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Munakata Taisha Image: Wikipedia/そらみみ
lifestyle

JAL staff reassigned to work as shrine maidens during virus travel downturn

7 Comments
By Casey Baseel, SoraNews24

A lot of businesses are hurting these days, but the effects of the coronavirus pandemic have hit travel providers particularly hard. In addition to Japan being almost closed to international tourism, many residents are also choosing to cancel or postpone their domestic travel plans.

That’s left Japan Airlines with a surplus of staff members to handle drastically reduced workloads, leading the company to look for ways to temporarily reassign employees to other roles. As a result, soon a group of JAL employees from Fukuoka Airport will instead be showing up for work as miko, Shinto shrine maidens.

As shown in the video above, a number of JAL Fukuoka ground staff underwent training at Munakata Taisha shrine, located in the town of Munakata, Fukuoka Prefecture. While working as a shrine maiden doesn’t require the taking of long-term vows in the manner of a Christian nun, the job does require knowledge of specialized vocabulary and etiquette.

Japanese people traditionally visit their local shrine or temple at the start of the new year to pray for health and prosperity in the months to come. Many also purchase auspicious objects and home decorations such as omamori, hamaya and fukusasa (good luck charms shaped like a cloth pouch, arrow, and bamboo branch, respectively). Each of these are meant to be handled and passed to worshippers in a particular manner, which was also covered during the miko training session.

While it’s unlikely the newly minted miko expected to have this sort of work assignment when they started working for Japan’s largest airline, there is some overlap in that both roles are focused on providing courteous hospitality, and both JAL and Munakata Taisha say they look forward to the potential synergy and opportunity to learn from one another. The arrangement also serves as an example of an often overlooked aspect of Japanese work culture in which companies generally try to avoid laying off employees simply because the economy is slumping, and instead try to figure out some way for them to stay on the payroll.

The JAL miko will be working at the shrine from Jan 1 to 11.

Source: Yahoo! Japan News/ TNC TV Nishi Nihon via Otakomu, Nishi Nippon Shimbun

Read more stories from SoraNews24.

-- Feel what it’s like to be a Shinto shrine maiden with shrine’s experience package for foreigners

-- Yaoi fans rejoice as Shinto shrine seems to open part-time positions for male shrine maidens

-- Japanese shrine maidens in Osaka spotted wearing unusual costumes during winter

© SoraNews24

©2024 GPlusMedia Inc.

7 Comments
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Cute idea. What about the male stewards?

3 ( +3 / -0 )

Who said that females in Japan had it tough?

6 ( +6 / -0 )

Cute idea. What about the male stewards?

Probably reassigned to backbreaking cargo loading work.

2 ( +2 / -0 )

The cabin attendants? that's great idea. it'll give them a chance to see life in a different perspective.

Life is not just about highflying, expensive cosmetics/handbags/clothes...☺

-1 ( +0 / -1 )

The arrangement also serves as an example of an often overlooked aspect of Japanese work culture in which companies generally try to avoid laying off employees simply because the economy is slumping, and instead try to figure out some way for them to stay on the payroll.

Nice, if not for the fact that JAL has gone bust multiple times due to its financial recklessness, only to get taxpayer bailouts -- on condition that it starts actually more financially responsible.

0 ( +0 / -0 )

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