Haguro San
Dewa Sanzan (Three Mountains of Dewa) comprises the three sacred mountains of Hagurosan (419 meters), Gassan (1980 m), and Yudonosan (1504 m), clustered together in the ancient province of Dewa (modern-day Yamagata prefecture on Honshu Island). Holy to the Japanese Shinto religion and especially the mountain ascetic cult of Shugendo Buddhism, Dewa Sanzan is a popular pilgrimage site visited by many, including famed haiku poet Matsuo Basho on his Narrow Road to the Deep North.
While most probably venerated in pre-historic times, the three mountains were first opened as a religious center 1400 years ago in 593 by Prince Hachiko, the first-born son of the then reigning Emperor, Sushun, who was the 32 emperor of Japan. The prince renounced his title and position, took the name of Kokai, and became a wandering mountain hermit. While on a beach in the Dewa province, he saw an enormous black bird with three legs that led him first to Mount Haguro and then to the other two holy peaks. When Kokai came to Hagurosan, he went through many difficult ascetic practices and is said to have seen an apparition of the Buddha. He was then inspired to build the shrines on the three sacred mountains. Kokai spent the rest of his years in Haguro, where his imperial grave remains.
Pilgrims climb Hagurosan along the stone-lined Ishi-Dan path through a dense forest of cedar trees. The steeply rising path winds back and forth for 1.8 kilometers and was constructed in 1648. The stone path has 2446 steps and required 13 years to complete. The path begins at a large wooden bridge and soon passes the Go-Jyu-No-To five-storied pagoda constructed by Taira no Masakado in the period 931-937 (a classical text says that Fujiwara no Ujiie, a court noble, rebuilt it in 1372). It is 29 meters tall, has five stories, and is made of plain, unpainted wood with shingles.
Atop the mountain is the shrine of Gassai-den (Sanjin Gosaiden), which houses the deities of the three mountains, Tsukiyomi-no-Mikoto, Oyamatsumi-no-Mikoto, and Ideha-no-Mikoto. The date of its foundation is unknown, but the priest Betto Kakujun rebuilt the main building of the present shrine in 1818. The building is 28.2 meters tall, 26 meters wide, and 20 meters deep. The thatched roof is 2.1 meters thick, and no other wooden building in Japan has a larger thatched roof.
An enormous iron bell near the Sanjin Gosaiden shrine is inscribed with the year 1275 and is said to have been donated by the Yamakura Shogun, who was thankful for having repulsed the Mongol fleet from China the year before. It is the largest cast bell in northern Japan and the third largest in the country. It is 3.14 meters tall, with a diameter of 1.85 meters, and weighs 10 tons.
After visiting Hagurosan, pilgrims trek upward through the mountain forests to the shrines of Gassan and Yudono. The deity of Yudono lives not in a building but in a hot waterfall. Pilgrims take off their shoes and some clothes to bathe in the cascade. The three sacred peaks attract pilgrims during spring, summer, and fall, with the largest Haguro festival being held on July 15. Bus transportation is available to Hagurosan, yet most pilgrims prefer the traditional footpath leading to the summit.
Martin Gray is a cultural anthropologist, writer and photographer specializing in the study of pilgrimage traditions and sacred sites around the world. During a 40 year period he has visited more than 2000 pilgrimage places in 165 countries. The World Pilgrimage Guide at sacredsites.com is the most comprehensive source of information on this subject.