Muhammad Yunus to speak at Rikkyo
From our good friend Wikipedia:
Under the trees are tables, on which you'll find pens and little pieces of coloured paper (Tanzaku), on which you may write your wish before tying it to the tree.
These are then burnt, or set afloat upon a river around midnight on the day itself.
Let's hope that string is biodegradable and that the ink is made from soy!
Tanzaku tied to bamboo branches

Two schoolgirls admire a photo of a particularly funny wish on one of the Tanzaku

The blue Tanzaku reads: "Sekai ga heiwa de arimasu yo ni" - a simple wish for world peace.

Tanabata, meaning "Seven Evenings" is a Japanese star festival, derived from Obon traditions and the Chinese star festival. The festival is usually held on July 7, and celebrates the meeting of Orihime and Hikoboshi. The Milky Way, a river made from stars that crosses the sky, separates these lovers, and they are allowed to meet only once a year. This special day is the seventh day of the seventh lunar month of the lunisolar calendar.In the days leading up to Tanabata, you 'll find little bamboo trees shooting up all over the place, such as these in the long underground passage leading from Ikebukuro Station to my university.
Under the trees are tables, on which you'll find pens and little pieces of coloured paper (Tanzaku), on which you may write your wish before tying it to the tree.
These are then burnt, or set afloat upon a river around midnight on the day itself.
Let's hope that string is biodegradable and that the ink is made from soy!
Tanzaku tied to bamboo branches

Two schoolgirls admire a photo of a particularly funny wish on one of the Tanzaku

The blue Tanzaku reads: "Sekai ga heiwa de arimasu yo ni" - a simple wish for world peace.
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