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Kyoto: A Tale of Two Cities - Japan, Asia

By: Joshua K. Hartshorne
from: http://www.bootsnall.com/articles/07-08/kyoto-a-tale-of-two-cities-japan-asia.html
 
This article expresses many of my thoughts about Kyoto - Van Sloan 
Thus I cannot recommend Kyoto in a list great places to see - at www.rio.s5.com/WOWplaces.htm
I wrote to the Japanese National Tourist Organization about the unfortunate ugly parts of Kyoto - quoting an editorial in The Japan Times. To read it and my accompanying photos (beautiful and ugly in Kyoto) go to www.rio.s5.com/UglyKyoto.htm

The Golden Pavilion
The Golden Pavilion

Most books describe Japan as a hybrid: the pull of both the modern and the traditional, the skyscrapers and the tea houses. Some focus on an older combination: an imported Chinese/Buddhist culture, with its ornate architecture, and the simpler, more fleeting "native" Shinto aesthetic. There are truckloads of books and dissertations that discuss these dichotomies, but Kyoto is a composite in a more profound and surreal sense. It is two cities, stitched and patched unevenly together so jarringly that when in one, it is hard to imagine the other is in the same country, much less around the next block.

Trimming the grass with clippers
Trimming the grass with clippers
 
Classic Kyoto

One of these cities is that classic Kyoto, the one the State Department is said to have determined a world treasure, the one that I read about in the textbooks, watched slides of in class. It is made up of the stunning gold and silver pavilions, the grand Imperial Palace Park, the Nijou Castle with its singing “nightingale” floors. When wandering through temple gardens, all is in place. The shrubs and trees have been meticulously groomed, combed and coached into positions, perfectly integrated into their settings from every direction. Gardeners on their hands and knees cut the grass with miniature clippers. It is easy to imagine the imperial court of days past whiling away the days composing linked verse.

A Dry Garden
A Dry Garden

There are also the Zen gardens: wet gardens, centered on lush ponds with a delicate island in the center, dry gardens of improbable waves and cones of meticulously raked gravel. Here the samurai or monks would meditate, striving towards enlightenment.

In addition, there is Gion, with its dark streets and exclusive teahouses and restaurants behind unmarked, silent doors and walls of dark wood. The air is so heavy with Period, I wondered if I hadn’t stumbled into a movie set.

 

The other Kyoto

Though I knew what awaited me outside the temple and palace gates, every passage jarred. Outside the gates of these little islands was the other Kyoto. It reminded me of the cold, gray utilitarian cities I remembered from my years in Russia, the primary contrast being that the Russian cities actually had more color. The automobile roads were wide and the sidewalks unfriendly. With few exceptions, the streets were dead, with none of the energy with which a city compensates the traveler for the missing greenery. This city’s style was not modern; it was missing entirely.

To the extent it could claim any modern architectural landmarks, these would be the widely-reviled Kyoto Tower and the new train station. The train station, though remarkable from the inside for its staircases that lead up into the sky, is a concrete jumble from without, and Kyoto Tower is so unremarkable I can find nothing to say about it.

 

It’s not that this Kyoto is particularly eye-wrenching or that it is necessarily a bad place to live. I know many who lived there and loved it. It is simply so unremarkable that anyone passing through would likely forget having been there when recalling their travels.

All cities have their highlights, and there is always some travel time in between. In my favorite cities, it is this exploration of the space between the spectacles that I love the most. I travel above ground wherever possible, to watch the city pass. The spots I return to over and over are not in the guidebooks, a little somethings I saw on the way somewhere.

In Kyoto, there was nothing to see between the highlights. As I bounced between these scattered landmarks, one isolated from the next, I began to feel like the modern, in-between Kyoto was a sort of wormhole, another dimension through which one must pass to get from different locations that are all in the same city, but by chance or fate, not spatially connected.

 

This feeling of slipping between worlds was intensified by the fact that they were populated by distinct peoples. In Taipei, where I live now, the temples are living spaces, full of incense and prayer and divination. There are tourists, but the temples aren’t for tourists. The temples in Kyoto were frozen museum pieces through which only vacationers and curators moved. I am used to cramped city dwellers spilling out into the parks and open space, enjoying the sun and their friends; in Kyoto’s scenic spots, everyone had a camera.

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Read Sloan's thoughts on the Buddhism in Kyoto temples, at http://rio.s5.com/ReligionForces.htm