‘Boat Houses Are Not Tourist Attractions’
Ine, a small fishing town in northern Kyoto Prefecture known for its traditional wooden boat houses, has recently become a social media sensation, drawing a record number of visitors.
Ine, a small fishing town in northern Kyoto Prefecture known for its traditional wooden boat houses, has recently become a social media sensation, drawing a record number of visitors.
Ine, a small fishing town in northern Kyoto Prefecture known for its traditional wooden boat houses, has recently become a social media sensation, drawing a record number of visitors.
Friday Night Lights is a series that delves into the heart of American culture through the lens of small-town life and high school football.
Friday Night Lights is a series that delves into the heart of American culture through the lens of small-town life and high school football.
The Trump administration is ending a decades-long effort to track food security at a time when many Americans are struggling to get proper nutrition or enough to eat.
Katsuura Hachiman Shrine in Nachikatsuura, Wakayama Prefecture, held its annual festival on September 21st, drawing tourists with the spectacular “Underwater Purification” ritual in which carriers of the mikoshi, or portable shrine, leapt into the sea from the fishing port pier.
Members of the Yadav community staged a protest in Gurugram on Sunday, demanding a change in the title of Farhan Akhtar’s upcoming film 120 Bahadur.
Call them wandering mystics, if you will. But in vernacular, they are defined by one mighty compelling word: malang. The malangs dont have a place theyd call home. As such they are almost nomadic. They often camp in small groups next to shrines and may associate themselves with the.
Call them wandering mystics, if you will. But in vernacular, they are defined by one mighty compelling word: malang. The malangs dont have a place theyd call home. As such they are almost nomadic. They often camp in small groups next to shrines and may associate themselves with the.
The Akasaka Hikawa Festival, a traditional event dating back to the Edo period, reached its final day in Tokyos Akasaka district with sixteen portable shrines parading through the streets, filling the area with lively chants and large crowds of spectators.