Japan Society of Boston

Japan Society of Boston

The Japan Society of Boston works across New England to foster friendships between Japanese and American citizens. We connect business to business, culture to culture, country to country, and organization to organization, through cultural, business, educational, and community focused programing.


The Art of Kintsugi

The Art of Kintsugi

Budo Part 4: Kendo

Budo Part 4: Kendo

Пікірлер

  • @alexhallmalta
    @alexhallmalta3 күн бұрын

    Beautiful craftsmanship. The gentleman in this short documentary, recently repaired a small old teapot we used regularly. The repair is noticeable if looked for, but seems to have been done when the pot was made. Lovely work.

  • @RetreatfarmFarmvilleVirginia
    @RetreatfarmFarmvilleVirginiaАй бұрын

    Well at least you won't have to travel far to find perfect rocks in Maine. After living in Lubec for 15 years i found smooth beautiful rocks on the Coast and rough rocks inland...mostly in my Garden every spring thanks to the frost heave. Now i live in Virginia and Rocks are hard to come by and are sold at a premium.

  • @hisakolisaevans9026
    @hisakolisaevans90263 ай бұрын

    Adam, I would like to commend you for your perseverance in becoming an excellent craftsman, as well as for your fine character. Thank you. It must have been really tough to experience an apprenticeship in Japan. Nowadays, it is rare to find people who are willing to go through a Japanese apprenticeship due to its difficulty and lengthy duration. The meaning of「石の上にも三年」 If you are patient and persevere, you will succeed.'' If you sit on a cold stone for three years, the stone will start to warm up, so it is used as a metaphor to show that even if it is hard at first if you persevere for a long time, you will be rewarded.

  • @purpleness64
    @purpleness646 ай бұрын

    I love this is so beautiful from something broken, art is created

  • @erraticrobot627
    @erraticrobot6276 ай бұрын

    You guys are great, so I decided to punish you with my garbage haiku...plez enjoy. 😊 hazy light on high sweet cries and flight, red wing...friend closing my eyes slipping

  • @dr.gaosclassroom
    @dr.gaosclassroom6 ай бұрын

    Thank you for sharing this!! I just did an interview with my student about Cold Mountain and his influence to Japanese poetry and Buddhism. It is so nice to find your channel!! I always love Haiku!!

  • @adamgoldgell2342
    @adamgoldgell23427 ай бұрын

    Why are the objects not on display that were found inside of Shotoku ?

  • @antoinettedrouart6209
    @antoinettedrouart62098 ай бұрын

    So interesting. I remember seeing the statue of Hachiko so often when we lived in Tokyo.

  • @fishinthesea3454
    @fishinthesea34548 ай бұрын

    Wow. Beautiful. Thank you.

  • @MrTetsukobu
    @MrTetsukobu9 ай бұрын

    Old pond The frog doesn´t jump Sound of water.

  • @annatoth9478
    @annatoth94789 ай бұрын

    What is the incredbile pink flower called at 4:06 in the video??

  • @kaylawatson8540
    @kaylawatson85402 ай бұрын

    Do you mean 6:04? I believe those are anemones

  • @ernestcole216
    @ernestcole2169 ай бұрын

    Wonderful explanations!!😂

  • @michaelherndon9573
    @michaelherndon957310 ай бұрын

    Love this. Thank you

  • @maryhoyt2609
    @maryhoyt2609 Жыл бұрын

    Nicely done! Camden, Maine is one of my favorite places on earth! It is so beautiful, and you and your crew are making it even more beautiful! Thank you so much for posting this informational and beautiful video!

  • @TheVoluntariast
    @TheVoluntariast Жыл бұрын

    Great interview and information on Manjiro san! Thank you.

  • @Tore1972Wisdom
    @Tore1972Wisdom Жыл бұрын

    I just love it. All my life i have been very drawn to the east. What a beautiful garden you have created.

  • @a.l.duncan6201
    @a.l.duncan6201 Жыл бұрын

    Oh, thank you very much for this presentation. Such a lovely representation of Japanese elements within an American garden. Adding to my studies for my own Japanese inspired gardens.

  • @marshawilliamson8602
    @marshawilliamson8602 Жыл бұрын

    Thank you. I’m so lucky to have discovered your channel. 🌸🐝

  • @ae_sko88
    @ae_sko88 Жыл бұрын

    Are we able to visit these gardens?

  • @lees7315
    @lees7315 Жыл бұрын

    Unfortunately, these are all private gardens. But I highly recommend Asticou Azalea Garden in Northeast Harbor, Maine, if you'd like to see a lovely example of a Japanese-inspired/Arts and Crafts garden in Maine. - Lee

  • @Enzo-ls3sl
    @Enzo-ls3sl Жыл бұрын

    🙄 Promo_SM

  • @texleeger8973
    @texleeger8973 Жыл бұрын

    Thank you. Gardens. Music. Japan.

