Unmannerly Hikers Doom Buddhist Temple Toilet in Japan

Unmannerly Hikers Doom Buddhist Temple Toilet in Japan

Want more UJ? Get our FREE newsletter 

Need a preview? See our archives

Jurinji Buddhist Temple in Hyogo Prefecture
Picture: Koji / PIXTA(ピクスタ)
This is why Japan can't have nice things. A Buddhist temple is bulldozing its toilet because some hikers can't behave themselves.

In a recent article, we examined the unlikely accident that led to a Toyota Will VI backing into and destroying Japan’s oldest toilet. The 16th-century Tōsu toilet of Tōfuku-ji, in Kyoto, was not in use then and has not been used for decades, even if the damage it sustained is no less tragic.

But as recently mentioned on our Twitter feed, there is a more unfortunate, more preventable bit of temple toilet news, this time out of Nishinomiya City in Hyōgo Prefecture.

The culprits? Unmannerly hikers.

An Ancient Temple

Jurin-ji is a temple of the Shingon sect, located in Nishinomiya, Hyōgo Prefecture, on the slopes of Mount Rokkō. It isn’t the only religious institution to take advantage of these natural environs. There are Shinto shrines there, and one of the temple’s immediate neighbors is the Nishinomiya Cistercian Monastery.

Jurin-ji is one of the oldest. It was founded on the orders of Emperor Junna in Tenchō 10 (833) by Kōbō-daishi. Kōbō-daishi, also known by his monastic name of Kūkai, was the legendary Heian-era monk who had a formative influence on Japanese Buddhism. He is the purported founder of many temples, especially in the Kansai region.

Kōbō-daishi practicing the tantra. Portrait by Edo period artist Katsushika Hokusai. (source)

Today, the temple sits astride a popular hiking trail. This is why it appears in hiking guides as an attraction and as the site of the last toilet at the end of the trail.

And here, unfortunately, is the root of the problem that faced Fujiwara Eizen, the temple’s abbot, and led to his having to take an unfortunately necessary decision with regard to the temple’s public toilets.

Advertisements

The Award Winning Toilet

On the Jurin-ji temple grounds. (CC 3.0)

Toilets– historically called su or secchin– are an integral part of traditional temple architecture. However, this was not a historic structure like the tōsu at Tōfuku-ji. The temple set up the toilet building following a generous donation from an elderly female parishioner in 2007. The toilet even won the 5th Annual Nishinomiya City Urban Landscape Prize, in the townscape architecture division.

The toilet was meant to serve both parishioners as well as transient hikers going on or coming off the local trails. It was built with Japanese and Western aesthetics in harmony. One wall even displayed the words of temple founder Kōbō-daishi.

汚され、壊され、暴言も…マナーが悪すぎてトイレ撤去 お寺の住職が苦渋の決断「数十年悩まされました」 (まいどなニュース) – Yahoo!ニュース

第5回西宮市都市景観賞のまちなみ建築部門を受賞した鷲林寺境内のトイレ(鷲林寺住職藤原栄善さん提供) – Yahoo!ニュース(まいどなニュース)

The now dismantled temple toilet.

Temple authorities had thought if the toilet was new, visitors would feel a measure of obligation to keep it as clean as possible.

Sadly, that didn’t happen.

Unmannerly Visitors

Hikers left both the men’s and women’s sides in poor condition. Abbot Eizen reports that these visitors regularly dirtied the toilets and didn’t show common courtesy in cleaning up after themselves. Other hikers in desperate need when coming off the trail would miss the toilets entirely and soil the floor. (And, again, not clean up afterward.)

Others would leave with rolls of toilet paper, then complain online that there was no toilet paper and that the stalls were dirty. And others broke the handwashing faucets. Many would wander around the temple buildings to sit and have bento in the middle of active monastic services.

As the abbot observes, he can’t spend his entire day tending to a public toilet. This issue had gone on for years, to the point that it was a nuisance to the community as well as the temple. He considered charging a fee, or asking the city to manage the building. Neither plan panned out.

So Fujiwara decided to take the extraordinary step of dismantling the toilet altogether. The structure will now serve as a changing room for parishioners doing waterfall meditation, as well as a more general sitting meditation space.

The Aftermath

Per his remarks to Maidona News, Abbot Eizen is disappointed. He didn’t want to have to inconvenience the local community. When interviewed, he also took great pains to note that the issue was not all hikers but rather just a handful of the worse offenders over the years.

The issue has gone on for long enough that before her death, the donor who made the structure possible in the first place remarked shortly before her death: “I wanted to believe in people. What a shame!”

For his part, the abbot has tried to use a positive approach to inculcating better behavior. Again, to no avail.

As we mentioned in our coverage of the damage to the Tōsu at Tōfuku-ji, the understanding among monks was that the discipline of training didn’t stop when one relieved one’s self. Sadly, thanks to the bad behavior of some, those in the area will now have to exercise bladder discipline when visiting this part of Mount Rokkō.

Sources

Want more UJ? Get our FREE newsletter 

Need a preview? See our archives

Nyri Bakkalian

Dr. Nyri A. Bakkalian is an author, recovering academic, raconteur, and Your Favorite History Lesbian. Her PhD thesis focused on the Boshin War in the Tohoku region. She is the author of "Grey Dawn: A Tale of Abolition and Union" (Balance of Seven Press, 2020). She hosts Friday Night History on anchor.fm/fridaynighthistory and the secret to her success is Arabic coffee. She misses Sendai daily.

Japan in Translation

Subscribe to our free newsletter for a weekly digest of our best work across platforms (Web, Twitter, YouTube). Your support helps us spread the word about the Japan you don’t learn about in anime.

Want a preview? Read our archives

You’ll get one to two emails from us weekly. For more details, see our privacy policy