- Here is the side of the Imperial Palace.
- There is the Chidorigafuchi National Cemetery.
- What is that?
- This is a cemetery to persons killed in the war.
- Buddhist temple?
- No. This is the government management.
- There is no religion.
- It is not Buddhism and not Shinto.
- Whom is it for?
- Dead persons in war were many people who do not have a family.
- It is soldiers and citizens, foreigners.
- How many people are there?
- 360,000 people.
- Japan was at a loss to their graves.
- There is Arlington National Cemetery in USA.
- Arlington Cemetery receives all religion.
- But this cemetery is irreligion.
- It is not a grave.
- The dead person has religion of their own.
- The expansion of Chidorigafuchi often becomes the problem.
- The war dead are in Yasukuni shrine.
- There was the proposal to make a grave in Yasukuni shrine.
- But, it is small to make a grave.
- And, Yasukuni shrine is specific religion.
- There is the emotional problem.
- The foreigner is easy to offer flowers, too.
- It was an interesting. Let's get out.
- Are you interested in the former main building of Ministry of Justice?
Related spot
- Edo-jo Castle
Dokan Ota built Edo-jo Castle. Ieyasu Tokugawa made the castle his place. The Emperor lives here since 1888. - Yasukuni-jinja Shrine
Yasukuni shrine worships soldiers killed in action. It is the upward of 2460 thousand persons. - Building Meiji era
The former main building of Ministry of Justice. This building was not broken by Great Kanto Earthquake. - Western learning
Japan had diplomatic ties with only Netherlands in Edo era. But Netherlands situation was unstable.