Yomitan, Okinawa
The kilns at Yomitan Sanpin Kita-gama still burn with wood, their thirteen-chamber climbing structure producing the thick-glazed, earth-toned wares that four master potters share between them. On the shelf beside the workshop entrance, finished pieces sit without ceremony — bowls, cups, jars — each one carrying the particular weight of Okinawan clay. Yomitan, a village on the central-west coast of Okinawa's main island, holds this kind of craft not as spectacle but as ongoing practice.
The East China Sea cuts hard against the cliffs at Zanpamisaki, two kilometers of sheer drop facing open water. Inland, the roads pass through neighborhoods where the smell of beni-imo — the purple sweet potato that goes into the tarts pressed out by the millions at Okashigoten's factory — drifts faintly from production lines visible through glass. Hija Shuzo continues to distill Zanpa awamori a short distance away, the white-label bottle at twenty-five degrees, the black at thirty, both sold plainly without ceremony.
Beneath this present activity, the ground carries heavier memory. The 1945 American landings came ashore here, and the site of Chibichiri-gama is marked and maintained within the village itself. The ruins of Zakimi Castle, built in the early fifteenth century by the chieftain Gosamaru, now sit as a UNESCO World Heritage site, with the Yuntanza Museum opened nearby in 2018 to hold local history. These layers — Ryukyuan stonework, wartime earth, ceramic tradition, awamori — coexist without resolution, which is perhaps the most honest thing about Yomitan.
On this island
- 座喜味城跡
- 木綿原遺跡
- 沖縄海岸
- 都屋