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Toyohashi Gion Festival Hand-Held Fireworks
Here a man holds the fireworks in his arms. The tezutsu is a hand-held firework—gunpowder…
Here a man holds the fireworks in his arms. The tezutsu is a hand-held firework—gunpowder packed into a length of bamboo, lit, and clutched against the body as a column of fire roars upward and a cascade of sparks rains down over the man who holds it. Toyohashi is where this tradition was born.
It happens at the Gion festival of Yoshida Shrine. The pillar of flame leaps many times a man's height, and in its glare you can see the face of the one holding it—calm, fixed, enduring the heat and the sparks pouring down around him. It is not a spectacle watched from a safe distance. It is fire embraced, deliberately, by a human being standing in its center.
This is not a festival of shells bursting in a far-off sky. It is something older and more visceral—the body itself placed against the fire, courage made visible in the willingness to hold what burns. Sparks, pride, and nerve. The tezutsu is fireworks brought down to earth and into a man's own arms, and to watch it is to feel the old danger that all our prettier displays have learned to keep at a distance.
The tracks converge at Toyohashi Station — Shinkansen, JR, Meitetsu, and the slow city tram all arriving at the same point before fanning out again. The tram, run by Toyohashi Tetsudo, still rattles along the Higashida Line through ordinary streets, past bicycle shops and convenience stores, the kind of route that exists for commuters rather than sightseers.
Toyohashi has long sat at a junction — between the old Tokaido road and the sea, between Mikawa's agricultural interior and the open trade of Mikawa Port. The post-town of Futakawa-juku, preserved at the Futakawa-juku Honjin Shiryokan, gives a sense of how the Edo-period road traffic moved through here. Inland, the fields produce shiso and Jiro persimmons in quantities that supply much of the country, and the quail eggs sold quietly in supermarkets here come largely from local farms. Chikuwa, the grilled fish-paste tube sold warm at market stalls, is a local staple rather than a souvenir — something eaten at lunch, not photographed.
At the Ankyumi Kando Shinmei Shrine, the Oni Matsuri — a festival recognized as an important intangible folk cultural property — draws the neighborhood into something older and less tidy than a civic parade. Elsewhere, at Iwata Hachimangu, hand-held firework cylinders called tezutsu hanabi are offered at the annual festival, fire held at arm's length in the dark. These are not performances staged for visitors; they persist because the people here have kept them.
Stay in Toyohashi, Aichi
What converges here
- Takayama Janketsu
- Urigasato Site
- Umakoshi Nagahizuka Tumulus Group
- Ishimakiyama Limestone Flora Community
- Ashige Wetland
- Higashi Kannon-ji Tahoto Pagoda
- Toyohashi Holy Resurrection Cathedral (St. Matthew the Apostle and Evangelist)
- Mikawa Wan
- Toyohashi
- Toyohashi
- Toyohashi
- Toyohashi
- Shin-Toyohashi
- Ekimae
- Futagawa
- Aichi-Daigakumae
- Minami-Sakae
- Oshimizu
- Takashi
- Higashida-Sakagami
- Yanagibashi
- Akaiwa-guchi
- Ibara
- Koike
- Undokoenmae
- Shiyakushomae
- Keirinju-mae
- Ueda
- Mukogaoka
- Ashiwara
- Higashi-Haccho
- Oitsu
- Funamachi
- Sugiyama
- Higashi-da
- Shimoji
- Fudaki
- Toyohashi-Koenmae
- Ekimae-Odori
- Shinkawa
- Maehata
- Futagawa Fishing Port
- Takatoyo Fishing Port