Chapter 451: The Power of Feng Shui, the Japanese Stock Market Has Plummeted!
Chapter 451
The next day, the Chosun Ilbo reported on the history and origin of the temple, and announced that the government would rebuild the temple and ask a foundry to cast a bronze bell with a map of Japan, using feng shui to suppress Japan's national fortunes!
The South Korean people were overjoyed and overwhelmed with the government's decision, and Feng Shui masters in South Korea also wrote articles expressing their support for this policy, and even Korean scholars shouted loudly!
One of the most famous is a professor at a university in South Korea.
'We want to use feng shui to suppress Japan', which shocked Japanese netizens.
The professor said that the Seiksangsa Temple at the foot of Mt. Jirisan in South Korea was built to "block the auspicious energy flowing into Japan," and that the Siljangsa Temple has a bell with a map of Japan printed on it, and that every time the bell is struck, it is as if Mt. Fuji, the symbol of Japan, is "beaten" as a symbol of Japan. In South Korea, many people believe that the fate of the country and the nation will be determined by the natural environment, but given the current poor economic situation in South Korea, it is really pointless for Koreans to try to find fault with Japan.
In response to Koreans' superstitious belief in "feng shui", Zakzak's website also points out that during the Japanese rule of the Korean Peninsula, wooden stakes used for land surveying were also considered by Koreans to be a "tactic" of the Japanese, that is, "to block the spiritual leylines of Korea and prevent the emergence of big names in Korea." Mount Fuji was beaten once......
These theories have also caused an uproar in Japan.
All sorts of arguments are in an uproar on paper!
It is said that the incident also alarmed the emperor, and the Japanese prime minister expressed his protest to South Korea through the Ministry of Foreign Affairs. However, South Korean politicians naturally had a way to deal with it, and the two countries began a back-and-forth polemic in the newspapers!
I don't know if it's influenced by public opinion or really feng shui. The Japanese stock market is like a tired strong man plummeting in an instant, and many stocks have hung up green cards!
According to the statistics of the Japanese authorities, the stock market crash caused Japan to lose 10 billion yuan in stock speculation, and this loss is still continuing......
This incident also made the Japanese see the power of feng shui again, and the famous Japanese feng shui masters are also constantly offering bright suggestions, hoping to counter South Korea through feng shui!
And Wang Zhong, who designed this feng shui, has once again appeared frequently in major newspapers in Japan!
Japan's experts from all walks of life have also expressed their opinions on the pages of major newspapers, but to sum it up. Most of them are fought back with Shinto, which is also the difference between Japanese Feng Shui and Chinese Feng Shui and Korean Feng Shui.
With the early spread of culture, the idea of "Feng Shui" spread from China to Japan. After the idea of "Feng Shui" was introduced to Japan. Combined with the original Japanese witchcraft, it has developed into a Japanese "feng shui" culture with a strong national flavor.
Japan's "Feng Shui" culture is heavily influenced by Buddhism (Shinto), with a strong sense of mystery and heavy metaphorical colors, which is concentrated in the architectural style of the shrines. The Japanese Shinto view of nature believes. Human beings have a close kinship with natural objects such as mountains, water, and forests. Naturally, people and all things created by God are also unquestionably sacred. In Japan, almost all shrines are connected to natural environments such as mountains, bays, rivers, lakes and marshes, forests, and waterfalls.
Because of this unique cultural background, they invited many gods to come to help, but they were noisy because there are so many gods in Japan!
Anyone visiting Japan is sure to visit the shrine and be impressed by the shrines, large and small. Shrines and shrines are places of worship for Shintoists, and it is impossible to determine when they originated. The original shrine was in the form of a hut built in a wooded area. An evergreen tree is planted in the center, and believers believe that the gods reside in it. Worship began and was called "Shinrih", and it gradually developed into various shrines today.
Depending on the type of undead worshipped, shrines are divided into six categories:
(1) Shrines dedicated to ancient gods;
(2) Shrines dedicated to the deceased of the emperors, also known as shrines, such as Meiji Jingu, which worships Emperor Meiji;
(3) Shrines dedicated to meritorious emperors;
(4) Shrines dedicated to national meritorious servicemen;
(5) Shrines dedicated to the ancestors of various clans;
(6) Shrines dedicated to those who have contributed to the local merits of the country, such as the Yasukuni Shrine, which worships the spirits of the fallen soldiers of the Meiji Restoration for more than 100 years.
In total, there are more than 80,000 shrines in Japan, of which the largest number of people visit each year are: Kamakura Hachimangu Shrine (6 million people), Ise Emperor Tendaigu (4.82 million people), Meiji Jingu Shrine in Tokyo (6.25 million people) and Yasukuni Shrine (3 million people).
Shrines usually have a traditional entrance called a torii, from which you can walk along the main path to the net basin, where worshippers can wash their hands and gargle. The main hall of the shrine houses Shintai (also known as the Imperial Spirit Generation), but it is only symbolic objects such as Shintai, puppets, and cloud swords.
According to incomplete statistics, there are 8 million gods in Japan, and each of these gods has its own offerings and controversies.
After several days of debate and the synthesis of everyone's opinions, Japan decided to build a huge leech god opposite Silshoji Temple, facing Korea!
This leech god is also a very interesting deity, legend has it that in ancient times, a child was in the river to draw water, suddenly floated a huge leech, the leech opened his mouth to the child and said: I am the god of this mountain, come to worship me! So the child went back to the village and told his family that the people in the village built a leech shrine on the mountain to worship the strange leech.
Leech later became the main deity of Settsu Kuni-Nishinomiya Mukoku Pusainomiya Shrine, and was the local god of fishing and commerce. Later, the leech merged with the god of wealth among the Seven Gods of Good Fortune, and expanded to become a nationwide protector of the sea. From this, we can see that leeches are likely to be the god of water that arose in the area of Osaka Bay, and that the people of this area were mainly engaged in fishing and maritime trade at that time.
Considering that the leech is the god of soft bodies, it may even refer directly to Osaka Bay, which is derived from a geographical concept along with Danzhou. It was only because the Tongduo people in the region belonged to the conquered peoples that the godhood of the leeches gradually decreased, and they were far inferior to the Yamato gods worshiped in Ise Jingu and Hachimangu Shrine. However, the fact that leeches originated in Settsu Province also suggests that the source of the Nigami culture was located near Settsu.
Because he was born as an alien, he was exiled by his parents Izanagi and Izanami. It was a symbol of the exiles. Leech Dafa is for the exiled. (To be continued......)