From the AURA index Region

Fukusaki, Hyogo

municipality

image · pastoral × balanced (proxy)
Hyogo / Fukusaki
A reading of this place

The kappa figurines crouching beside the pond near Tsuikawa are not decorations for tourists — they belong to a town that has always taken folklore seriously. Fukusaki, in the Harima region of Hyogo, was the birthplace of Yanagita Kunio, the scholar who shaped Japanese folklore studies, and the town wears that inheritance without ceremony. The house where he spent his boyhood years, the Mikke Family Residence where he stayed as a young adolescent and absorbed the rhythms of rural life, the small shrine of Suzu no Mori Jinja with its great yamaomo tree — these are not arranged into a museum trail so much as left standing in the ordinary grain of the town.

The older layers run deeper still. Jinshakuji, founded in the tenth century, is one of the Harima Tendai six mountain temples, and its winter demon-chasing ritual, the oni-oi, still takes place on the grounds. Ōshōji, considered the oldest temple in Fukusaki, is known for its grove of sara trees and a garden designated as a prefectural scenic site. Up on the slopes of Nanakusa-yama, a cascade drops from a considerable height through a series of falls that continue down the hillside in sequence.

At street level, the old Tsujikawa post office building — a 1923 structure in the eclectic quasi-Western style — now operates as a café and small hotel, its worn façade still readable as civic ambition from another era. Mochi barley, grown in the area, turns up in local noodles and a regional soda. The town moves at the pace of a place that manufactures precision equipment and pharmaceuticals on its outskirts while the center holds its older shape, quietly.