  • @vikisteiri9085
    @vikisteiri9085 Жыл бұрын

    I just discovered this channel, thank you for this video! I study japanese and I am a meditator and into japanese literature, I read a Basho book and was looking for some analysis as it's so mysterious. I loved the poems and poets you showed, the analysis and giving some cultural context around it and the value and use of poetry in japanese society. The text below is also very beautiful and explains a lot, Buddhism is fundamental for one to understand Basho and haiku in general. 'It's all to be understood through visualization, because Zen does not believe in words', that sums it up.

  • @dhinkley74
    @dhinkley74 Жыл бұрын

    Fun and interesting conversation!

  • @zakariazaki7513
    @zakariazaki7513 Жыл бұрын

    Thanks for poems keep going 🤠 greeting from Morocco do you writer jabran Khalil jabran?

  • @marymerrill1612
    @marymerrill1612 Жыл бұрын

    I have done the Shikoku Pilgrimage and the Camino de Santiago and the Kumano Kodo. I found the Shikoku Pilgrimage osettai very comforting. Of the three I would chose the Shikoku Pilgrimage. The people were wonderful. The medieval buildings in Spain were spectacular. But Shikoku is more beautiful and the people too!

  • @kzutakahashi37
    @kzutakahashi37 Жыл бұрын

    The Kamo River is a recreational area for local residents, with the riverbed maintained as a park. The water is shallow because of weirs that hold back the flow at regular intervals, and in summer, parents and children play in the river. Near the weir, the sound of the waterfall echoes loudly. If you visit Kyoto from spring to autumn, take a walk along the Kamo River. Especially upstream from Shimogamo Shrine, the natural scenery is more beautiful.

  • @MaiyimBaron
    @MaiyimBaron Жыл бұрын

    The cicadas "screaming into the silence" she interpreted it, which is very nice. Mine is "Shrilling into the rocks" - and it Is Rocks in that line. I worked at Yamadera Basho Kinenkan, and it was at Yamadera on the other side of the steep river valley where Basho got that haiku. Love those "Narrow Roads thru the Back Country" stories and verses. Its such gorgeous countryside.

  • @rumahilalangksii4631
    @rumahilalangksii46312 жыл бұрын

    I love Japanese culture and art ---- S. Himeko Udagawa, a beautiful girl from Tokyo, Japan, reads poetry at the Pagelaran MusimTandur Season #5 Sanggar Rumah Ilalang - Indonesian Ilalang Art Community. visit the video 👇👇👇 kzread.info/dash/bejne/pWR6uq6hdLrSlMo.html

  • @carittaaustell8700
    @carittaaustell87002 жыл бұрын

    😣 promosm

  • @patrickeason9105
    @patrickeason91052 жыл бұрын

    This was so much fun. Thank you again for hosting this event!

  • @willieluncheonette5843
    @willieluncheonette58432 жыл бұрын

    "Basho has tremendous respect in my heart. He is not only a mystic, a master, he is also a poet, a painter, a sculptor; he is a creative phenomenon. Nobody can compare with him as far as his multidimensional personality is concerned. He has the fragrance which only a flower can have. That fragrance is manifested in his poetry, in his small statements, in his every gesture. Even in his ordinary talks with people he cannot be other than Basho. Basho is far more refined, perhaps the most refined Zen master up to now. His refinement is in his cultured, meditative spaciousness. Out of that spaciousness many flowers have showered on the world. It does not matter wherever he is and whatever is going on, Basho is going to make it a Zen state of affairs. That uniqueness will not be found again. Basho is one of the greatest poets of the world, but he has written only haikus - very symbolic but very miraculous, very simple but very mysterious. They are all to be understood through visualization, because Zen does not believe in words. Visualize and perhaps you may have some understanding. A meditator, according to Basho, will go on searching deep within himself, but that does not mean that he should lose contact with the outside world. Once in a while he should open his eyes. With all his emptiness he should mirror the outside world. Those reflections are collected in these haikus. They don’t mean anything, they simply depict a picture. Basho is the greatest haiku poet of Japan, the Master haiku poet. But he was not just a poet. Before becoming a poet he was a mystic; before he starting pouring out with beautiful poetry, he poured deep into his own center. He was a meditator. It happened when Basho’s master died - Basho is a buddha, a buddha who writes poetry, a buddha who paints beautiful pictures, a very aesthetic buddha. His master died, thousands of people gathered. His master was very famous; more famous because of Basho, because Basho was a famous poet and painter and he was Basho’s master. Thousands of people gathered and they were very much surprised when they saw Basho crying, big tears rolling down his cheeks. A few close disciples of his master came to Basho and said, “It does not look right. Thousands of people are coming and they are getting confused. They don’t think a buddha should be crying and weeping, and you are the man who has been saying to them again and again: There is no death and the innermost core lives forever. Then why are you weeping? Your master is not dead, he has only moved from the small body to the universal body of God. So why are you weeping?” Basho wiped his tears and he said, “Listen! This is nobody’s business. I live according to my inner feelings, I cannot pretend. When my innermost core has disappeared into the universal. don’t care whether people think it right or not. If they don’t think that I am enlightened it’s okay, but I cannot pretend. I cannot do something which is not really there. And yes, I have said that the soul is immortal and my master has not died, he has disappeared into the universal. That’s why I am crying, not crying that he is dead but crying that now I will never be able to see his form. Now he has become formless - and his body was beautiful. I will never be able to look again into those deep eyes, I will never be able to hold his hand and touch his feet. I have lost his form - I am crying for his body, for his form; I am not crying for the formless soul. And I am not concerned whether people think me enlightened or unenlightened, that is their business. Who cares?”

