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Drunk American Tourist Wrecks Ancient Japanese Temple
Drunk American Tourist Wrecks Ancient Japanese Temple

Miami Herald

time17 hours ago

  • Miami Herald

Drunk American Tourist Wrecks Ancient Japanese Temple

An American tourist on Tuesday caused significant damage to a 761-year-old temple in Japan. The unnamed suspect, described as intoxicated, forced his way inside Shoden Eigen‑in Temple through a rear kitchen door on the southern side of the building, according to the Tokyo Weekender. After walking through the garden, he attempted to scale the wooden railing that encircles the main hall. In doing so, he caused visible damage, scraping and compromising the surface of the historic structure. The wooden railing sustained cracks and abrasions and a nearby wooden door was destroyed. Newsweek contacted the Japan National Tourism Organization for comment via email on Friday. Founded in 1264, Shoden Eigen‑in Temple, a subtemple of Kennin-ji Monastery, in Kyoto, where the incident took place, was officially designated as a Kyoto Prefectural Cultural Heritage Site in 2015. According to the Tokyo Weekender, the structures there are architecturally fragile, historically significant and irreplaceable. The head priest of the temple, Keinin Magami, noticed the intrusion when the man knocked on the door of his adjacent residence, The Mainichi Shimbun reported. Police were called but a damage report was not filed. There was no permanent damage to the residence. Kennin-ji, established in 1202, is considered the oldest Zen training monastery in Kyoto, with deep historical ties to Oda Urakusai, brother of famed warlord Oda Nobunaga. The man apologized in person to the head priest through a translation app, saying: "This is the biggest mistake of my life. I am truly sorry." According to reports, when asked why he had come, he said, "I wanted to see the temple." Unlike tourist-heavy areas, the subtemple is intentionally low‑profile and wasn't equipped with major security measures, making it easier for the visitor to enter unnoticed. Head priest Keinin Magami, as reported by The Mainichi Shimbun: "We have reached a point where we need to be careful in our daily lives as well. We are seeing the negative effects of overtourism, so I would like measures to be taken." Japanese news outlet the Tokyo Weekender: "Shoden Eigen-in will mend the damage. The priest will move on. The tourist will fly home. But there will be more issues in the future." As reported by the Tokyo Weekender, Magami told reporters he accepted the man's apology. The railing will likely be repaired with traditional methods. Japan's reliance on tourism revenue is at risk of clashing with the unexpected costs and threats posed by what is seen by some as irresponsible tourists and a growing trend of disrespect by foreign visitors regarding the protection of Japan's cultural treasures The incident adds to a growing roster of mishaps involving ill‑advised tourist behavior, from carving names into Nara's ancient temples to vandalism at Tokyo shrines, raising questions about the balance between open access and cultural preservation in Japan's tourism-driven era. Related Articles Key US Ally Quietly Prepares for China's Pacific War With AmericaJapan Calls China's Latest Sea Move 'Extremely Regrettable'-Tensions RiseUS Ambassador Calls Out Chinese Counterpart Over X Post: 'Untrained Puppy'Mapped: How China Staged Double Aircraft Carrier Show of Force in Pacific 2025 NEWSWEEK DIGITAL LLC.

Drunk American Tourist Damages Kyoto Temple Tied to Samurai Legend
Drunk American Tourist Damages Kyoto Temple Tied to Samurai Legend

Tokyo Weekender

time3 days ago

  • General
  • Tokyo Weekender

Drunk American Tourist Damages Kyoto Temple Tied to Samurai Legend

At around 6:20 a.m. on June 24 , an intoxicated American tourist entered a centuries-old Zen temple in Kyoto and broke part of it. The man, whose name has not been released, wandered into Shoden Eigen-in, a subtemple of Kenninji in Higashiyama ward. Rather than using the main entrance, he entered through a kitchen door on the south side. He stumbled through the gardens. Then, for reasons known only to himself, he attempted to climb a wooden railing enclosing the main hall. That railing, along with the hall itself, was designated as a Kyoto Prefectural Cultural Heritage Site in 2015. The structure is fragile, historically significant and irreplaceable. The damage was immediate. The wood split and scraped under his weight. A nearby wooden door was also broken. The temple called the police, but didn't file a damage report. The man returned later that morning, sober. Through a translation app, he told the chief priest: 'This was the biggest mistake of my life. I'm truly sorry.' When asked why he did it, his answer was simple. 'I just wanted to see the temple.' List of Contents: The Legacy of Shoden Eigen-in A Familiar Pattern in Kyoto Related Posts The Legacy of Shoden Eigen-in Shoden Eigen-in isn't just any temple. It's one of the quieter subtemples of Kenninji, Kyoto's oldest Zen training monastery, founded in 1202 . While Kenninji's dragon murals and manicured grounds attract thousands, Eigen-in sits in a more subdued corner, slightly hidden and slightly worn — and usually closed to the public, save for rare seasonal openings. It's a place most visitors will never step inside, let alone touch. The temple is closely tied to Oda Urakusai, also known as Oda Nagamasu — a warlord-turned-tea-master and the younger brother of Oda Nobunaga, one of the three great unifiers of Japan. Urakusai survived the fall of the Oda clan, lived through the violent rise of Toyotomi Hideyoshi, and eventually renounced politics for aesthetics. He became a student of Sen no Rikyu, the most influential figure in the history of the tea ceremony. Urakusai brought with him a taste for restraint, imperfection, and wabi-sabi — ideas that would come to define Japanese high culture. His legacy survives not only in ceramics and tearooms but in quiet places like Shoden Eigen-in, a temple where there are no velvet ropes or security guards. A Familiar Pattern in Kyoto This incident is hardly the first time a historic site in Japan has suffered from the side effects of tourism. In 2024 , authorities moved to restrict access to Kyoto's geisha districts after repeated cases of tourist harassment. The city, which welcomed a record high of 10.88 million foreign visitors in 2024, walks a fine line between preservation and profit. Its temples are cultural touchstones, but also functioning religious spaces. And while tourism fuels the economy, it also frays the very fabric that visitors claim to cherish. Chief priest Keinin Magami, 48, told reporters he accepted the man's apology. There was no permanent damage to the residence attached to the temple. The railing will likely be repaired with traditional methods, quietly, without fuss. Within an hour of the story breaking, though, several people took to X to vent their anger. 'If the temple doesn't ask for repair costs, things like this will just keep happening!' one user said . This isn't just about one drunk man and a railing, though. It's about a city buckling under the weight of its own myth. A place where history lives in wood and paper, and yet is expected to withstand the full force of global foot traffic, camera flashes and clueless entitlement. Shoden Eigen-in will mend the damage. The priest will move on. The tourist will fly home. But there will be more issues in the future. Related Posts Chilean Influencer Faces Backlash for Exercising on a Torii Gate Nuisance YouTuber Elected to European Parliament Yasukuni Shrine Sees Another Graffiti Incident

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