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Photos show a town praying for marine safety at a seaside festival near Tokyo

Photos show a town praying for marine safety at a seaside festival near Tokyo

YOKOSUKA, Japan (AP) — Hundreds of residents gathered at Kurihama beach outside Tokyo over the weekend to pray for marine safety in a summer festival that fuses sacred ritual and seaside spectacle.
As a portable shrine called mikoshi, decorated with Shinto ornaments, was lifted onto bearers' shoulders, the audience cheered.
The mikoshi had started from Sumiyoshi Shrine and was paraded through neighborhood alleyways. Shrine priests paused to bless offerings and pray for good fortune for people gathered outside their homes.
When the procession reached the beach, the priests danced and chanted. The festival reached its climax when the bearers entered the water up to their neck, their sweaty faces splashed with seawater.
The procession made a final stop at the nearby ferry terminal, where the mikoshi was carried onto a vessel for prayers for its safe travels.
'Everyone has been looking forward to this day all year,' said Shuji Shimizu, head of the Kurihama Neighborhood Association. 'It's a celebration of our own strength and unity. Please stay safe out there ... and enjoy every moment.'
This is a photo gallery curated by AP photo editors.
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This story corrects dateline to YOKOSUKA, Japan, not TOKYO.
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