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Osaka is a thriving commercial metropolis that, with Tokyo, divides the country into two main business zones. Built on the commercial foundation laid down in the Edo period (1600-1868), Osaka has become the mercantile hub of Japan. At the same time, the city boasts a lavish and varied cuisine that has earned it the nickname "kitchen of the world," while emerging as an international entertainment mecca. Let's take a look at the many faces of Osaka today.
The Venice of Japan
Osaka is often referred to as the Venice of Japan. Although not
large in area, its population is second only to Tokyo, and its leading
position in commerce and industry owes a lot to its man-made “river”
in Osaka Bay. This vital waterway is not only a pathway to the sea,
but a gateway to the world, and it helped Osaka to become a leading
commercial city, not just in Japan, but throughout the world.
To survey the soaring skyscrapers, or the shopping arcades that
you come across unexpectedly while wandering around the city, is
to get a new feeling for Osaka and a new appreciation of the pleasures
of travel. The attractive and abundant merchandise piled up in such
profusion in the shops is enjoyable enough in itself, but to experience
the first rate service of the sales people is like discovering a
hidden Japanese treasure, guaranteed to bring a ray of sunshine
into the hearts of travelers every time.
Thanks to the most advanced construction methods, the fabric of
the city is just as delightful below ground as above. A place where
you can wander in the midst of the rainy season without feeling
a drop of rain: that’s where Japan is at today.
Downtown Osaka is divided into four main areas: the city center,
Tennoji, the Bay Area, and Universal Studios Japan.
The city center shows the contemporary face of Osaka, a city very
much living in the present. Apart from the area around Osaka Castle,
it is famous for shopping streets. Wherever you look it’s
exciting.
There’s a saying in Korea that even the sea can change into
a mulberry grove, and just 130 years ago, this place was a bunch
of green onion fields. Its fortunes began to change in 1874, when
the intercity highway was built. Today, the shopping streets of
southern Osaka stand at the vanguard, decked in the latest fashions
and dazzling ornaments.
Universal Studios Japan (USJ) is equally impressive. It’s
hard to believe that California’s Hollywood or Florida’s
Universal Studios has suddenly landed in Japan. Taking full advantage
of the Japanese talent for imitation, this massive movie theme park
must be seen to be believed. More than half a square kilometer of
attractions in nine distinct zones add up to an endlessly fascinating
experience.
To the east, in the Tennoji district, lies Suruhashi, Osaka’s
largest Korea Town, with more than 200,000 Korean residents. Its
Korean market, known as the international market, has a deep-rooted
history. Extending 300 meters from east to west and 500 meters from
north to south in the shade of Suruhashi Station on the overhead
railway, this crowded market looks exactly like a traditional Korean
market. The lively atmosphere, the Korean signage, ample goods for
sale, Korean food stalls and enticing smells make this a true Little
Korea within Osaka.
Just ten years ago, most Japanese couldn’t bear the smell
of garlic, but now they come by the thousands to buy kimchi.
Dotombori, Kitchen of the World “If
Osaka is ruined by food, Kyoto is ruined by clothing.” “Kyoto
people dress well but don’t care what they put on their feet;
Osaka people don’t care what they wear so long as they have
good shoes.” These sayings have been repeated in Japan for
ages. They satirize the empty formality of upper-class life in Kyoto,
for centuries the Japanese capital, but also suggest the satisfying
wholesomeness of Osaka cuisine.
Osaka’s nickname, “the kitchen of the world,”
dates back to a visit from a Korean envoy in the distant past. When
he and his party reached Osaka Harbor after a long and arduous voyage,
daimyos and military commanders from nearby harbors came to greet
them in as many as 150 boats.
According to historical records, Koreans in the Joseon Dynasty
who took roles as correspondents were given a royal welcome in a
two-story pavilion boat that was towed upstream by thousands of
men lined up on the banks. The envoy responded with a musical performance
by a popular Korean band, in what was perhaps the first ever international
open-air concert.
The inns of Osaka were crammed to capacity with people who had
come from all around to watch this spectacular event. It was from
this time on that Osaka became known as the “kitchen of the
world.”
