduced Aizuwakamatsu's unique local arts and crafts championed by 
the samurai as important sources of income for the city. Correspondents visited 
Yamagataya, a store and workshop specializing in candle painting, a craft 
practiced in Aizuwakamatsu for around 500 years, and watched a performance by 
"geigi," traditional Japanese female entertainers and hostesses.

"Aizu has so much to offer and is very much worth a visit from Japanese and 
foreign visitors," remarked one of the correspondents who hailed from Europe.

Despite hardships following the Great East Japan Earthquake in 2011, Fukushima 
Prefecture has emerged as the most important sake-brewing region of Japan, 
having claimed the most gold medals in the prestigious Sake Competition for 
seven consecutive years up to 2019. Correspondents visited the award-winning 
brewery Suehiro Shuzo Kaei-gura, a sake brand served at the 2019 G20 Osaka 
summit.


SOURCE: Aizuwakamatsu City