Shide (Shinto) Explained

are zigzag-shaped paper streamers, often seen attached to or to demarcate holy spaces, and used in Shinto rituals in Japan.[1] [2] They are usually found adorning doorways, shrine buildings, and kamidana.

The origins of shide are traced to the yūshide, a thread made from the bark of Broussonetia x kazinoki mentioned in the Kojiki. There are different styles of folding shide. One method requires placing the paper zigzags in a cut slit on a stick, creating a ritual object known as a gohei or heihaku.[3] A gohei is an offering to kami that can be seen on kamidana altars and inside the main building of a Shinto shrine.[4]

A common purification ritual uses a, a wooden stick with linen or paper shide attached at the top.[5] A Shinto priest waves the over a person, item, or newly bought property, such as a building or a car. The wand is waved at a slow and rhythmic pace, but with a little force so that the strips make a rustling noise on each pass of the wand. For new properties, a similar ritual known as (lit. "calming the land") is performed with a within an enclosed part of the land (enclosed by).

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Shimenawa: Basic Terms of Shinto . 國學院大學デジタルミュージアム . ja.
  2. Web site: Q10 紙垂(しで)の意味と種類を教えて下さい。 - 北海道神社庁のホームページ . hokkaidojinjacho.jp. ja.
  3. Web site: Heihaku, Go-hei: Basic Terms of Shinto . 國學院大學デジタルミュージアム . ja.
  4. Web site: 御幣のまつりかた 青森港守護神 諏訪神社 . aomori-suwajinja.org. ja.
  5. Web site: Haraigushi: Basic Terms of Shinto . 國學院大學デジタルミュージアム . ja.