  • @Liliquan
    @Liliquan Жыл бұрын

    Hey willie, if you’re going to quote something then provide the source or be a thief. By the way, those quotes are truly atrocious. Talk about blowing smoke where the sun doesn’t shine. A pure example of extreme fetishization. ❤

  • @jamesb3rg13
    @jamesb3rg132 жыл бұрын

    Thank you so much for this delightful interlude in an otherize humdrum life. I appreciate the depth of these poems and the nuance you bring to them!

  • @k.v.gruzen9078
    @k.v.gruzen90782 жыл бұрын

    Thank you for showing us, Naoko!

  • @stephaniedagnese5891
    @stephaniedagnese58912 жыл бұрын

    Lovely presentation!

  • @clementihammock7572
    @clementihammock75722 жыл бұрын

    It will be good to relate these Shikoku places with a few Japanese Movies. Three times on-the-foot-sleep-everywhere Ohenro-San.

  • @ext1013
    @ext10132 жыл бұрын

    This has been a project for me, maybe, two years before the pandemic. This year I will definitely go next month.

  • @rangi-chan
    @rangi-chan2 жыл бұрын

    Mashi is one of the wonderful cooking instructors teaching Japanese home cooking with the Japan Society of Boston. This was such a fun and delicious class. Thank you, Mashi and JBS.

  • @soniawoolley366
    @soniawoolley3662 жыл бұрын

    Great video !

  • @allanmurphy5273
    @allanmurphy52732 жыл бұрын

    A very enjoyable discussion. "The Inland Sea" is one of my favourite books on Japan. I was fortunate to attend DR's talks possibly at a SWET event, definitely at Good Day Books. Thanks to everyone for seeing to this.

  • @rebeccakrupke8334
    @rebeccakrupke83342 жыл бұрын

    Thank you for this! I plan on making my first onigiri おにぎり today! Also Deb is lovely! What a fun sensei. Thank you Deb

  • @rebeccakrupke8334
    @rebeccakrupke83342 жыл бұрын

    Can we buy this kit someplace?

  • @rebeccakrupke8334
    @rebeccakrupke83342 жыл бұрын

    I unfortunately was sick on the night of the demonstration, but thanks to the beauty of the Internet being able to watch this was magnificent. Thank you Paul! Thank you for seeing its value and sharing it with us. I wish to someday be at peace in your structure and just listen to the beams myself. ❤️💜❤️

  • @4KWalkinJapan
    @4KWalkinJapan2 жыл бұрын

    It's a wonderful image. I'm your fan.

  • @MaiyimBaron
    @MaiyimBaron2 жыл бұрын

    Yes, Japan has strong relationships with Colorado and Boulder through the Yamagata-ken/ Colorado relationship and the Yamagata City - Boulder Friendship (Sister City) Relationship.

  • @MaiyimBaron
    @MaiyimBaron2 жыл бұрын

    JSB- remember that we who view later cannot access chat, so helpful if you add contact info given so people can follow up. Thanks! Great session!

  • @MaiyimBaron
    @MaiyimBaron2 жыл бұрын

    Oh, You're THAT Kerinanne! I heard about you in your days in baseball. I was an assistant to Daisuke's wife for a while.

  • @MaiyimBaron
    @MaiyimBaron2 жыл бұрын

    What fun to watch this! Does she know about the KishaPoPo in a train car Espresso on the Mamigasaki Riverside in Yamagata-shi City? Cant wait to hear if she mentions it. De finitely one of those destination Coffee Shops in Japan. Merry, come over to the newly expanded Maruichi Market in Coolidge corner and we'll meet for coffee!

  • @LifefulLife
    @LifefulLife2 жыл бұрын

    very interesting! Could you make a video like this about Akita Inu and the Shikoku Ken?

  • @juliehenderson1672
    @juliehenderson16722 жыл бұрын

    Patience and unconditional love by owners.