The local cuisine developed further as the event repeated every
few years. To this day, Osaka’s shopping and entertainment
districts such as Dotombori are so crowded with restaurants that
visitors are always amazed.
Osaka’s role as the kitchen of the world has been aided both
by its proximity to the sea providing an abundant supply of fresh
seafood, and by the growth of trade, which has made cooking ingredients
and other products from all over Japan readily available. Food in
Osaka has become a delicacy to which visitors flock from far and
wide to endulge.
Dotombori is a food and entertainment district that has grown on
the banks of a man-made waterway called the Dotombori River, originally
built as a transport canal. Taverns and kabuki theathers have lined
Dotombori since the Edo period (1600-1868), and today the district
has become Osaka’s biggest shopping and entertainment zone.
Here, all kinds of restaurants bustle with customers. An ever-popular
item on the menu is takoyaki, finely chopped octopus, perfectly
fried in a delicious batter. Equally savory is kinryu ramen, noodles
cooked in a rich chicken-pork broth.
When night falls, the face of Dotombori changes. Instead of distributing
cheap and tasty foods, the streets are clad in multicolored neon
as Dotombori turns into a nightlife mecca, as bright as can be.
The colorful lights on the banks of Dotombori will cheer the heart
of any traveler.
City of Daily Festivals
There
are some unusual statues not found on the mainland.These stone figures
stand as tall as a full-grown adult.The faintly smiling dolhareubang,
“stone grandfathers,?have their eyes wide open, and have black
bodies with large prominent hands. Made of basalt, they once served
as village guardian idols. In the days before the development of
medical science, they were set up to protect the village from contagious
diseases.
They were also placed beside gates to keep evil out. Accordingly, whenever the people passed a dolhareubang,
they lowered their heads to say a prayer for their family and village. The dolhareubang has become the
predominant symbol of Jeju, widely known around the world.
But Jeju also has many other sights connected with
stone.“We came from the rocks, and to
the rocks we will return,?say the Jeju people. It’s no exaggeration to say that the whole island is covered with
volcanic rock.Looking at Jeju’s
fields, it’s easy to see how the long walls have been built up from lumps of
basalt.The graceful curves of the
basalt walls sweeping between wide open fields, and between houses, make a
scene that springs to mind whenever one thinks of Jeju.
There
are plenty of rocks along the coastline, too. Jeju’s stony beaches
keep coming into view along the road, black beaches thickly strewn
with big basalt rocks. To those accustomed to sandy beaches, it
may look strange, but for those born and raised on Jeju, the endless
black beaches form an image that always remains with them even after
they leave. These black rocks are ancient monuments of an island
formed by volcanic activity.
The Face of a Nation in a Petal Through the big plate glass
window of the observation deck at the Osaka Historical Museum, the
scene around Osaka Castle looks like an Oriental painting. With
its moat, the castle speaks without words of the vicissitudes of
400 years.
For three long years, tens of thousands of people toiled in the
service of Hideyoshi’s determination to show the world Japan’s
unity, prosperity, and everlasting glory. But nothing lasts forever.
Not without reason does the old proverb tell us there is no flower
that remains red for ten days, and no power that lasts for ten years.
The fortress that now shows its imposing appearance before my eyes
is a new building erected in 1948, amounting to only one fifth of
the original castle. This gives a vivid impression, not just of
the castle’s former grandeur, but also of Hideyoshi’s
overreaching power and ambition.
The
cherry blossoms are in full bloom, and with each gust of wind, they
flutter brilliantly as their petals fly off high above the castle
and descend lifelessly to the ground. The falling petals whisper
of the brevity of human desires and power. Yet, the flowers that
now lie on the ground, will once more rise from despair to blossom
with renewed vigor, like a great cheer resounding through the city.
The clear faces of these petals could be an image for the quiet
determination of the Japanese, who don’t despair but begin
again, rise again, and even when bowing their heads, maintain a
firm will. Perhaps it is because of this national character that
the world seems to have a special place in its heart for Japan.
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