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'Setsubun' bean-throwing festival events held across Japan

7 Comments

Events marking Setsubun, also known as the bean-throwing festival, were held across Japan on Sunday.

Setsubun marks the day before the beginning of spring, according to the lunar calendar. The festival involves a ritual called mamemaki, traditionally intended to drive away the evil and wish for good health for the year. The ritual involves throwing roasted soybeans at people and children.

Despite the rainy weather Sunday, temples drew crowds for the event. At Naritasan Shinshoji temple in Chiba Prefecture, stars of NHK's Taiga drama "Berabou," kabuki actors and sumo wrestlers threw soybeans from the stage to excited spectators who tried to catch and eat them.

It is believed to bring good fortune if you eat the same number of soybeans as your age.

The festival is also celebrated in many homes. The father or the oldest man in the house plays the role of a demon, wearing a mask, while children throw soybeans at him shouting Oni wa soto, Fuku wa uchi (Demons out, good fortune in!).

Another traditional custom for Setsubun is to eat eho-maki (hand-rolled sushi) which is supposed to bring good luck. You eat an uncut sushi roll while facing the lucky direction of the year. This direction changes every year and is determined by the 12 Chinese zodiac symbols.

Each year, the Consumer Affairs Agency and the National Center for Child Health and Development issue a caution to parents to be careful about letting young children swallow the soybeans. In the past, there have been cases of children aged between nine months and four years old being taken to hospitals for treatment after choking on the beans.

Health officials say it is possible for a soybean to lodge in a child's bronchial tract for one or two days before being discovered. A four-year-old child choked to death at a childcare center in 2020 in Shimane Prefecture. The cause of death was suffocation due to one bean that got stuck in his throat. The bean was enlarged as it contained moisture from water. Each child was given around 10 beans during the event.

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7 Comments
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I’ve always thought that throwing beans around the house is a fine waste of food so instead of doing that I’ll have some beans on toast to mark the coming spring

-3 ( +8 / -11 )

You have to love Japan.

US headlines: Major trade war with neighbours! FBI top people fired! Musk takes control over social security!

Japan headlines: People throw beans.

-5 ( +5 / -10 )

I did my bit by eating peanuts today. I hope that qualifies in some small way.

3 ( +5 / -2 )

Is the festival a day early this year to keep calendars aligned?

0 ( +4 / -4 )

Setsubun roughly translates into English as "scare the crap out of little kids and laugh about it."

0 ( +3 / -3 )

@ Some dude.

Very true. Lighthearted can win the day sometimes. Good ole Japan.

Is that Ken Watanabe in the photo? Top center in green? Looks like him.

2 ( +2 / -0 )

I’ve always thought that throwing beans around the house is a fine waste of food so instead of doing that I’ll have some beans on toast to mark the coming spring

Oky thats a new one. What kind of beans on toast taste good?

1 ( +1 / -0 )

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