rumah ibadat • 2-chōme-21-34 Nishiazabu, Minato City, Tokyo 106-0031, Jepun
Below is a proposed article structure to maximize the charm of this tourist destination.
Quietly standing in the oasis of the city, this is the Soto Zen sect head temple, Tokyo Hasedera Temple, also known as Hasedera. Looking up, a wooden eleven-faced Kannon statue smiles gently.
The Kannon statue, which was destroyed in the war, was revived over 6 years by the Japan Art Academy's Seien Shrine, modeling it after the Empress Showa. The 10-meter-high Kannon statue is the epitome of tradition carved from a 600-year-old camphor tree.
The green of the pine trees reflecting in the stone garden, the conical roof of the bell tower. The precincts, with the atmosphere of Zen Buddhism, seem to be in a corner of Manhattan. It is a hidden spot recommended for when you want to take a break from the bustling cityscape.
In the temple grounds, there are the graves of Edo-period kokugaku scholar Izawa Ranken and the late Edo-period philosopher and essayist Kuroda Seiki. You can quietly remember the footsteps of these great people.
Why not come and feel the