Japan has two main sacred traditions you’ll encounter throughout the trip: Shinto (shrines - jinja) and Buddhism (temples - tera or ji). The rituals are different and the distinction matters - don’t clap at a Buddhist temple, and don’t skip the water basin at a Shinto shrine.


Shinto Shrines

On this trip: Fushimi Inari Taisha, Meiji Shrine, Yasaka Shrine, Nezu Shrine

Torii Gates

The red torii gate marks the threshold between the ordinary world and sacred ground. When passing through:

  • Bow once before entering - a brief nod of the head is enough
  • Walk to the side of the central path (sando) - the center lane is traditionally reserved for the deity
  • Bow again on your way out

At Fushimi Inari you’ll pass through hundreds of gates. A single bow at the first gate is sufficient; you don’t need to bow at each one.

Temizuya - Water Purification

The stone basin near the entrance (手水舎) is for ritual hand purification before approaching the main hall. The sequence:

  1. Right hand: pick up the ladle with your right hand, pour water over your left hand
  2. Left hand: transfer the ladle to your left hand, pour water over your right hand
  3. Mouth: cup your left hand, pour a small amount of water into it, rinse your mouth - do not drink directly from the ladle
  4. Handle: tilt the ladle upright so the remaining water runs down the handle to rinse it, then replace it

Note: Many temizuya were closed or kept dry after COVID-19 and may still be restricted. If there’s no water flowing, skip this step.

Main Hall Prayer - 二礼二拍手一礼

At the main hall (本殿), the standard Shinto ritual:

  1. Two deep bows (二礼) - 90 degrees, held briefly
  2. Two claps (二拍手) - hands at chest height, right hand slightly lower than left, then pull right hand down and clap twice
  3. A moment of prayer - hands pressed together
  4. One final bow (一礼) - 90 degrees

This takes about 30 seconds. Nobody will be watching to grade you - doing it sincerely matters more than perfect form.

Shrine Purchases

  • Omamori (お守り) - small cloth amulets for protection, health, travel, study; ¥500–1,000. Each temple/shrine has its own designs. Jeannette and Ana: these make excellent small gifts.
  • Omikuji (おみくじ) - paper fortune slips, ¥100–200. If you get a bad fortune (凶 kyō), tie it to the rack at the shrine and leave the bad luck behind. If good, keep it.
  • Ema (絵馬) - wooden plaques where you write a wish; hang on the designated rack at the shrine.

Buddhist Temples

On this trip: Senso-ji, Kiyomizu-dera, Sanjusangendo, Kenninji, Ginkaku-ji, Nanzen-ji, Ryoan-ji, Kinkaku-ji, Kodaiji, Shitennoji

Key Difference from Shinto

Do not clap at Buddhist temples. The clapping ritual is Shinto. At Buddhist temples, press your palms together (合掌 - gasshō) and bow.

Incense - Senko

Most Buddhist temples have a large incense burner (香炉 - koro) near the main hall. Using it is part of the experience:

  1. Purchase a bundle of incense sticks if offered (¥100–200), or use ones provided
  2. Light from the burning coals in the burner - using your own lighter is fine if coals are out
  3. Wave out the flame - never blow it out. Blowing breath onto a flame is considered impure in Japanese Buddhist tradition.
  4. Place sticks upright in the ash
  5. Waft smoke toward you with your hands - believed to purify and heal. People fan smoke toward their head, hands, or a part of the body that needs healing.

Senso-ji has an enormous brazier at the entrance - the smoke wafting and the crowd around it is part of what makes it feel alive.

Main Hall Entry

If you’re allowed inside the main hall (not always open to the public):

  • Remove shoes at the step - look for the raised floor and a row of shoes
  • Bow before entering
  • Keep voice low
  • Photography: almost always restricted inside main halls - look for 撮影禁止 signs before raising your camera

Zen Temples (Ryoan-ji, Nanzen-ji, Ginkaku-ji, Kenninji)

Zen spaces are designed for silence and contemplation. The rock gardens and moss gardens are meant to be experienced slowly. Standing quietly is not awkward - it’s appropriate.


Both - General Rules

DoDon’t
Bow at gates and main hallsTouch sacred objects or statues
Keep to the side of the main pathWalk on grass or restricted areas
Speak quietlyTake photos inside main halls without checking
Remove shoes when stepping up into a buildingEat or drink in the main hall area
Waft incense toward yourselfBlow out incense flames
Ask before photographing someone actively performing a ritualPoint at sacred objects

Photography

  • Grounds: almost always fine at both shrines and temples
  • Main hall interiors: usually restricted - check for 撮影禁止 (no photography) signs
  • People: ask before photographing someone mid-ritual - “Shashin o totte mo ii desu ka?”
  • Goshuin calligraphy in progress: always ask the priest/monk before photographing them writing
  • Jeff: at Fushimi Inari, set C4 Shadowchrome before the first gate; at Buddhist interiors, camera down and just look

Sites on the Itinerary - Quick Reference

SiteTypeKey RitualNotes
Fushimi Inari TaishaShintoBow at first gate; clap at main hallTorii tunnel - walk left side
Meiji ShrineShintoFull temizuya + 二礼二拍手一礼Quiet forest approach sets the tone
Yasaka ShrineShintoBow at gate; clap at main hallBusy street-side entry; still worth the ritual
Nezu ShrineShintoBow at torii tunnel; clap at topShort tunnel - easy to stop and be present
Senso-ji TempleBuddhistIncense burner at entranceHuge brazier; waft smoke toward you
Kiyomizu-deraBuddhistIncense; shoes off in inner hallsOuter stage is fine to photograph
SanjusangendoBuddhistGasshō bow on entryCamera down inside - the statues are the experience
Kenninji TempleZen BuddhistGasshō bowDragon ceiling is inside - no photos
Ginkaku-jiZen BuddhistGasshō bowGarden is the main space; quiet walk
Nanzen-jiZen BuddhistGasshō bowAqueduct is outside and fine to photograph
Ryoan-jiZen BuddhistGasshō bow; sit quietlyThe garden rewards stillness
KinkakujiBuddhistGasshō bowCrowded but the ritual still grounds you
Shitennoji TempleBuddhistIncense; inner garden separately ticketedJapan’s oldest officially-administered temple
Kodaiji TempleZen BuddhistGasshō bowBamboo grove and pond; calm pace